Re: ASU Hockey
Never heard this.
. I figured the NCHC, but they allegedly have eyes on some AHA schools.
Never heard this.
. I figured the NCHC, but they allegedly have eyes on some AHA schools.
Never heard this.
It's merely a rumor as of now; I found out about it this weekend from a known name in the business. 4 schools. Canisius, Mercyhurst, RIT, and I forget the 4th (might have been Niagara). It's a scholarship limit thing. They want more scholarships, AHA doesn't.
I was unaware of the 2 year indie plan with ASU, but given all the particulars of joining a conference (scheduling being one of them), and it being this late in the year, next season being indie makes sense. Join in 2017-18.
Sidebar: Can RIT offer scholarships? I thought they came in after any new D-III play-ups were told that they can't offer them...
From my limited understanding, and this came from another poster on GPL, AHA limits teams to 12 scholarships, the 4 schools in question want 18. I am not very familiar with eastern hockey and their practices. Just reporting what I heard this weekend. If anyone can offer more info, please do. Given the developments over the past couple of years, college hockey is in a very strange place right now. I cannot discount anything at this point.
RIT and Union still can't as far as I know.
RIT does not offer scholarships currently. Atlantic hockey has been phasing in additional scholarships. Currently at 15
It's merely a rumor as of now; I found out about it this weekend from a known name in the business. 4 schools. Canisius, Mercyhurst, RIT, and I forget the 4th (might have been Niagara). It's a scholarship limit thing. They want more scholarships, AHA doesn't.
I was unaware of the 2 year indie plan with ASU, but given all the particulars of joining a conference (scheduling being one of them), and it being this late in the year, next season being indie makes sense. Join in 2017-18.
So if they left the conference, they COULD offer scholarships? The people I were with were wondering why THESE particular schools were named...and the scholarships would explain it.
RIT may want the higher profile... they have a different dynamic where they are VERY locally popular. That doesn't change that RIT can't offer scholarships.
To be perfectly clear, this isn't a conference regulation but a D-III regulation. RIT cannot offer hockey scholarships and continue to participate in Division III athletics in the rest of its sports.
Maybe RIT is looking to move its entire athletic program up to D-II or D-I?
NMU had a similar issue happen when the WCHA accepted UAH as their 10th. NMU had a non-conference agreement with UAH for home and home series over two years. The second year fell into the first year of UAH's membership in the WCHA. NMU and UAH agreed to delay their non-conference game until last year, when they only played each other twice in league play.Not sure when the schedule will come out and have only heard about the three-year deal with Bemidji State. We go back there next year and then they are out in Tempe/Phoenix the following season. But we are playing a full D-1 schedule according to reports, so it will be interesting how they fit it all in prior to the start of conference playoffs.
I think the two year independent seems to be the norm for new teams.It's merely a rumor as of now; I found out about it this weekend from a known name in the business. 4 schools. Canisius, Mercyhurst, RIT, and I forget the 4th (might have been Niagara). It's a scholarship limit thing. They want more scholarships, AHA doesn't.
I was unaware of the 2 year indie plan with ASU, but given all the particulars of joining a conference (scheduling being one of them), and it being this late in the year, next season being indie makes sense. Join in 2017-18.
I think the two year independent seems to be the norm for new teams.
SCSU - Played three years independent as D-1 before joining WCHA (but I believe had a scheduling agreement with all WCHA teams).
Niagara - Played two years independent as D-1 before joining AHA.
Mankato - Played three years independent as D-1 before joining WCHA (again, I recall them having an agreement with the WCHA also).
Nebraska Omaha - Played one year as independent D-1 before applying to the CCHA associate member the following year then being granted full membership.
Sacred Heart - Played six years as independent D-1 before joining MAAC.
Penn State - Played two years as independent D-1 before imploding college hockey... err... joining B1G.
It all depends on the school and any scheduling commitments that they can set up. It does appear that the recent trend has been to have some league in mind, play a couple years to get your feet wet, and hit the ground running.
And the AHA defection rumor has been around, I do trust your source even though mine have not seen the same smoke signals being sent. Always had an inkling that the CCHA would return. I still feel that three MAC schools will head up the return of the CCHA.
Wouldn't it be something if this actually came about it some way, shape, or form? Talk about a shakeup....
Not if.......when. The current model of conferences isn't sustainable. Question is, will ASU be the catalyst towards a more sensible layout?