Re: What if the Committee Decides to Makes Changes to the Tournament Design?
Note that the neutral site system hasn't fixed this. Not forgetting there is a genuine difference between home ice and home crowd. But unearned home cooking reared its head over the weekend. The NCAA succumbed to the temptation to place PC in Providence, and the home folk helped get the bottom seed to the Frozen Four. I don't mean to disrespect the great effort put forth by the Friars. But why are we tolerating all of the disadvantages of the neutral site system if it doesn't eliminate the problem of unearned home crowd advantage?
EDIT: The local university would undoubtedly inherit most or all of the administrative duties of holding the event. The "hosting away from home" idea is that the location would be convenient to the highest seed, but would satisfy the desire to keep the game off the higher seed's campus. Tweaking the current system in this way would allow a number of great hockey buildings back into the mix for regional play. Right now they're blackballed because they're on somebody's campus...
There are quite a few such examples, but the one you've named is probably the most notorious.The neutral sites were intended to prevent situations like 1998, where UND was a top seed but had to go to Yost to play the regional, where Michigan also happened to be placed. That's not the only example, obviously, but it was one of them.
Note that the neutral site system hasn't fixed this. Not forgetting there is a genuine difference between home ice and home crowd. But unearned home cooking reared its head over the weekend. The NCAA succumbed to the temptation to place PC in Providence, and the home folk helped get the bottom seed to the Frozen Four. I don't mean to disrespect the great effort put forth by the Friars. But why are we tolerating all of the disadvantages of the neutral site system if it doesn't eliminate the problem of unearned home crowd advantage?
I've considered this, and think it would genuinely help, at least in the West. As one example, I think a number of schools not named Michigan would do OK hosting at Yost. Another example, though not a perfect analogy: Many years ago UMD hosted a home WCHA playoff series against UND at the Gophers' home rink because the DECC was unavailable. They got a solid turnout at the gate. It can work. But if the goals of maximizing attendance, atmosphere and revenue are important, the results would fall well short of letting the top 8 teams host on campus.FWIW, basketball regionals can be done at campus sites, but are never allowed to be "home games" until the Final Four. They theoretically could do the same thing, although I'm not sure how much attendance would be affected...
EDIT: The local university would undoubtedly inherit most or all of the administrative duties of holding the event. The "hosting away from home" idea is that the location would be convenient to the highest seed, but would satisfy the desire to keep the game off the higher seed's campus. Tweaking the current system in this way would allow a number of great hockey buildings back into the mix for regional play. Right now they're blackballed because they're on somebody's campus...
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