{"id":149135,"date":"2024-10-15T07:00:48","date_gmt":"2024-10-15T12:00:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/?p=149135"},"modified":"2024-10-15T08:23:34","modified_gmt":"2024-10-15T13:23:34","slug":"tmq-rehashing-a-fantastic-weekend-of-hockey-while-also-exploring-some-of-the-biggest-issues-like-the-chl-and-nil","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wp-admin.uscho.com\/2024\/10\/15\/tmq-rehashing-a-fantastic-weekend-of-hockey-while-also-exploring-some-of-the-biggest-issues-like-the-chl-and-nil\/","title":{"rendered":"TMQ: Rehashing a fantastic weekend of hockey while also exploring some of the biggest issues like the CHL and NIL"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Michigan State celebrates a goal on Saturday in a 4-3 victory over Boston College that earned the Spartans a weekend split with the Eagles (Photo: Michigan State athletics)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Paula: <\/strong>Dan, it\u2019s great to be back with you to talk college hockey in this season\u2019s second installment of TMQ. Even though the season is young, there\u2019s a good deal to dig into, both on and off the ice.<\/p>\n

Last week, Jim Connelly and Ed Trefzger began a discussion about the implications of the NCAA granting eligibility to Canadian major junior players and I\u2019d like to hear your thoughts on that later in the column, but for our first conversation of the season, I\u2019m throwing out the word that so many fans despise and so many coaches use: parity.<\/p>\n

And, honestly, the conversation about the NCAA\u2019s proposal and the P-word intersect, especially when terms like \u201cblue bloods\u201d and \u201celites\u201d come into play.<\/p>\n

What transpired on the ice this past weekend brings me to it, though. One week after Stonehill upset Merrimack, Lindenwood \u2013 a team with six wins last season \u2013 split with Wisconsin, a 4-2 win Friday and a 3-2 overtime loss Saturday. The Lions didn\u2019t trail in that series and only lost when Daniel Laatsch scored the game-winner with 18 seconds to spare in OT.<\/p>\n

On the other end of the PairWise spectrum (so to speak), Boston College and Michigan State split a pair of games in Munn Ice Arena, with each team exploding for three second-period goals in its win: 3-0 for BC on Friday, 4-3 for the Spartans Saturday.<\/p>\n

There were 16 games decided by a single goal and four OT ties, several come-from-behind wins, and some other notable results, like Omaha beating Minnesota 2-1 in overtime for the Ice Breaker title and Merrimack shutting out Minnesota State 1-0.<\/p>\n

Is this an early harbinger of a season that will produce many surprises and upsets? Is this a sign of some teams \u2013 from up and down conference standings \u2013 starting where they left off at the end of 2024-25? Or is it too early to make much of anything here?<\/p>\n

Dan: <\/strong>Based on the child-based crash emanating from the other side of the wall, talking about college hockey is exactly where I’d like to be right about now, so welcome back to another wonderful season where you and I get to play hooky from our responsibilities while we talk about the best and fastest game on Earth.<\/p>\n

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I admittedly think it’s still way too early to make some predictions about the entire season, but the results this weekend forced me to check the national scoreboard a little more frequently than I fully expected. The dreaded parity word – the one that we’ve all come to both respect and abhor – played itself out in too many different ways. I know, for example, that I didn’t expect Rensselaer to drop 14 goals on Canisius across two games, and I certainly didn’t expect my Bentley Falcons to take New Hampshire to overtime one week after badgering a UMass team that went to overtime against Omaha in this week’s IceBreaker first round. That’s not to say anything about AIC taking Ohio State to overtime and a shootout after losing a 6-0 score to Maine in the first weekend.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Fiddling with expectations is a big part of what we do over the course of the season, but it’s also pretty difficult to simply write off or salt away the first couple of weekends when we know that the race to the national championship is already starting for Pairwise bubble teams. One thing we don’t know is who exactly that impacts, but there are far too many teams that face the end of their season because they dropped an unexpected loss or tie in October. One point here, two points there…they make a difference in conference races, and while there’s a tendency to laugh about the Pairwise (Union was No. 2 this weekend and Stonehill outranked Boston College on Saturday morning), the “don’t look at the standings until February” mentality shouldn’t and doesn’t permeate coaches and players who are increasingly emphasizing the need to win games at the start of the year.<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n
Bottom line: don’t sweat results that occur in October but absolutely sweat results that occur in October.<\/div>\n
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But back to your original point about the CHL because Ed and Jim did a fantastic job outlining the overall vote and its upcoming impact on college hockey’s future. In particular, they talked about roster sizes and the “blue chip” aspect of players matriculating into college hockey – as well as how it could expand the game. I’m going to look at this a different way because I think this is an unintended impact of NIL’s overall takeover. I’ve spoken with too many coaches who talk about how NIL isn’t going away and how we’re seeing it “seep” into college hockey, and I’m getting pretty tired of looking at it as a future thing. As we’re seeing the wall crumble between college hockey and NIL, where do you stand on this as an overall impact because I have a hard time wrapping my head around the fact that the biggest difference between amateurism and professionalism is no longer valid? And what, pray tell, is college hockey going to look like in five years as players from the CHL make their way south?<\/div>\n
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Paula: <\/strong>As someone living at a latitude nearly identical to Niagara Falls, Ont., and about 78 miles northwest of Windsor, Ont., I think it\u2019s cute that you see Canada a strictly northern proposition, Dan.<\/p>\n

I\u2019m also an easy drive between two Ontario Hockey League teams that play right here in Michigan, the Saginaw Spirit and the Flint Firebirds.<\/p>\n

All chiding aside, that geographic perspective that echoes a kind of Canadian invasion is a fascinating metaphor for this moment in college hockey. There is a two-camps mentality at play here that I fall victim too as well, but I\u2019m not sure that an either-or model holds up to scrutiny.<\/p>\n

Players in the major juniors are still college-aged kids, and I don\u2019t think that giving them NCAA eligibility differs much from the way current NCAA players are allowed to be drafted and remain NCAA eligible.<\/p>\n

Yeah, I know that players in the major juniors are playing professional hockey \u2013 but they\u2019re not getting rich doing so, and in many cases, they\u2019re not being developed well. The Canadian major junior leagues have histories of lying to players about pay, bonuses, and reimbursement for college tuition should they forego the NCAA route for the major juniors.<\/p>\n

I really dislike seeing people \u2013 especially young people \u2013 exploited for the profit of others.<\/p>\n

That is why I\u2019m fully behind the NIL. I understand the relationship between big collegiate sports programs like football and how smaller programs (fencing, wrestling) are funded, but exploiting student-athletes to do so is wrong.<\/p>\n

There are too many people profiting from the play of young athletes \u2013 in the NCAA, in major junior hockey \u2013 who are not the athletes themselves. That\u2019s what it really comes down to for me.<\/p>\n

One potential area of worry for me is the continued manipulation of players who come to the NCAA from major junior hockey. These are players who will have had greater exposure to all of the people who want to exploit their careers. Not only will those individual student-athletes need protection from such exploitation, but so will the programs they enter.<\/p>\n

The lines between amateur and professional are already blurred in sports in so many ways, and as an old lady, I\u2019m surprised by how little that bothers me. What does trouble me is money. From betting culture to access, there are too many ways in which sports culture can be corrupted to profit individuals at the expense of collegiate players.<\/p>\n

There\u2019s more to this in my mind, too, but I\u2019m still working to articulate it accurately. I\u2019m not sure this I followed the way you were steering things, Dan, but that\u2019s where I went.<\/p>\n

Dan:<\/strong> That’s an interesting take. I’m not really sure where I was heading with this, but I really like the idea of hashing out the CHL vote in the framework of the kids’ ages. Also, for the record, anything west of the 128-Mass Pike interchange for a Boston-area guy is New York. The fact that I moved outside that exit and live in the same county as where I grew up – with its multiple orange line MBTA stops – made me recalibrate my whole geographic orientation in Massachusetts.<\/p>\n

\n

Shoutout the 24 people reading this who understood that sentence… also shoutout the Big Ten and NCHC fans who just imploded at me waxing poetic over New England in the fall.<\/p>\n

Like you, I support NIL under its pretense while also harboring fear of exploitation of a system that feels a bit like the Wild West. I maintain that hockey is more unique because its NIL has to be viewed within a separate construct. A multitude of schools that aren’t Division I have enormous hockey programs while other schools with\u00a0smaller D-I athletics departments play this particular sport at an incredibly high level. That’s all aside from the power conference schools that have full-blown, high-powered collectives capable of doling out much higher numerical values for its revenue-rich sports.<\/div>\n
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I don’t want that lost in my snarky commentary about the difference between the illusion of amateurism or professionalism. In the end, more hockey players can’t be a bad thing, but I still have such a hard time fully grasping that college athletes might make more money than CHL athletes that were paid lower-end stipends despite playing “professionally.” It’s almost comical to me that it got to that point, and it’s funnier still that there’s a conversation about what happens when we break down the walls. Sometimes I feel like I’m in the early 1900s and the American League and National League won’t play each other because one side is considered superior to the other.<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n
I don’t know. This whole thing is just strange, and we’ll never quite know its full impact because of additional money allotted through cost-of-attendance or anything else. It’s just wild that we’ve finally gotten to this point.<\/div>\n
<\/div>\n
As we get rolling here into late October, what’s on the menu for you in the next coming weeks for events and tournaments or conference openers? Any games of note that you’re circling on your calendar?<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Paula: <\/strong>I hear you, Dan. It\u2019s a weird new landscape that we\u2019re navigating. So much has changed in recent years \u2013 the COVID eligibility, the portal, NIL, now the prospect of major junior players \u2013 and it\u2019s quite dizzying.<\/p>\n

One more thing before I leave this topic altogether. I\u2019ve been hearing the term \u201cblue bloods\u201d bandied about, with Ohio State coach Steve Rohlik talking about it a little on the record last week and whispers about the term in other places.<\/p>\n

I\u2019ve never liked the idea of the \u201celites\u201d in college hockey, the implication that some programs are better because of something inherent to their identity rather than to certain very real circumstances, and the term \u201cblue bloods\u201d kind of shakes me. From covering the old CCHA, I remember the disparity among big name and lesser-known programs within the same conference. While some programs in our tenure of covering DI hockey have remained perennial powerhouses, programs wax and wane \u2013 and not all schools are endowed with equal resources.<\/p>\n

That is all I\u2019ll say about that.<\/p>\n

I also want to circle back to the AIC-Ohio State series. I think that the college hockey world in general saw that as a challenge for the Yellow Jackets, but I saw it as equally challenging for the Buckeyes. I think that series alone got my brain thinking about parity.<\/p>\n

But to answer your question: there are a few series right within the conference I cover that I\u2019m anticipating pretty eagerly.<\/p>\n

Because the Big Ten is so small and there\u2019s quite a bit of nonconference play for B1G teams in the first half, what happens in December may count a lot toward March and April.<\/p>\n

I\u2019m really looking forward to the Michigan State-Minnesota series Dec. 13-14 to end the first half and then the Frozen Confines games Jan. 3-4 at Wrigley Field. I see the Spartans as national contenders this year, and I\u2019m pretty certain that Bob Motzko and his staff will have the Gophers in shape in no time, so what happens in Minneapolis in December may impact the Big Ten conference race.<\/p>\n

Six of B1G Hockey\u2019s seven teams will play a total of four games in Wrigley Field, something that will certainly draw attention to college hockey. Outdoor games that count are always interesting, so there\u2019s that.<\/p>\n

One single game that I\u2019m looking forward to is Michigan State vs. Michigan Feb. 8 at Little Caesars Arena. I don\u2019t think that people outside of the area where I live understand how big a deal this game is between the Spartans and Wolverines on NHL ice. Even before Michigan State began its rebuild, this game routinely drew enormous crowds, often selling out. It\u2019s an event \u2013 and it\u2019s a more meaningful one now because of the excellent work that Adam Nightingale and his staff have done at MSU.<\/p>\n

Down the stretch, too, Ohio State has a chance to play spoiler as the Buckeyes end their season with series against Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan.<\/p>\n

How about you? What are you looking forward to?<\/p>\n

Dan: <\/strong>You know, I’m going to go off the board here because I genuinely enjoy the simplest form of tradition. For me, it’s the same thing week-in and week-out, so getting that cup of coffee before a broadcast is one of those things that I miss when I’m not at the rink. I live for the postgame meet-up and the decompression in equipment rooms, and grabbing that caffeinated beverage in between periods or ahead of the opening puck drop cleanses my soul from the outside world. I know it’s cliche, but I feel like I’m home when I do it, like the year never really ended even as it’s starting anew.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n

<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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