The NCAA has now been back in full swing for a few weeks following the holiday break and the action is ramping up as teams jockey for position in their respective conferences and the national rankings with conference tournaments taking place and the NCAA Tournament opening next month. Yet, there has actually been little movement amongst the top teams in the rankings in recent weeks. This past week actually saw no team shift more than three spots in the top 20, with No. 9 Ohio State and No. 15 Michigan Tech moving up and No. 11 Cornell moving back. Will it take a wild winning streak or a mighty fall to shake up the current makeup of the tournament field?
Recent Results
All hail, No. 1 Minnesota State. The Mavericks continue to excel from the top spot in the nation, winning consistently and brushing off skeptics with a superior strength of schedule this year. Minnesota State did lose to Northern Michigan earlier this month, their first loss since November 26, but have now won three straight since to bring their reason record to 25-5-0. The CCHA still presents a lighter schedule and Mankato’s six remaining games all look winnable. Barring a collapse in the conference tournament, it is hard to see the team losing their top spot.
No. 2 Quinnipiac seems to be in a more delicate position, yet continue to hold on to their ranking. The Bobcats are having an all-time season, there is no question. They are 21-2-3 and lost their first game since mid-October earlier this month to No. 11 Cornell. Of course, that brings up the fine print on Quinnipiac’s current record. Though a stunning mark overall, the Bobcats are just 2-2-1 against teams currently ranked and play only ECAC competition the rest of the way. Could the selection committee dock them for a weak strength of schedule? Would a regular season win and tournament championship over inconsistent Cornell really make much of a statement?
Preseason favorite No. 3 Michigan was 7-1-0 in January, including a sweep of the defending champions, No. 10 UMass. The star-studded squad will continue to be a top pick for the championship. However, Big Ten competition is closing in and proving more difficult than anticipated. The Wolverines’ one loss in the last month came to No. 8 Minnesota, while No. 9 Ohio State is flying up the rankings with a 10-1-2 record since knocking off Michigan themselves in December.
Hockey East seems to be trending in the opposite direction, as no team has been able to assert their dominance this season. The scattered results within conference play and some lacking non-conference results has left the historic New England group without many top contenders. UMass leads the pack in the national rankings, but they hold just a narrow lead in the conference standings over No. 14 UMass Lowell despite already beating them three times. Lowell has had no luck against their flagship rival, but did pick up a win against No. 16 Northeastern last weekend. The Huskies are now 1-4-0 in their last five games, including two losses against UMass, a disappointing loss versus Arizona State, and their one win coming against Vermont, the team with the lowest RPI in college hockey. Yet, Northeastern still sits above No. 17 Providence, who managed to beat UMass and take three of four points from Boston College in the last month, but also dropped two games to Merrimack and lost last weekend against No. 19 Boston University. There’s no clear contender in Hockey East this year and the conference may stunningly only end up with one or two tournament teams.
Still the strongest conference in NCAA Hockey, the NCHC is having another phenomenal year – even if it doesn’t always seem that way on paper. With teams ranked No. 4-No. 7 (a potential problem for national tournament design), No. 12 North Dakota, and perhaps even No. 18 Omaha, the NCHC looks primed to send the most teams to the big dance. No. 4 Denver has quietly taken over the top ranking and conference lead behind a 14-1-1 run, though only two of their past seven wins have come against ranked teams. The Pioneers face a make-or-break stretch run, with their next six games coming against the three teams directly behind them in the rankings. First up is No. 7 St. Cloud State, who has suffered from an infrequent schedule – eight games since December 1 – and tough luck against North Dakota of late, who took five of eight points in half of those games. Next is No. 5 Western Michigan, who slid a bit in the rankings this week following a split with No. 6 Minnesota-Duluth. As for the Bulldogs, Duluth has missed out on points they should have had in some of their recent match-ups and are only 4-7-1 in their last dozen games. While all of these teams seem to be cold, they are in fact suffering losses at the hands of one another, keeping them afloat in the national rankings.
Scholarships For All
Competitive balance at the Division I level of NCAA hockey received a major boost earlier this month when RIT and Union finally gained the ability to award athletic scholarships, ensuring that all hockey schools are on an even playing field in that regard. As Division III schools, RIT and Union previously had not been able to award scholarships, which is prohibited at that level, even though they sponsored hockey at a Division I level. The Division III membership voted last week to allow teams with Division I programs to abide by Division I rules for those teams, allowing RIT and Union to award athletic aid to its hockey athletes. While other Division I programs are also Division III overall – Clarkson, Colorado College, RPI, St. Lawrence – they had been grandfathered in. Union and RIT had been fighting for equal treatment for years, although both have not only survived, but thrived at times without scholarships. Union won the 2014 National Championship, following three consecutive ECAC titles, while RIT made the Frozen Four in 2010 and has three Atlantic titles. However, they will be even better equipped to compete with these changes. The timing is great for Union in particular, who will now have more of a draw as they seek to fill their head coach vacancy.
Student-Athletes At The Olympics
For the next few weeks, not every college team will be at full strength. 18 NCAA stars will be suiting up at the Olympics and all of them will play for one of the two North American powerhouses, Canada and the United States. In fact, the entire American squad is made up of college players, past and present. The NCAA teams hit the hardest will be Michigan, unsurprisingly, but also Minnesota and unranked Boston College.
Here is the list of college athletes to watch on the biggest international stage:
Canada:
G Devon Levi, Northeastern
F Jack McBain, Boston College
D Owen Power, Michigan
United States:
F Nick Abruzzese, Harvard
F Matthew Beniers, Michigan
F Brendan Brisson, Michigan
F Noah Cates, Minnesota-Duluth
G Drew Commesso, Boston Univ.
D Brock Faber, Minnesota
F Sean Farrell, Harvard
D Drew Helleson, Boston College
F Sam Hentges, St. Cloud State
F Matthew Knies, Minnesota
F Marc McLaughlin, Boston College
F Ben Meyers, Minnesota
D Nick Perbix, St. Cloud State
D Jake Sanderson, North Dakota
F Nathan Smith, Minnesota State