{"id":50884,"date":"2013-03-26T05:00:21","date_gmt":"2013-03-26T10:00:21","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=50884"},"modified":"2019-09-17T14:15:57","modified_gmt":"2019-09-17T19:15:57","slug":"tmq-handing-out-pluses-and-minuses-from-the-conference-tourneys","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2013\/03\/26\/tmq-handing-out-pluses-and-minuses-from-the-conference-tourneys\/","title":{"rendered":"TMQ: Handing out pluses and minuses from the conference tourneys"},"content":{"rendered":"
Todd:<\/strong> With so much to get to this week, it’s tough to figure out where to start. Let’s start with what we saw last weekend. A conference said goodbye, a legendary coach said goodbye and a few teams said hello to NCAA tournament spots that weren’t sealed until they won their conference tournament.<\/p>\n There were lots of pluses and minuses out of the weekend; what story deserves the biggest plus for you?<\/p>\n Jim:<\/strong> I know people may think I’m biased, but I think my alma mater, Massachusetts-Lowell, was the most impressive team of the weekend. They were the only team from last week’s top eight to not lose, and they captured their first league title, something that has been 29 years in the making.<\/p>\n In doing so, they also ended the career of one of the game’s top coaches, Jack Parker. So there is something to be spoken about such a legend who probably on Sunday felt like his team was a lot better than some of the teams that made the NCAA field.<\/p>\n But that is the system we work within and BU doesn’t move on. I heard a lot of flak for that in Boston this weekend, something people all over the country tend to complain about after Selection Sunday.<\/p>\n Todd:<\/strong> Keeping with the trend of picking the team that we personally saw win a conference title, my plus goes to Wisconsin. The Badgers hadn’t been in a WCHA championship game since 2000 and hadn’t won it since 1998. In a field that included St. Cloud State, Minnesota and North Dakota, the Badgers may not have been a popular choice to win the Broadmoor Trophy but they had to in order to make the NCAA tournament.<\/p>\n With a hot goaltender, scorers who are getting the job done and role players contributing to the score sheet, the Badgers are going to be a tough out in the NCAAs. But more on that later. Was there something deserving of a minus for you from the weekend?<\/p>\n Jim:<\/strong> Oh, yes. Both Quinnipiac and Yale were easy minuses. As much as been made of the Bobcats this season, they choked down the stretch and enter the NCAA tournament with a 5-4-1 record in their last 10 games. I feel like they are entering this tournament limping.<\/p>\n The other team that is struggling is Yale. The Bulldogs had two losses without scoring a goal in the ECAC Hockey Championship and are barely limping into the tournament, so I feel like they’re on a low right now and will struggle through the NCAA regionals.<\/p>\n Todd:<\/strong> You touched a little bit on my minus. Mine goes to Yale, but for shunning the postgame news conference after the third-place game loss to Quinnipiac. As our Brian Sullivan wrote in Monday’s ECAC Hockey blog entry<\/a>, it created an uncomfortable situation for a lot of people who didn’t deserve it, and I’m talking about the ECAC staff running the event. Win with class, lose with class.<\/p>\n