blackswampboy
New member
Re: WCHA 2015-16: So here's what we think that we know...
#GoChargers #EatTheNachos
The WCHA
#GoChargers #EatTheNachos
The WCHA
#GoChargers #EatTheNachos
The WCHA
The league has to start looking at this issue. I don't want a return to a whole slew of '80s era 9-7 games, but what we're selling now is not an appealing product.
I don't know if this is good or bad, but the one league that seems to feature scoring right now is the Big 10
From the fans' perspective, wouldn't they prefer 9-7 than 2-1?
And the Big Ten plays by the same rules as the WCHA. They simply have the ability to attract more high end offensive talent.The league has to start looking at this issue. I don't want a return to a whole slew of '80s era 9-7 games, but what we're selling now is not an appealing product.
I don't know if this is good or bad, but the one league that seems to feature scoring right now is the Big 10
Here's the Week 11 BELOW ratings: http://blog.wchaplayoffs.com/2015/12/18/week-11-below-ratings/
It's a slow week on the ISS, so I've gotten a lot done the last two nights. We'll see how things go — lots of console shifts between now and the 5th of January (12 to be exact).
GFM
This will come in very handy in the quest to take down that rascally Nacho Miami Stater who has been leading the WCHA Pick 'Em since week 1.
Information is power. Carry on.
Not just that, but since the 80s-90s, goalies in general have become a lot bigger and more athletic, and stronger defensive systems have developed. I think that's what's really knocked down the scoring from the earlier time period. I would like to see the size of goalie pads reduced as a prime way to get scoring up a little. With all the technology we have, that shouldn't be a problem while still keeping goalie safety in mind. Calling more interference penalties would help some, but it can be difficult to get all the officials to be consistent with doing that to the ire of the coaches and players.And the Big Ten plays by the same rules as the WCHA. They simply have the ability to attract more high end offensive talent.
And the Big Ten plays by the same rules as the WCHA. They simply have the ability to attract more high end offensive talent.
Yes, but it's not clear to me that the officiating in the WCHA is willing to call obstruction and interference. I don't think that you need reduced goalie pads or even vastly better talent to get us back above 6.0 G/GM combined — I think that you just need to treat these infractions as seriously as you do the emphasis on majors.
GFM
I guess I'm more pessimistic in that I think it'll end up like CFB, called to point that anything resembling a CFB was called and it ruined games and players started to play for the penalty (i.e. constantly kept their backs away from the boards).The bad part would be the the transition period where the games just get awful and chopped up with way too much special teams time. Not sure how fast players would properly react to enforcement but I do agree. The problem to me is that its a bit of a chick little issue. They've probably talked big about enforcing those rules on and off for a decade and keep falling back to "letting them play" rather quickly.
So back to overtime things, and this is related to the BELOW project I'm working on:
If we're going to modify the 2-0-1 format for points distribution, I think that there are two reasonable alternatives:
W-OTW-T/OTL-L 3-2-1-0. This encourages teams to go for the win in overtime, as the extra point is valuable.
W-OTW-T-OTL-L 4-3-2-1-0. I am afraid that this encourages ties, but it really encourages teams to go for it in regulation.
So I thought that I'd look at the standings as they currently are and how they'd be under each system.
Minnesota State: 9-1-4—22 | 9-0-4-1—31 | 9-0-4-0-1—44
Bowling Green: 8-2-4—20 | 7-1-4-2—27 | 7-1-4-0-2—39
Michigan Tech: 9-6-1—19 | 8-1-1-6—27 | 8-1-1-0-6—37
Ferris State: 7-7-2—16 | 6-1-4-5—24 | 6-1-2-2-5—33
Northern Michigan: 5-5-4—14 | 5-0-6-3—24 | 5-0-4-2-3—30
Alaska-Anchorage: 5-5-2—12 | 5-0-3-4—18 | 5-0-2-1-0—25
Lake Superior: 4-4-4—12 | 4-0-5-3—17 | 4-0-4-1-3—25
Bemidji State: 4-8-2—10 | 4-0-2-8—16 | 4-0-2-0-8—20
Alaska: 3-8-3—9 | 3-0-3-8—12 | 3-0-3-0-8—18
Alabama-Huntsville: 2-10-2—6 | 1-1-2-10—8 | 1-1-2-1-9—12
There aren't any changes here, but there is some more separation. I'd rather have this than tiebreakers.
Games left for WCHA teams:
16: Alaska-Anchorage, Lake Superior
14: Alabama-Huntsville, Alaska, Bemidji State, Bowling Green, Minnesota State, Northern Michigan
12: Ferris State, Michigan Tech
It's also a matter of who you play as much as how many. I noted the possibilities for the remaining 70 games on Friday, and it's pretty ugly for some schools. The same list with the number of games that team would be favored to win in parentheses:
16: Alaska-Anchorage (8), Lake Superior (0, but they're a wash with Ferris)
14: Alabama-Huntsville (0), Alaska (4), Bemidji State (10), Bowling Green (10), Minnesota State (14), Northern Michigan (10)
12: Ferris State (2 and 2 a wash with Lake), Michigan Tech (10)
Based on that, and without all the math that I have left to do undone, here's a half-guess as to the final standings:
1-MSU, 2-BGSU, 3-MTU, 4-NMU, 5-UAA, 6-FSU, 7-BSU, 8-LSSU, 9-UAF, 10-UAH
That makes Bemidji, Fairbanks, and Huntsville the big disappointments of the season so far.
This concludes Thoughts from the Midnight Shift.
GFM
The url tag.What did you fix?
GFM
The url tag.