Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
The biggest problem is potentially that conference affiliation requirement for a team to play up in D-1 once they end the moratorium. Now that we've realigned the conferences with 12 teams each, I don't see them expanding for a very long time.
You'd need at least three Canadian schools that wanted to make the D-1 jump along with the two Alaska schools just to think about starting a conference.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by 4four4 View PostIf by chance Canada has two to three D2 college programs who want to play D1 hockey they should go to the NCAA as a group and ask for them to reconsider the bylaws.
I believe the threshhold is now 50 participating programs to including a divisional championship for an existing sport. We are, obviously, nowhere near that, even if you kick all (and I mean all) of the play-up institutions back to their all-sport divisions.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by bigmrg74 View PostI sure hope so, it would be pretty dang asinine for the NCAA to not allow D2 schools to have D1 Hockey if they chose to have the sport.
Anything can happen but if they did it that way the would have a better chance of playing up.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by MikeAnderson View PostNot before July 1, 2011 at the absolute earliest.
Pure speculation: The "play-up" option will go away* except for the low-participation sports: ice hockey, field hockey, m/w lacrosse, swimming and diving.
Sports like rifle, skiing, water polo, men's volleyball, bowling, etc. are non-divisional, so they don't really count.
* With existing programs being grandfathered in, of course.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by bigmrg74 View PostSo, they're not going to let any more D2 schools be able to start up a D1 hockey program?? That blows chunks!!!
Pure speculation: The "play-up" option will go away* except for the low-participation sports: ice hockey, field hockey, m/w lacrosse, swimming and diving.
Sports like rifle, skiing, water polo, men's volleyball, bowling, etc. are non-divisional, so they don't really count.
* With existing programs being grandfathered in, of course.Last edited by MikeAnderson; 07-15-2009, 01:35 PM.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by bigmrg74 View PostSo, they're not going to let any more D2 schools be able to start up a D1 hockey program?? That blows chunks!!!
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Posted this over @ the D-II/III forum
Membership panel confirms policies for Canadian applicants
Jul 13, 2009 9:22:32 AM
By Gary Brown
The NCAA News
In addition to determining the status of institutions progressing through the membership process, the Division II Membership Committee approved a policy requiring Canadian institutions applying for Division II membership to follow NCAA rules in all varsity sports, even those for which an NCAA championship is not offered.
The issue pertains primarily to ice hockey, for which Division II does not offer a championship but which many Canadian institutions sponsor. Current NCAA legislation (Constitution 3.2.4.4) applies NCAA bylaws and other legislation to any sport the institution sponsors as “varsity.”
At least one Canadian school considering NCAA membership has asked whether its men’s ice hockey program would be subject to NCAA requirements even though there isn’t a Division II championship and there currently is no opportunity for a Canadian institution to sponsor a sport at the NCAA Division I level.
The Membership Committee reviewed the matter but eventually agreed that any sport classified as varsity must meet the rules and regulations of that division regardless of whether that sport has access to an NCAA championship.
The action became necessary when the Division II membership at the 2008 Convention facilitated NCAA membership from Canadian schools. Division II is the only division to have taken advantage of an NCAA Executive Committee-approved pilot program to consider four-year Canadian institutions as potential NCAA members.
Simon Fraser, located in Burnaby, British Columbia, officially applied for Division II membership this year and will enter year one of the candidacy period September 1. Simon Fraser does not sponsor ice hockey.
The Membership Committee also approved another matter pertaining to prospective Canadian members, which is when and under what circumstances Canadian institutions are required to convert their financial figures to United States dollars to confirm whether those institutions are complying with Title IX and EADA reporting requirements.
Committee members voted to require Canadian institutions to convert their expenditures from Canadian to United States dollars on May 1 (using the conversion rate published by the United States Treasury) for the purpose of reporting expenditures on their athletics teams.
In other action at the Membership Committee’s July 7-9 meeting, members:
•Noted that the deadline for applications from prospective member institutions will change over the next two years. The usual June 1 deadline will be in place for 2010 but will change to December 1 afterward. That allows for two deadlines in 2010 (June 1 and December 1), and the Membership Committee will review applications at its July 2010 and February 2011 meetings.
•Voted to require institutions in the membership process to file applications and annual reports electronically in addition to submitting a hard copy to the national office.
•Approved a request from Hawaii-Hilo to waive the two-year reclassification period for moving its baseball team from Division I to Division II.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by joecct View PostSFU won't have Title IX either, but being in Canada, they probably have a ton more equality regs to comply with.
If one of the Canadian schools takes the NCAA to court (or vice versa), where do they go?
as for a Canadian university taking the NCAA to court, somebody would need to go find a lawyer for that one.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by busterman62 View PostAnyone care to wager how long it will take for the NC$$ to rule this nickname as "hostile and abusive?"
If one of the Canadian schools takes the NCAA to court (or vice versa), where do they go?
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by Happy View PostWhen I want to see a Canadian school play ncaa, I just watch Denver.
Denver has only eight Canadians this year, less than 1/3 of the roster.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
As an alumnus of a GNAC-affiliated university, this has been talked about for a while now, although the consensus rumor was the UBC (U. of British Columbia) would join Simon Fraser in applying for membership.
The GNAC recently lost Seattle U. to D-1, so having a school up the road in Vancouver makes sense geographically.
Personally, I'm looking forward to it. I say let 'em play.
Originally posted by Bruce Ciskie View PostUm, guys...
Simon Fraser doesn't offer hockey as a varsity sport. If we're going to test the "play-up" moratorium for a hockey program, it's going to have to be a different school.
I'm interested, though, to see if anyone follows SFU.
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Re: Canadian College into NCAA Div 2
Originally posted by Puck Swami View PostGreat for SFU.
Would love to see more Canadian schools playing in the NCAA, and hopefully, someday in D-I. With Title IX and high start-up costs conspiring to restrict the growth of college hockey stateside, the upside of adding more hockey savvy, established programs to our sport is a compelling alternative to the no-growth, (and some might say decline) of the college game.
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