{"id":130256,"date":"2021-11-12T08:00:03","date_gmt":"2021-11-12T14:00:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/?p=130256"},"modified":"2022-06-24T18:05:07","modified_gmt":"2022-06-24T23:05:07","slug":"ncaa-d-i-womens-hockey-expansion-to-11-is-disappointing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2021\/11\/12\/ncaa-d-i-womens-hockey-expansion-to-11-is-disappointing\/","title":{"rendered":"NCAA Division I Women\u2019s Hockey: Expansion to 11 is disheartening and disappointing"},"content":{"rendered":"
When the NCAA Division I Competition Oversight Committee <\/span>approved <\/span><\/a>expanding the women’s hockey tournament field from eight to 11 teams on Wednesday, they showed they are more interested in manufacturing the appearance of equality than in actually achieving it and ruined any illusions I may have had that fundamental, structural changes would take place in response to the <\/span>Kapler, Hecker and Fink Equity Report<\/span><\/a> (KHF).<\/span><\/p>\n Positive changes may be forthcoming, but with this as the NCAA’s opening gambit, it’s difficult to feel encouraged.<\/p>\n The working group of coaches and administrators that were petitioning for expansion of the women’s tournament field a second time in as many months asked for the field to increase to 12 teams and instead were given this nonsense.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Per the committee, they approved the expansion to 11 teams because that is 27% percent of the 41 teams that compete for the Championship each year. That matches the percentage of men’s teams that compete in the DI men’s tournament. The men have a 16-team bracket for their 60 teams.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The 27% just happens to be the team access point the men are at right now because brackets work best in multiples of four. Their tournament has 16 teams because that makes sense. The math means that\u2019s 27% of men\u2019s teams. It\u2019s a random number with no real meaning here and it\u2019s irrational and illogical to choose to adhere to something so arbitrary.<\/span><\/p>\n Rather than expand the championship because it merits expansion, or because the current set-up is fundamentally inequitable, the committee has opted to default to the barest version of numerical parity \u2014 without engaging with what actually makes sense for the sport, or for a logical tournament bracket.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n It’s a pedantic and petty devotion to the percentage of teams eligible, a number that will constantly be in flux as schools add or cut programs. We all know they won\u2019t add a 17th team or drop to 15 teams in the men\u2019s tournament in the future to ensure they stay at 27%, which just highlights how absurd, hollow and senseless this decision is.<\/span><\/p>\n Beyond that, it\u2019s particularly galling for the Competition Oversight Committee to decide to act like that’s the only piece of data that matters and be beholden to the team access point percentage when one of the findings in the<\/span> KHF report is that the men are allowed to have three additional players on their championship rosters. By focusing on team access points over student athlete access points, they\u2019re saying it\u2019s perfectly reasonable for the men’s side to have a higher percentage of student athletes with the ability to play in the championship.<\/span><\/p>\n The Committee did not address whether or not women’s teams can have the same size roster in the NCAA tournament. They also didn’t address the massive spending disparities the report laid out in any way. Those numbers, it seems, are not ones they feel they need to be tied to.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Whether or not they meant it to (and I’m not feeling particularly inclined to give grace or the benefit of the doubt in this moment), this comes off as the Committee offering<\/span> malicious compliance.<\/span><\/a> It feels petty and like an attempt at a power move. They tabled this discussion two months ago and were forced to reconsider. This result feels like a tantrum tantamount to “You wanted expansion? Well good luck figuring out 11 teams.”<\/span><\/p>\n