gfmorris
New member
Re: Rule's Committee Recommends 4 on 4 OT, RPI to adjust for OT losses
:heavy heavy heavy sigh:
GFM
First to 2 goals wins!!!
:heavy heavy heavy sigh:
GFM
First to 2 goals wins!!!
I'm not sure that teams so much play as to win but as to not lose. I'm perhaps biased by watching a lot of WCHA games last year.
GFM
Regardless of what they "play for" they've been evenly matched. Why uneven the playing field? I'm not arguing against taking the game to 4-on-4. I'm saying if 4-on-4 is the way to go in OT to "open the ice up," then it is the way to go for the full 60.
So, this is a legitimate question cause I'm not familiar with the rules process, how does a rule change get proposed to the committee and how does it pass through? What I'm meaning is that I see peoplease blaming the B10, and I'm not sure why. Did the B10 try to ram this through and go directly even thought the coaches are overwhelmingly against it? Or is this just a case of pepole scapegoating the B10 because they are an easy target?
How about 5x5 overtime without goalies?
Sean
A committee composed of representatives from all four college hockey divisions (D-I and D-III, men's and women's) reviews the rule book every two years, and based on how games have been going, as well as things that have made the news, propose changes to the rule book. They are released for consideration and comment (usually coaches will weigh in, keyboard cowboys on here will talk about it although it doesn't have too much emphasis if any, etc.), and voted for approval in the middle of July (so nothing's been "rammed through" yet). It's not a pure "rubber stamp", either, as there have been times where rule changes were very unpopular and either limited to exhibition play or removed entirely, one big example being when they tried to enforce icing rules while a team was on the PK.
In this case, the Big Roll-a-20 truly is a scapegoat (although it's become a bit of a recurring thing on here). With the 4v4 OT, it seems like they're trying to go less towards the professional route and more towards the IIHF route, where they do use 4v4 OT and have a special point consideration for a regulation tie. Obviously they can't go pure IIHF and shun the North American style of play (after all, that's where we are), but are trying to find a good hybrid.
My solution:
1. 5x5 OT
2. Shoot-out ala NHL rules.
Conference points for standings
5 - regulation win
4 - OT win
3 - SO win
2 - SO loss
1 - OT loss
0 - regulation loss
And frankly, there's your weightings for RPI also (OT win worth 80% of regulation win; SO win worth 60% of regulation win).
IIHF shootout. Keep using the same guy for the sudden death rounds.
The NHL uses shootouts to satisfy people who can't accept a tie game.
The IIHF uses shootouts so that there are fewer ties in the standings that need to be resolved by running up the score against weaker competition
The NCAA level has neither of those concerns other than wanting to be like the other kids
And the IIHF uses the 3-2-1-0 points distribution
IIHF shootout. Keep using the same guy for the sudden death rounds.
Just don't expect birthday cards stuffed with cash.I agree; I'm arguing for changing the incentives and not the playing style. 4v4 is more free-wheeling, and I guess that's fun to watch, provided that your team has speed/hands. But yeah, why change that?
GFM <— always finds discussing with UncleRay funny since, well, his only parental sibling is a Ray...