it didn't help that some fool wrote an article that the WCHA winning all the championships and having an all WCHA finals was hurting the sport and some people jumped on that bus.
the whole idea of a championship tournament is to pit one conference against another and see how things shake out. It is the only way to measure how you are doing. If you don't like the results, IMPROVE.
Just a couple years ago UND was a doormat, now they are a national power and likely will be like the men's program, usually one of the top teams year after year.
How is it possible with a population barely over 50,000 in the middle of nowhere? The students certainly don't come for the view.
pokechecker,
Jung found that the primary American 'archetype'- roughly, what persona was most favored by the majority of respondents/test participants, was the ... an Indian ... native American ... indigenous native ... and, I believe, specifically, the Eastern Woodland Indian.
Most of us in our dreams want to have been Indians- Eastern Woodland Indians, more exactly.
Dartmouth no longer is, "The Indians". East is closed, in that respect. UND was last hold-out, say (or refuge for us).
And what better team symbol (for an, 'archetype'); the, "Fighting Sioux"?
Wow. I'm ready!
Is there a better symbol of the American Indian, say? Maybe the romance, if I have it right, of Oglala, Nez Perce, Ojibway, et al ... the words, is a part of the attraction. I think so. But is/was, I think, more rather, the life style. Free (say)!
Read, Francis Parkman even seven volumes on the people here when Europeans initially arrived:
"France and England in North America".
Thus an answer for you.
That is the American male, too- I believe (only).
As opposed to female. But no matter once the concept got 'rolling'.
No "team" in USA/Canada that I know of has a symbol for the women and a symbol for the men. Perhaps is time.
Ahem. I love women. But I wonder as to their, 'archetype'.
Do not know if on this Jung was (appropriately/smartly) mum.
Anyone?
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The East largely ignored the sport when it had a monopoly on the teams competing and that's still true to an extent. I don't see it suddenly becoming more popular in Boston should Clarkson win it all this year.
I'm not following why the East is at a disadvantage in term of recruiting and needs the playing field leveled. Many of those schools had a large head start in building reputations: Providence, UNH, Northeastern, Harvard, Brown, and Princeton to name a few. We always hear how the richest single recruiting region is Ontario in general and the GTA specifically. Over the years, eastern schools have had first pick at most of that talent, in large part due to an edge in proximity to it. Similarly, most of the best players from Quebec have stayed in the East.The notion that "It would be good for the sport if the east wins" is more about creating a more level playing field in attracting recruits, to create more balance between the various leagues.
I'm not following why the East is at a disadvantage in term of recruiting and needs the playing field leveled. Many of those schools had a large head start in building reputations: Providence, UNH, Northeastern, Harvard, Brown, and Princeton to name a few. We always hear how the richest single recruiting region is Ontario in general and the GTA specifically. Over the years, eastern schools have had first pick at most of that talent, in large part due to an edge in proximity to it. Similarly, most of the best players from Quebec have stayed in the East.
UMD rose to prominence in part due to Miller's international connections. That has lessened over time as these players have started attending a wider variety of schools. Wisconsin got a boost from Mark Johnson's Olympic fame. Minnesota'a advantage is that it is the first choice of the majority of the home-grown players. I don't see a NCAA championship by another league changing any of those to a measurable extent. North Dakota is now getting better recruits, and that certainly isn't due to any past NCAA success.
If there is something to your theory, I'd need more convincing.
True to a certain extent, but the best of the talent pool still winds up on a small number of top Eastern teams. Cornell and BC don't lose a lot of players to Union and Maine. If your argument was a major factor, then I think that the West would see similar success on the D-III side, but the exact opposite is true. There are more D-III programs than D-I in the West, but the same is true for the East, although probably not proportionately so.1 - Sure there is a great talent pool in Ontario, but there are also many more teams in the east then in the west, spreading the talent pool out over a larger set of teams. A greater number of teams leads to more dilution, exactly the reason why some teams in the east are less hardened by a tough schedule compared to the WCHA. I'm convinced that the tough WCHA schedule is one of the seasons the champ comes out of that group.
I'd agree with that, but I don't see the league as being tougher because of some inherent recruiting edge. Look at all of the kids from Minnesota that are heading to Providence, rather than bolstering the depth of the WCHA teams as a whole, despite the lack of an NCAA title in Hockey East. Players will go to a school that actively recruits them.I'm convinced that the tough WCHA schedule is one of the seasons the champ comes out of that group.
How many national team players does Cornell need in order to compete? Look at Harvard's incoming class this season. These teams can still recruit talent in large enough quantities to contend. The Big Red fell in the most recent tournament to Mercyhurst, a team that has managed to find success despite not having a tough league schedule as an advantage.2 - While some Ivies run great programs, they will always have a hard time competing head to head on an equal bases with the upper echelon D1 teams. They simply cannot build a team deep enough with a large talent pool of players, also good enough academically to get in these schools. The days that Ivy was first choice for many top end players are long gone.
USCHO Poll
1 Minnesota
2 Boston College
3 Clarkson
4 Cornell
5 Boston University
6 Wisconsin
7 Mercyhurst
8 North Dakota
9 Harvard
10 Northeastern
Hot mess!!!
Man you North Dakota fans sure are delusional.
"This USA Hockey poll is nonsense, we are way too low, surely the USCHO voters will realize that we are #2 in the country!"
HA HA HAAAAA
I'm glad the "ignore" didn't work for me, you ARE extremely funny, village idiot funny
village idiot funny
Hey now, I can't take all the credit! I'm just paraphrasing the board's top ranked jester:I'm glad the "ignore" didn't work for me, you ARE extremely funny, village idiot funny
North Dakota came ever so close to winning it all last year, and if anything, is ranked too low
they were #2 at the end last year
T
I'd agree with that, but I don't see the WCHA as being tougher because of some inherent recruiting edge.
the WCHA does indeed have a recruiting edge, the best players want to play for the best teams, certainly having won all the titles give the WCHA teams an edge, and in fact, the WCHA men have won the majority of titles, that long mens history makes a reputation even for the women's league that tends to attract a greater percentage of the best Canadian players (and International, and US national (non-local) players) than you would expect.
I too agree that dilution plays a part, with only 8 teams in the "west" it is easy to differentiate who is who. There are so many teams in the east it is more difficult to stand out from everyone else.
Schools from the WCHA,... which already play a difficult conference schedule, might choose to shy away from playing the Lakers in non-conference games.