Caustic Undertow
Don't read this message. Really.
Re: More proof that the Regional system is a disaster: Today's attendance at the X is
How would the NCAA tournament have looked this year if the games were played at home arenas instead of regionals? Let's compare. Assumptions used here: First round on the first weekend (just past). Second round next weekend (March 30 and/or 31). Prices are assumed to be reasonable, instead of outrageous like they were in St. Paul; not illogical since if you divide the price in half for a single day at St. Paul, as you are dividing the games in half, you arrive at a reasonable price.
All attendance figures are educated guesses.
Day 1:
Cornell at Michigan: 6500
Denver at Ferris State: 2500
Day 2: Cornell at Ferris State: 2500
Total: 11,500
Ferris hosts twice at its tin can of a rink (mind you, the place is really hostile when the fans are into things) and still the Resch is destroyed here.
Day 1:
MSU at Union: 2500
Lowell at Miami: 3600
Day 2:
Miami at Union: 2500
Total: 8600
There were a lot of empty seats at this regional, but given the fanbases that were close and the distance for the others it wasn't bad. Keep in mind that Union and Miami, the two hypothetical hosts, are two of those "low-capacity" worst-case-scenarios that everyone thinks completely destroys this idea, and still give away only 2000 fans here.
Day 1:
Western at North Dakota: 11,500*
BU at Minnesota: 9700 (and how cool is this matchup on campus)
Day 2:
Minnesota at North Dakota: 11,500* (and the Ralph would never be louder)
Total: 32,700 very happy fans.
You want ESPN to put NCAA hockey games on television? Give them environments like this, instead of the Resch.
*Assuming NCAA embargos weren't in effect. This is all hypothetical anyway. Lawson would be rocking for a playoff game, though.
Day 1:
Air Force at BC: 4500
Maine at UMD: 6500
Day 2:
UMD at BC: 5500
Total: 16,500
BC attendance is tough to guess, perhaps some Easterners can help me here. I know they have some attendance trouble, hard for me to tell how much they'll sell for playoff games with a week's notice each. I could be undervaluing.
12 Game total: 69,300.
This is kind of the doomsday situation people who are concerned about small arenas describe; Union, with a capacity of 2500, hosts two games. Ferris, capacity 2457, hosts two games. BC, fickle attendance, hosts two games. Wisconsin, the highest-drawing home team in the sport, doesn't make the tournament.
The home sites will draw more fans. It's not close.
You can argue that this is guesswork, and you would be correct. But these are educated guesses. We're not talking about margin of error; we're discussing an estimated difference of 21,300 fans.
Play the games at home sites.
How would the NCAA tournament have looked this year if the games were played at home arenas instead of regionals? Let's compare. Assumptions used here: First round on the first weekend (just past). Second round next weekend (March 30 and/or 31). Prices are assumed to be reasonable, instead of outrageous like they were in St. Paul; not illogical since if you divide the price in half for a single day at St. Paul, as you are dividing the games in half, you arrive at a reasonable price.
All attendance figures are educated guesses.
Updated attendance numbers:
Green Bay
3465 / 8709 40%
3108 / 8709 36%
6573 / 17418 38%
Day 1:
Cornell at Michigan: 6500
Denver at Ferris State: 2500
Day 2: Cornell at Ferris State: 2500
Total: 11,500
Ferris hosts twice at its tin can of a rink (mind you, the place is really hostile when the fans are into things) and still the Resch is destroyed here.
Bridgeport
5090 / 8412 61%
5328 / 8412 63%
10418 / 16824 62%
Day 1:
MSU at Union: 2500
Lowell at Miami: 3600
Day 2:
Miami at Union: 2500
Total: 8600
There were a lot of empty seats at this regional, but given the fanbases that were close and the distance for the others it wasn't bad. Keep in mind that Union and Miami, the two hypothetical hosts, are two of those "low-capacity" worst-case-scenarios that everyone thinks completely destroys this idea, and still give away only 2000 fans here.
St Paul
9386 / 18064 52%
10794 / 18064 60%
20180 / 36128 56%
Day 1:
Western at North Dakota: 11,500*
BU at Minnesota: 9700 (and how cool is this matchup on campus)
Day 2:
Minnesota at North Dakota: 11,500* (and the Ralph would never be louder)
Total: 32,700 very happy fans.
You want ESPN to put NCAA hockey games on television? Give them environments like this, instead of the Resch.
*Assuming NCAA embargos weren't in effect. This is all hypothetical anyway. Lawson would be rocking for a playoff game, though.
Worcester
5925 / 12239 48%
4470 / 12239 37%
10395 / 24478 42%
Day 1:
Air Force at BC: 4500
Maine at UMD: 6500
Day 2:
UMD at BC: 5500
Total: 16,500
BC attendance is tough to guess, perhaps some Easterners can help me here. I know they have some attendance trouble, hard for me to tell how much they'll sell for playoff games with a week's notice each. I could be undervaluing.
47566 / 94848 50%
12 Game total: 69,300.
This is kind of the doomsday situation people who are concerned about small arenas describe; Union, with a capacity of 2500, hosts two games. Ferris, capacity 2457, hosts two games. BC, fickle attendance, hosts two games. Wisconsin, the highest-drawing home team in the sport, doesn't make the tournament.
The home sites will draw more fans. It's not close.
You can argue that this is guesswork, and you would be correct. But these are educated guesses. We're not talking about margin of error; we're discussing an estimated difference of 21,300 fans.
Play the games at home sites.