Hosts Jim Connelly, Derek Schooley, and Ed Trefzger look at sometimes controversial or overlooked topics in our midweek episode called Upon Further Review.
College hockey is experiencing a massive facilities arms race, with programs investing heavily in new arenas. Recent projects range from Union’s $55 million M&T Bank Center to Northeastern’s planned $300-350 million replacement for Matthews Arena, with notable investments at St. Thomas ($175M), Western Michigan ($100M+), and numerous other schools. The hosts debate whether this spending remains the primary recruiting advantage or if NIL money, revenue sharing, and player development have become equally important.
A major concern: nine-figure construction costs could make college hockey unsustainable and deter program expansion.
A key tension emerges around maintaining atmosphere during upgrades. Smaller, intimate venues like Cornell’s Lynah Rink preserve the electric home-ice advantage that massive buildings often lose when they’re harder to fill. The hosts note successful examples like UConn’s compact arena and Union’s decision to stay smaller rather than expand, while acknowledging the challenge of balancing modernization with the historic charm that makes college hockey special.
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