Re: More proof that the Regional system is a disaster: Today's attendance at the X is
I submit that the attendance at these regionals is actually pretty good. The notion that that they are poorly attended defies logic when you look at the numbers with your eyes instead of your hearts.
Here is the average home attendance of the 16 NCAA tournament teams (few of whom play to 100% capacity):
North Dakota 11,634
Minnesota 9,539
Boston College 7,549
Minnesota-Duluth 6,328
Maine 6,182
Michigan 5,997
Michigan State 5,364
Denver 5,359
Boston U. 4,963
UMass-Lowell 4,904
Cornell 4,238
Western Michigan 3,444
Miami 3,021
Air Force 2,483
Union 2,009
Ferris State 1,947
Where are all the butts in seats at these regionals? I submit that they are there, based on this list.
The participating team's home attendance average, total, for each of the 4 regionals:
Worcester 22,542
St Paul 29,580
Bridgeport 15,298
Green Bay 17,541
What percentage of these fanbases are going to make a trip to one of the regional locations and pay the ticket prices charged to see their teams besides all the other ancillary expense? I don't think regional attendance looks bad or out of whack at all based on these numbers. In fact, it looks pretty good to me.
Teams like Union don't have much of a fan base to bring. They can't even sell out an arena, consistently, that seats 2,225 people! Or Ferris State, that plays to about 78% capacity in a building seating 2,493?
Everybody posting about this here seems to live in some fantasyland where all sorts of fans of these teams (and college hockey in general) exist in numbers far beyond the reality of the situation. Further, if you move these games back to on-campus sites into the puny arenas most of these teams play in, the home team has home field advantage and the fans of the opposing team that want to come get shut out of doing so, too.
I do have a problem with the site selection not being very fan friendly and the dissemination of the teams to specific regionals but I don't think much can be done about the attendance unless you could somehow chose regional sites after you knew the 16 team field, which isn't logistically possible, or, increase the following of college hockey teams and college hockey in general. To give you an idea of the scope of that problem, using UNO as an example, the Omaha World Herald covered no aspect of the WCHA tournament after UNO was out of it and has hardly covered the NCAA hockey tournament at all.
I think this situation is what it is. Lowering ticket prices isn't going to create a fanbase that isn't there in the first place. You could supply free tickets and I don't know what impact that would have given the other costs associated with going to a regional that is far away. And, you'd have to have somebody that wants the free tickets to give them to in the first place. I think the people that want to be at these regionals are, by and large, there.