Re: The Great Eight
Re: The Great Eight
There is no question moving the first and second rounds to campus sites and making them multiple game series, like were done back in the '80's, will favor the higher seed (home team). I think the percentage of time the host team advanced to the next round, both under the total goals and the best 2 of 3 formats, was something in the neighborhood of .780 from the '81 tournament through the '91 tournament. Under the "neutral" regional format (first, east and west regional, ultimately 4 regionals), the higher seed advances just over 60% of the time.
Is that good or bad? I think reasonable arguments can be made for both. It certainly adds a sense of randomness to the tournament, and makes the underdog story more likely. But does that make the tournament "better"?
In my opinion, the move to 16 teams, coupled with a move away from home campus games, has diluted the quality of the hockey games we see at the Frozen Four, although it has certainly opened up opportunities for championships to a broader selection of teams.
Since going to the 16 team format (13 seasons), all of which have used the 4 neutral site regionals, the average margin for victory in the Frozen Four games, and in the championship game as been around 2.5 goals. There have also been a total of 4 overtime games in the Frozen Four under that format.
You go back the previous 20 years or so to about the time HE was formed, and when there were only 8 teams, and then 12 teams in the tournament, with games played on campus for a period of time, the average margin of victory was closer to 2 goals per game, and in the championship game it was even lower, down around 1.9 goals per game. And that includes the absurd 8 goal margin in the '94 championship game. You take that out and it's 1.5 goals a game. That's a goal per game difference in the championship game. We also had 17 overtime games in those years in the Frozen Four. That's about 1 per year.
I'm not saying it's necessarily worse to see one of the last 3 or 4 teams in the tournament end up winning it. But I do think the quality of the product we get to see has been diluted somewhat.
Re: The Great Eight
There is no question moving the first and second rounds to campus sites and making them multiple game series, like were done back in the '80's, will favor the higher seed (home team). I think the percentage of time the host team advanced to the next round, both under the total goals and the best 2 of 3 formats, was something in the neighborhood of .780 from the '81 tournament through the '91 tournament. Under the "neutral" regional format (first, east and west regional, ultimately 4 regionals), the higher seed advances just over 60% of the time.
Is that good or bad? I think reasonable arguments can be made for both. It certainly adds a sense of randomness to the tournament, and makes the underdog story more likely. But does that make the tournament "better"?
In my opinion, the move to 16 teams, coupled with a move away from home campus games, has diluted the quality of the hockey games we see at the Frozen Four, although it has certainly opened up opportunities for championships to a broader selection of teams.
Since going to the 16 team format (13 seasons), all of which have used the 4 neutral site regionals, the average margin for victory in the Frozen Four games, and in the championship game as been around 2.5 goals. There have also been a total of 4 overtime games in the Frozen Four under that format.
You go back the previous 20 years or so to about the time HE was formed, and when there were only 8 teams, and then 12 teams in the tournament, with games played on campus for a period of time, the average margin of victory was closer to 2 goals per game, and in the championship game it was even lower, down around 1.9 goals per game. And that includes the absurd 8 goal margin in the '94 championship game. You take that out and it's 1.5 goals a game. That's a goal per game difference in the championship game. We also had 17 overtime games in those years in the Frozen Four. That's about 1 per year.
I'm not saying it's necessarily worse to see one of the last 3 or 4 teams in the tournament end up winning it. But I do think the quality of the product we get to see has been diluted somewhat.