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Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Big Ten College Hockey Conference

Earlier this week it was announced that Michigan, Michigan State, and Ohio State would be defecting from the CCHA beginning in the 2013-14 season. There is mass speculation circling the college hockey world on what the impact of this move will be. Rumors are that the CCHA and WCHA may merge to form a 18 team conference, the Big Ten teams will continue to play a nonconference schedule against instate teams from the CCHA, and even speculation that the formation of the Big Ten Conference will cause several of the CCHA teams to fold.

My take on the Big Ten adding hockey is that it is completely driven by money and the Big Ten Network. This will add several games each season to the Big Ten Networks scheduling, and increase television revenue for the schools. There are really no negatives for the Big Ten schools when it comes to adding hockey to their league. Some have even argued that the level of play in the Big Ten will increase as players choose schools with television contracts for the desire to increase their personal exposure.

The Big Ten schools leaving the CCHA will have a negative impact on its member schools, but probably not as big as initially expected. I do not expect the quality of play to drop in the CCHA, college hockey in general is going to get better with the proliferation of junior leagues throughout the United States. Michigan and Michigan State travel well and increase the attendance at the Taffy Abel Arena when they come to the Soo, so their leaving the CCHA will have an economic impact on the Lakers. Games against Michigan and Michigan State bring in 500+ more people to each game which translates to $5000 +/- each game, a nice sum but not enough to make or break any team in the CCHA. The Big Ten schools have said that they will continue to play nonconference games against the CCHA teams, but I would expect that they will want games on their home ice, as they have shown in the scheduling of MAC teams in football. Maybe LSSU will host MSU or UM once every other year, but I suspect that knowing that Michigan or Michigan State will be in town every season is a thing of the past.

I suspect that losing Michigan and Michigan State will also have a negative impact on the CCHA’s contract with Fox Sports Network Detroit. FSN may drop the CCHA all together or may just choose to cover playoff games. Also will Michigan leaving prompt the CCHA to move the championship from Detroit to Grand Rapids? Where will the Big Ten hold their championship?

My take is that the WCHA and the CCHA are not going to merge. Any league that has a minimum of 6 teams gets an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. If they merge, they would be one league and would only get one automatic bid, which alone is reason enough for me to be suspect of any rumors of a merger into a super conference, let alone looking at the increased travel costs for a conference with this large of a footprint.

Lastly the Big Ten formation really clears up why the CCHA rejected The University of Alabama, Huntsville as a member; the league saw the Big Ten coming and would rather play a few years with 11 teams than be saddled with 9 teams for the long haul. Having an even number of teams makes life really easy when it comes to scheduling and having a tournament.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Lakers add center for 2011-12 season

The St Louis Bandits of the NAHL have announced that forward Chris Ciotti has committed to Lake Superior State University to play hockey beginning next season. Ciotti, the Bandits’ captain, ranks second on the team in scoring with 64 points on 27 goals through 50 games. "Chris has worked hard to earn an opportunity to play college hockey in the CCHA and for a competitive program like Lake State,” Bandits assistant coach Trevor Stewart said of the 20-year-old from Romeo, Mich. “Lake Superior will be getting a good hockey player who’ll only get better.”

Ciotti recorded 14 goals and 37 points in 2009-10, and 6 goals and 17 points in 2008-09 for the St. Louis Bandits.

Tuesday, March 08, 2011

Kapalka named to 2011 CCHA All-Rookie Team

FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich. – Lake Superior State freshman goaltender Kevin Kapalka was unanimously named to the Central Collegiate Hockey Association’s 2011 All-Rookie Team.

Kapalka, from Mississauga, Ont., took over as LSSU’s number one goaltender after senior goalie Brian Mahoney-Wilson suffered a season-ending injury in November. He made his collegiate debut against Michigan Tech during the season-opening Superior Cup and suffered a 6-2 loss. He recorded his first victory as a Laker by stopping 26 of 30 shots at home against Colgate. Kapalka played to a 2-2 tie at Miami on Oct. 30, which led to his first collegiate shootout. He lost that shootout 3-2 in five rounds, but went on to finish 5-3 in shootouts for the season.

Two CCHA Goaltender of the Week awards and one CCHA Rookie of the Week honor are part of Kapalka’s impressive first-year resume. His first honor was the result of 1-0 and 4-0 victories over Ferris State Nov. 11-12. His second honor came from back-to-back shootout victories over Bowling Green State Dec. 3-4. He was named rookie of the week Feb. 7 after the Lakers swept Northern Michigan on the road, 4-1 and 2-0.

Kapalka is seventh nationally and second in the CCHA in overall save percentage (.926). He is 15th nationally in goals-against average (2.25). When playing CCHA competition, he is ranked third in save percentage (.928) and sixth in goals-against average (2.16).

Michigan State’s Will Yanakeff is ranked first among freshman on the national save percentage list, while Kapalka is second. Yanakeff played in 12 games compared to Kapalka’s 29. Kapalka is third among freshmen on the nation’s goals-against list and first in shutouts with four.

Kapalka totaled career high of 48 saves to lead LSSU to a 4-0 victory over Ohio State during Friday’s opening game of the CCHA First-Round Playoffs. He stopped 76-of-78 shots for the weekend as the Lakers swept the first round series for the first time since 1996.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

Lakers face Buckeyes in first round of playoffs

Lakers face Buckeyes in first round of playoffs: "Friday's game will be live on CBS College Sports Network at 7:36 p.m."