Ralph Slate
Registered User
I'm hoping someone here can help me out. I'm trying to compile yearly ECAC D2 and D3 records. Unfortunately, the ECAC media guides stopped including D2 and D3 starting with the 1997-98 edition (not sure if they released a separate D3 media guide starting that year).
Prior to that, the East/West/SUNY were grouped together in the guide in one section, and North/Central/South were grouped together in another section. I think it was sort-of a tip of the hat to when there was a D2 comprised of East/West and a D3 comprised of North/South.
Can someone tell me if the SUNY teams are still known as ECAC-SUNY? If not, was there a year where they formally withdrew from the ECAC?
During the 80's, some schools were technically part of NESCAC, but were primarily considered part of the ECAC. Colleges like Middlebury, Williams, etc. I see no mention of those colleges on the ECAC website -- was there a year when they formally withdrew from the ECAC?
Same question goes for the MASCAC.
I know that all the conferences are technically considered D3 now, starting in the early 90's, but at least until 1996-97 they were still separated as I described above - can someone tell me if they are still viewed in their old groupings, with East/West as sort-of the "stronger" D3 teams, the equivalent of the old D2, and Northeast as the "weaker" D3 teams, the equivalent of the old D3? Or would people consider the NESCAC the heir to the D2 legacy? Or do people just see the various ECAC conferences, plus NESCAC and MASCAC as all separate and distinct D3 conferences, no more groupings the way the ECAC used to group?
Thanks for the help.
Ralph Slate
Prior to that, the East/West/SUNY were grouped together in the guide in one section, and North/Central/South were grouped together in another section. I think it was sort-of a tip of the hat to when there was a D2 comprised of East/West and a D3 comprised of North/South.
Can someone tell me if the SUNY teams are still known as ECAC-SUNY? If not, was there a year where they formally withdrew from the ECAC?
During the 80's, some schools were technically part of NESCAC, but were primarily considered part of the ECAC. Colleges like Middlebury, Williams, etc. I see no mention of those colleges on the ECAC website -- was there a year when they formally withdrew from the ECAC?
Same question goes for the MASCAC.
I know that all the conferences are technically considered D3 now, starting in the early 90's, but at least until 1996-97 they were still separated as I described above - can someone tell me if they are still viewed in their old groupings, with East/West as sort-of the "stronger" D3 teams, the equivalent of the old D2, and Northeast as the "weaker" D3 teams, the equivalent of the old D3? Or would people consider the NESCAC the heir to the D2 legacy? Or do people just see the various ECAC conferences, plus NESCAC and MASCAC as all separate and distinct D3 conferences, no more groupings the way the ECAC used to group?
Thanks for the help.
Ralph Slate