For the sports world, there was always bound to be long-term effects from the coronavirus pandemic. Leagues like the AHL are still trying to figure out how to hold a season without gate revenue, while the NHL is working hard to stay financially stable for the next few years as it rebuilds. College sports are perhaps taking it even harder and today a storied hockey program got the ultimate bad news.
The University of Alaska-Anchorage has decided to eliminate four programs from the sports roster, one of which will be men’s hockey. The changes will occur for the 2021-22 season, though obviously there is still plenty of uncertainty surrounding the upcoming year as well. In May, the WCHA announced a schedule that would begin in October.
While this isn’t a program that churns out NHL players every year, UAA does have a notable representative still alive in the 2020 playoffs. Jay Beagle, Stanley Cup champion and current Vancouver Canucks forward, spent two seasons with the Seawolves before starting his professional career. NCAA programs like this are the way many undrafted players get noticed, with names like Beagle and Curtis Glencross being perhaps the most notable examples from UAA.