Re: What if the Committee Decides to Makes Changes to the Tournament Design?
But help me here, I don' understand what you're saying. I don't understand the relevance of two day attendance. I thought we were only talking about the opening round. I also don't understand aggregating the capacities. If 1,000 people are shut out of a game at Quinnipiac, what good does it do if there are seats available to them in Grand Forks?
Yes, sure would, but I don't think ticket revenue would take a hit. Isn't the whole thesis of this increasing attendance? I suspect the athletic departments at some schools might get overwhelmed, and there might be some push-pull between the sites and the NCAA over revenue, since the school would probably want to treat it as another "home" game, but that could be worked out.... And even if ticket revenue takes a hit, wouldn't eliminating the costs associated with hosting off-campus usually be enough to offset that?
Not sure of the "overwhelming" but I'd say the current system doesn't work well in the west. But given the choice of pleasing the coaches and playing to the potential audience, I'd vote for the coaches. I look on college (and high school, for that matter) athletics as something that the colleges for the benefit of the college and the students that participate. If I like the result, I go; if I don't like the result I don't. I don't look on college sports as a form of produced entertainment, as pro sports and movies are. When college sports start tilting to the fans too far, you get the academic cesspool that is college football and basketball (not saying hockey is even close yet, and I'll admit I enjoy watching football, but the degree to which it's corrupted the academic mission of the colleges bothers me).You could be right. Naturally coaches will favor anything they perceive gives their team an edge, or at least cancels out a disadvantage. And if a majority of the coaches actually feel this way, that factor certainly needs to be taken into account. But other constituencies have legitimate concerns too. Including, dare I say it, ticket buying fans. Wouldn't you agree that the fans' verdict on the status quo, at least at Western sites, is an overwhelming thumbs down?
First, thanks for your research. Regarding this point I agree, but not sure where you're going with this. If you're saying that going to home rinks wouldn't hurt overall attendance, I agree. But it seems to me that large fan base that travels well might create a problem if, say, UNH has a game at Merrimack.I think there are some nuances that are being overlooked.
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- Second, you have to operate under the assumption that in the majority of cases, teams that have a large fan base that travels for the current regionals also have larger home rinks, and vice versa. This is of course not always the case, but generally speaking it is.
If you're interested in the attendance the article that I linked to in my earlier post has it.I haven't gone back to look at exact attendance numbers for each day of the past regionals. I would have assumed 5,000 a day on average. But coming closer to what you have found for 1st day attendance, let's say 5,500 a day on average for both days of the regional.
5500 a day x 2 days at each site x 4 sites = 44,000.
Using the data I posted yesterday, the smallest crowds an on-campus first round could have accommodated in the last 10 years is 42,804. That was in 2011, a year when half of the top 8 played in a rink that seated less than 3500 (MIA-3200 MER-2549 YA-3486 UNi-2225).
But help me here, I don' understand what you're saying. I don't understand the relevance of two day attendance. I thought we were only talking about the opening round. I also don't understand aggregating the capacities. If 1,000 people are shut out of a game at Quinnipiac, what good does it do if there are seats available to them in Grand Forks?
But isn't this statement based on an assumption that the bar for "serious attendance issues" is around 2,000? If so, I don't agree. pgb estimated 3,000 and I think it may be even higher, maybe 3,500 or 4,000.I don't think there would be any need to set a minimum capacity threshold. The only schools that would pose serious attendance issues are all in Atlantic Hockey; and as I said yesterday, until the formula for ranking the teams changes or Atlantic Hockey makes an incredibly large imporevement on a conference-wide scale, that just isn't going to be an issue.