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The Commish, Part 2

(In the first installment, new Hockey East Commissioner Joe Bertagna talked about the league’s SportsChannel contract and a potential national TV package.)

The ECAC vs. Hockey East

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As ECAC commissioner, Bertagna oversaw not just the 12 Division I schools under the ECAC umbrella, but all the Division II and III programs competing in ECAC-sponsored leagues. Eventually, this grew to over 90 schools.

“It was one of those jobs that grew horizontally,” Bertagna says. “I wasn’t gaining in authority. I was just gaining work to do. And, in a perverse way, I was creating the work. I was actively trying to create a women’s league, and I was actively trying to create an alliance.

“At the same time that I got permission to start these things and considered it a victory, I stepped back and said, ‘Oh, geez, now I’ve got to create a schedule for these people.’ After 15 years, I had 90 some-odd programs. Even though there was support help at the ECAC office, I was the hockey guy. So a call to the ECAC, meant to call Joe.

“Some of it was comical. I’d get a call from an athletic director complaining, ‘it was a rough game and we thought we handled it pretty well, but the PA announcer out there said, “And that’s the end of this fiasco!”‘ So I’d have to call an AD, and call a coach, and find an observer that watched the game, and find the PA guy. I’d have to write a letter to the PA guy and copy everybody saying that it’s unprofessional to say, ‘And that’s the end of this fiasco!’ Next thing you know, it’s one o’clock and I had all this other stuff I had to do.”

Eventually, the job just became too much.

“I asked the ECAC for a full-time assistant or to absolutely change things,” he says. “I was a little naive. I thought that I’d established myself so much that I would get a lot of the things that I asked for.

“But they did an internal study of how we did things, and concluded that the problem wasn’t that I didn’t have any help. The problem was that we had two offices. If I moved down on the Cape and used their staffing, the problems would go away. Well I wasn’t going to move after 15 years.

“And to be very blunt, they had this huge office, but some of the people there were not assets. They didn’t know hockey. They were upset that hockey was getting preferential treatment. I said, ‘It’s because it’s the only sport that raises the ECAC flag at a national level and makes money for you. You guys should bow down and give hockey the extra attention. No one else cuts you a check like the hockey tournament in Lake Placid does.'”

Instead, they criticized Bertagna’s creation of a hockey-specific ECAC logo, wondering why his sport couldn’t use the generic ECAC one, even though the three competing conferences all sported logos clearly identified with hockey.

At the same time that his unhappiness with his working conditions grew, the Hockey East position opened. He knew the league had an attractive TV contract — at least it did at the time — and that it had a full-time assistant.

“I can’t say this clearly enough,” Bertagna says. “It was a personal decision for a better job. It was not a statement on which league is better than the other. I’m forty-five years old, and my wife and I started a family last year. I have a one-year old son and another one on the way. I got a health plan for my family as opposed to just for myself. There were a lot of things on a personal level that the ECAC just wouldn’t offer.

“My gripes were never with the schools of the ECAC, the coaches, or the hockey programs. It was really a matter of my working conditions and finding a better job. I would hate after 15 years to have anything I say reflect ill on the league’s hockey operations, because I had great relations with all the schools.”

His change in allegiances will initially challenge the instinctive reactions Bertagna built during his long ECAC career.

“I’ve spent the last 15 years trying to have a winning record against Hockey East. Last year the ECAC did it. Given the way I’ve been thinking for so long, when I’ve picked up a paper or called a press box, I’ve always wanted the ECAC team to win. Now I’ve got to do an about-face.

“So now when I go out to speak to teams, I’ve got two messages. One, I want the league to have the reputation for being a tough, but clean, league. The other message is,” — and here Bertagna laughs — “‘you guys have to beat up on the ECAC.’

“When I was with the ECAC, there were a lot of things I was proud of, but there was that feeling of looking at the other guys for on-ice success. It’s nice to have people looking at us now. The strength of our best programs is a real strong suit. The top 20 comes out and we have three teams in the top seven. Some of our coaches have 500 wins and are still coaching, and there are a lot of guys in the National Hockey League that played in Hockey East. So there are a lot of things that we can sell.”

Expansion

One advantage that the ECAC holds over Hockey East, at least in Bertagna’s mind, is its 12-team composition.

“It’s really tough to schedule an odd number of teams,” he says. “Look down the stretch and it’s a shame that on a Saturday night in February, there are Hockey East teams that can’t play because non-league opportunities dry up. Everybody is into their conference schedule from Beanpot time on.

“Down the line, there’s the new league that has just been announced, but they have an even number of teams, so near the end of their schedule they’ll all be busy. If they expand, and they probably will, if they expand by an odd number, my first phone call would be, ‘let’s try to match our odd number with your odd number and make sure everybody is playing every weekend.’ But they’re a few years away from being competitive on the ice.”

Ideally, Bertagna would like to see not only a tenth team added, but also an eleventh and twelfth if the teams are a good fit.

“I think most people who follow hockey know that 10 works better than nine, and, in some cases, 12 works better than 10,” he says. “If you can get to playing each other fewer times, I think it makes every single game more important. I like the ECAC schedule. If you missed Harvard this time, that’s it. They’re not coming back until next year.

“If you’re going to play somebody three times in your schedule, once in the Governors’ Cup, maybe once in the Beanpot, maybe three times in the quarterfinals, then all of sudden at the end of the year you’ve played somebody seven times and two of those games were televised. The importance of getting to that single game has been diminished.”

The catch, of course, is finding teams that are a good fit. Teams like Niagara and Alabama-Huntsville might be interested, but pose geographical problems.

“Part of the attraction for SportsChannel to Hockey East was that we weren’t spread out,” Bertagna says. “We were all in their market. The fact that we weren’t too spread out made us more attractive.”

Finding teams within the region to add won’t be easy, pointing to an immediate future stuck at nine teams.

“One thing I personally won’t do is knock on the doors of the ECAC schools,” he says. “I don’t think that’s appropriate. I didn’t think it was appropriate when I was on the other side. I’m not going to do an about face now. I think some of the athletic directors might have hoped that I would do it, but I won’t.” Laughing, Bertagna then looks at Saunders and adds, “I’ll have Ed do it instead.”

The MAAC and the NCAA Tournament

The introduction of a fifth Division I conference, the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), affects Hockey East in ways beyond simply providing for additional interleague foes or potential expansion candidates. Over time, it could have a major impact on the structuring of the sport’s NCAA tournament.

“The presence of that league requires a lot of us in college hockey to think differently,” Bertagna says. “We’ve been thinking about Division I hockey as these four conferences. You can argue about which league is stronger, but for the most part, they’re pretty competitive.

“But look at basketball. When basketball announces its 64 teams for the national tournament, no one thinks that the Ivy League teams top-to-bottom are as strong as the ACC. But the basketball people understand that there are a lot of Division I leagues and they all get invited to the party in March. Nobody thinks that they are all at the same level, but so what? We’ve got to get used to that.

“I hope there’s a sixth conference some day. I hope Syracuse and maybe Penn State — large, well-known schools that have club hockey — look at this new league and say, ‘Hey, there is another way of doing it. I don’t have to go from nothing to BU or Michigan State. There’s a half-step; there’s something else we can do.'”

This growth has fueled speculation that the NCAA tournament could soon grow to 16 teams to accommodate an automatic berth for the new league. The NCAA looks for a six-to-one ratio between the number of D-I teams playing a sport and the size of the tournament field. Until now, that ratio has prevented the move from 12 to 16 teams.

“A lot of the average fans are getting too excited, too early about this,” Bertagna says. “They’re thinking, ‘Oh good, there are eight new teams.’ Unfortunately, most of these teams have already been counted in that formula. Only three make a difference. Sacred Heart and Quinnipiac are moving up their entire athletic programs, and AIC is playing up in hockey. So we’ve added three teams to that formula, but it’s still a ratio that’s troublesome to people in the NCAA that watch that stuff.”

Even so, the NCAA has recently restructured itself in a way that each sport has its own specific committees, such as one for the tournament and one for rules changes. Additionally, there are NCAA-wide councils that establish policies that all the committees have to follow. So, for example, if the rules committee passes something that affects either finance or safety, the overall NCAA can veto it.

In a similar fashion, the tournament committee, which is presumably more familiar with hockey’s specific needs than the general NCAA population, could vote to expand to a 16-team draw. Although this still would be subject to an overall veto, this route to a larger tournament appears to be an easier path than in past years.

“The committee has already voted not to do anything for at least two years to give the new league a chance to get its act together,” Bertagna says. “But let’s say three or four years from now, they can make a case to get an automatic bid. And somebody else makes a case that it shouldn’t come from the 12, it should be in addition to the 12. You’d start moving to 16.

“The sport, right now, can support a 16-team tournament. I don’t think anybody knowledgeable will suggest that if you added a team from each conference, that all of a sudden the tournament would be diluted. Just look at who got selected in March, and then look at who just missed. You’d still have a good tournament.

“And from the fans’ point of view, you’d have a much better tournament, knowing that there were four regionals, each producing a winner as opposed to the six-team thing that we all have trouble explaining to people: ‘Who won the East regional?’ ‘Well, nobody won it.’ It just would make so much more sense.”

Additionally, the larger draw would also eliminate the enormous advantage given to bye teams that can advance to the Final Four with only one win over a team that has played the previous night.

“I don’t think anything is going to happen in the next two or three years,” Bertagna says. “But I can’t see that this new league isn’t going to help somewhere down the line. They’re going to demand, and legitimately so, that they have to be recognized. Why shouldn’t they be?”

Referees and “Calling the Book”

As both a member of the NCAA Rules Committee and the Hockey East Commissioner, Bertagna is in a unique position to affect the way games are officiated.

“I’ve had the opportunity to speak to our coaches and to our refs, both separately and in the room together,” he says. “I have one clarification that I always have to make. When I tell a referee that I expect him to call the book, some people will invariably ask, ‘Are you telling them to call penalties?’

“No. There’s a difference. Some nights there are no penalties to call. You tell a ref that he has to call penalties, and he’s going to be looking to call penalties. If he’s doing a game where the players are doing their job, the coaches are doing their job, it’s a great hockey game, and there are no penalties to call, then don’t make things up.

“But I think we all know what it’s like to go to a game as fans where all of a sudden you realize that it’s starting to get a little out of hand. I’m not going to be involved too much directly, because we have a supervisor of officials who is good.

“But the one referee who should feel nervous about my input is the guy who has the reputation for not calling the book. If over a ten-game period, [the other officials each] call 120 penalties and another guy calls 40, that’s the pattern that somebody should not want to get hung on them, that they just don’t call things, or that the assistant is calling eight or nine penalties that the ref saw but didn’t call. Those are the things that bother me.”

Hockey East and the Internet

“On college campuses, Internet and computer usage is so great that it’s a perfect match for college hockey,” says Saunders, a recent UNH export. “Especially if we want to increase our visibility and on-campus presence with the students, the Internet is where they are and where they’re hanging out, so it’s a great place to reach them.”

The two Western conferences, however, have been quicker not only to realize this, but to act on it as well. Both the WCHA and CCHA provide official websites for their fans.

“As a league, we’ve been slow to catch on,” Bertagna says. “We have to catch up to the WCHA and CCHA. But let’s not only try to catch up, let’s try to be creative. We should create some contests that fans can play and win tickets to the tournament and do some things that are fun. That’s what we should be doing. We don’t identify fun as a priority a lot of the time.”

Luckily, fun happens all by itself in college hockey. And with all the potential goodies on the horizon — a national TV contract, an expanded NCAA tournament and a Hockey East presence on the Web — fans may soon be having more fun than they know what to do with.

Rensselaer Tops ECAC Coaches’ Poll

The 1997-98 ECAC Men’s Division I Ice Hockey Poll was released today, and the Rensselaer Engineers were voted the top school this season.

“We’ve gotten a lot of respect from the coaches,” said RPI head coach Dan Fridgen. “And it’s reflected in this preseason poll.”

RPI received nine of 12 first-place votes, as it did in the 1993-94 poll. That year, RPI finished third in the standings and in the ECAC tournament.

“RPI has everyone back,” said Princeton head coach Don Cahoon. “And on paper they should be the team to beat.”

“I was so impressed with that RPI team last year,” said Dartmouth head coach Bob Gaudet. “And with everyone back they should make a run.”

“RPI is the consensus team,” said St. Lawrence head coach Joe Marsh. “They will probably be first in the poll and with every right.”

“RPI has got to be one of the teams to beat,” said Clarkson head coach Mark Morris. “They’ve got firepower and great goaltending.”

“You’re going to see how good RPI is,” added Vermont head coach Mike Gilligan.

Clarkson received the remaining three first-place votes to finish second.

“You have to start with Clarkson,” said Harvard head coach Ronn Tomassoni. “They have got a great nucleus coming back.”

“Clarkson is impressive,” said Gaudet. “They’re a team that will knock your lights out.”

“Clarkson has a great defense,” said Cahoon. “And it starts with their goaltending.”

Cornell, the defending two-time ECAC champions, finished third in the voting, while Princeton received its highest-ever preseason ranking — fourth. The highest the Tigers had previously been voted was seventh in 1988-89.

“Cornell has superior goaltending,” said Morris. “That is a great start.”

“Princeton will be there as well,” said Gilligan. “They were tough last year.”

“Our league is as tough as any league out there,” said Brown head coach Roger Grillo. “And anyone can finish anywhere from first place to last place.”

ECAC To Alter Playoff Format

Though an official announcement has yet to be made, it appears that the ECAC will change the format of its Division I ice hockey playoffs.

Under the new arrangement, 10 of 12 teams still qualify for the playoffs, but the ECAC will go to five quarterfinal series, with the winner of the five-six series advancing to Lake Placid for the ECAC Championship Round.

In previous years, two first-round games were played on the Tuesday night following the end of the regular season. The winners of those games then advanced to the quarterfinals, along with the remaining six playoff teams.

“This is something that I have been pushing hard for, and not because [Colgate] lost in it last year,” said Colgate head coach Don Vaughn. “I’m excited about it; the Tuesday game was just not working.”

“I’m certainly for it,” said Vermont head coach Mike Gilligan. “It was a way to eliminate the Tuesday game.”

“I don’t think anyone was in favor of the Tuesday game,” said Harvard head coach Ronn Tomassoni. “It’ll be interesting to see how it plays out.”

The Tuesday first-round games have been criticized for many reasons, including lack of gate attendance, travel, and interruption of academics. The move to five quarterfinal series is designed to allay these criticisms.

“We have great fans,” said Gilligan. “But if we can’t sell out a Tuesday game, who can? These games had no crowd, and it was an interruption to the student-athlete in their studies.”

“It just wasn’t beneficial to the student-athlete,” said Vaughn. “Coming off a weekend of play and then perhaps having to travel to get to a game on Tuesday night is too much of a distraction.”

The five quarterfinal series will remain a first-to-three-points format, and the winners advance to Lake Placid. The two lowest remaining seeds would play each other on Thursday, March 19. The winner of that game faces the highest remaining seed the next day, while the two other seeds play one another that same day.

While the switch of formats has eliminated some of the criticisms of the Tuesday game, it has raised others.

“The only advantage now is finishing in the top three,” said Princeton head coach Don Cahoon. “I would hate to advance and have to play the Thursday game.”

“It certainly makes it tough to have to win three games in Placid,” said Vaughn. “To win on Thursday, and then come back and have to win Friday, and then again Saturday, it’s a lot to ask.”

“It puts a lot of pressure on the four and five teams,” said Gilligan. “You have to win three games.”

Another criticism has been that the idea is to get as many ECAC teams as possible into the NCAA Championships, and giving the top seed a supposedly easier path almost eliminates the possibility of the fourth- or fifth-place team getting into the Championships.

“Shouldn’t the top seed have every advantage to earn the bye in the NCAA Tournament to have an easier path to the Final Four?” counters ECAC Commissioner Jeff Fanter. “It may be right that the goal is to get as many teams to the NCAAs, but it is not only to get teams there, but to win a championship.”

While there are criticisms, it seems that the plusses outpoll the minuses.

“One more school gets to experience Lake Placid,” said Vaughn. “It only lends to the great college hockey experience. And if you get the right combination of teams there, the place will be overflowing.”

“It brings another team to Lake Placid,” said Tomassoni, “and that team’s fan base.”

Cahoon agreed.

“That helps the ECAC and Lake Placid.”

Doneghey Named Head Coach At Fairfield

Michael Doneghey has been named head coach of Fairfield, replacing Peter LaVigne, who stepped down after one season.

“I am very excited about coming to Fairfield University,” said Doneghey. “Fairfield is an established program and I hope to keep building on the school’s hockey tradition.”

Doneghey, a 1993 graduate of Merrimack, comes to Fairfield after spending last season as an assistant coach with New Hampshire. He helped the Wildcats earn a share of the Hockey East regular-season championship and a bid to the NCAA tournament. Previously, he served as an assistant coach with Division III Hamilton College for one season after playing professionally in France from 1993 to 1995.

“I feel fortunate to have a coach with Michael’s experience take over our ice hockey program,” said Eugene Doris, Fairfield’s Director of Athletics. “He has achieved success as a player and as a coach both on the collegiate and international levels. His experience will be a valuable asset to our student-athletes.”

Fairfield, a Division I Independent playing in the ECAC South, will join the newly-established Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference next season. The Stags were 13-12-1 last season, including 9-4-1 in ECAC South play.

Spartans Lead CCHA Preseason Polls

The Michigan State Spartans, coming off a third-place, 23-13-4 season and a first-round NCAA tournament loss, have been anointed the team to beat by CCHA coaches and media.

“It’s nice to know going in that you are among the group that has a chance to win the league,” said MSU head coach Ron Mason. “But I have been in the league a long enough time to know that no two points come easily and it takes a lot of work.”

In the coaches’ poll, for which each CCHA coach ranks the other 10 conference schools, the Spartans received nine first-place votes and 99 points overall out of a possible 100 to lead the pack. Miami received the remaining two first-place votes to finish second, followed by Michigan, Lake Superior State and Western Michigan.

The media poll ranked Michigan State (with 20 of 36 first-place votes) first and Michigan second, followed by Miami, Lake Superior and Bowling Green.

It’s Official: MAAC Hockey To Begin Play Next Season

Confirming a story USCHO reported in August, the nation’s fifth Division I hockey conference was officially born Thursday as the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference announced the formation of an eight-team league to begin play in 1998-99.

The new league includes Quinnipiac, Fairfield, Connecticut, Sacred Heart, Holy Cross, Iona, Canisius and American International, all northeastern schools currently competing in leagues sponsored by the ECAC.

Several additional schools have expressed interest in joining the new league.

The MAAC anticipates having a 28-game conference schedule, with each team playing every conference opponent twice at home and twice on the road. The league’s playoffs are expected to include all eight teams.

BGSU’s Price Injured, Another Dead in Auto Accident

Dan Price, a forward for the Bowling Green Falcons, was injured and another passenger killed Saturday night in an automobile accident near Marysville, Ohio, north of Columbus.

The Columbus Dispatch reported Monday that Price was driving when the car struck a ditch along Route 38, just south of Marysville, and flipped over. Neither Price nor the vehicle’s owner, Ryan Bernthisel, 26, of Bowling Green, was wearing a seat belt, and both were thrown from the car.

Bernthisel died of his injuries, while Price was treated at Union Memorial Hospital in Marysville.

Investigators have told the Dispatch that alcohol was a factor in the crash. The investigation is ongoing.

BGSU’s Ratchuk To Depart For Pros

According to the Bowling Green Sentinel-Tribune, Falcon defenseman Peter Ratchuk has renounced his three remaining years of NCAA eligibility to sign with the NHL’s Colorado Avalanche.

Ratchuk, a 6-foot, 175-pound native of Buffalo, N.Y., scored nine goals and added 12 assists for Bowling Green in his rookie campaign last season, garnering honorable mention designation on the CCHA all-rookie team. He was selected in the first round (25th overall) by Colorado in the 1996 NHL draft.

Terms of the contract were not available, but Ratchuk’s signing bonus was believed to be around $500,000.

Auger Signs Pact With QMJHL’s Remparts

The prospects for the Princeton Tigers’ season took a hit this week when defenseman Dominique Auger, an ECAC all-rookie team selection last year, signed a contract with the Quebec Remparts of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

The loss of Auger is a severe blow to Princeton, where it isn’t easy to recruit players of his caliber. Princeton coaches describe Auger as a legitimate pro prospect and a player who could have been an All-American.

“We’re disappointed with his decision but wish him well,” said Princeton head coach Don Cahoon. “He’s a terrific athlete, a terrific student-athlete, who would’ve done real well here. I wish him good luck.”

Last season, Auger scored seven goals and 16 assists in 33 games, including four power-play goals.

Princeton finished with a school-record-tying 18 wins last season, and was counting on returning its entire core of defensemen, and most key forwards, in hopes of its first-ever NCAA berth.

Auger, a native of Levis, Quebec, called Remparts general manager Raymond Bolduc last week saying he would like to play for his team. According to Bolduc, he had never previously spoken to Auger.

Auger began working out with the team last Tuesday, and signed earlier this week. Princeton coaches were stunned to learn Auger was in Quebec’s camp, though Cahoon had spoken at length with Auger last spring about his future. Cahoon thought Auger might be courted by the Canadian national team, but when that didn’t happen, he figured his star defenseman would return.

Playing in the Canadian major junior system makes Auger ineligible with the NCAA, which considers the major juniors a professional operation. As a 20-year old, Auger has just one year of eligibility left in major junior hockey, whereas he had three at Princeton.

Auger can make between $150 and $500 per week in major juniors, in addition to room and board and expenses. Bolduc also said the team has given Auger a three-year scholarship to a Quebec college, in the event that he doesn’t play professionally.

Bolduc said Auger cited the desire to play more games and have a better chance at the pros as reasons for his interest in the Remparts.

This is a microcosm of the issue for the ages — the differences between college hockey and juniors, and the constant struggle for U.S. colleges to compete with the major juniors for players.

“Both ways are good,” says Bolduc. “It depends on where you want to go.

“If you want to go pro, it’s the short way; you’ll play more games. That’s the problem with college. And they play with a full visor.

“But as I always say, if you are a good player, you will play pro.”

Cahoon isn’t so sure that major juniors is the fast track, especially for Auger.

“It’s a little premature,” said Cahoon. “If the [International Hockey League] called next year, and he was physically strong enough, I would’ve been the first to help him. Hopefully he won’t forget about his academics because he’s a bright kid.

“I could sit here and get really upset about it, but we’ll make do like every other program makes do.”

Alaska-Anchorage Loses Two Skaters, Gains One

According to Wednesday’s Anchorage Daily Times, left winger Neil Schell, who led all Seawolf freshmen with 20 points in 35 games last season, will not return to UAA this year.

Seawolf head coach Dean Talafous said Schell’s decision was based on health concerns — Schell is missing one kidney due to a junior-hockey injury — and homesickness. Schell is a native of Yorkton, Sask.

Also, Talafous said that sophomore left winger Regg Simon would be out for most, if not all, of this season after reaggravating a shoulder dislocation lifting weights. Reconstructive surgery was planned for Thursday.

On a brighter note, the Seawolves have signed Adrian Hasbargen of Warroad (Minn.) H.S. The 5-foot-11, 175-lb. defenseman was named to the Minnesota all-tournament team last season after helping Warroad to the state’s Class A championship game.

Princeton’s Auger Considering Junior Hockey

Dominique Auger, the flashy Princeton defenseman who was an All-ECAC Rookie Team member last season, is seriously contemplating a jump to the Quebec Remparts of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League.

Auger, a native of Levis, Quebec, called Remparts general manager Raymond Bolduc on Saturday, saying he would like to play for the team.

According to Bolduc, he had never spoken to Auger previously.

Auger began working out with the team on Tuesday, and has been offered a contract, but has not officially signed. Stunned Princeton coaches didn’t learn of the possibility of losing Auger until Thursday morning, and are in the process of trying to contact him.

QMJHL training camp ends Sept. 15, and the regular season starts on the 17th. Princeton students are expected back in school starting next week.

Last season, Auger scored seven goals and 16 assists in 33 games, including four power-play goals.

Joining the Canadian major junior system would make Auger ineligible for further play in the NCAA; the NCAA considers the major juniors a professional operation. As a 20-year old, Auger would have just one year of eligibility left in major junior hockey, whereas he has three at Princeton.

Auger can make between $150 and $500 per week in major juniors, in addition to room and board and expenses. Bolduc also said the team has offered to give Auger a three-year scholarship to a Quebec college, assuming he doesn’t play in the pros.

Bolduc said Auger cited the desire to play more games and have a better chance at the pros as reasons for his interest in the Remparts.

“If he wants to come, that’s fine,” said Bolduc. “If he wants to play college, that’s fine. I don’t want to see Dominique come to me (next year) and say, ‘Ray, you forced me to play with your team.’ It’s his decision.”

This is a microcosm of that issue for the ages — the differences between college hockey and the juniors, and the constant struggle for U.S. colleges to compete with the major juniors for players.

“Both ways are good,” says Bolduc. “It depends on where you want to go.

“If you want to go pro, it’s the short way, you’ll play more games. That’s the problem with college. And they play with a full visor.

“But as I always say, if you are a good player, you will play pro.”

The loss of Auger would be a severe blow to Princeton, where it isn’t easy to recruit players of his caliber. Princeton coaches describe Auger as a legitimate pro prospect.

Princeton finished with a school-record-tying 18 wins last season, and was counting on returning its entire core of defensemen, and most key forwards.

Minnesota’s Crowley Signs With Ducks

On Saturday, Gophers captain Mike Crowley became the second Minnesota player in a one-week span to turn pro, announcing his signing with the NHL’s Mighty Ducks of Anaheim.

Forward Erik Rasmussen announced his agreement to terms with the Buffalo Sabres last Wednesday.

Crowley, a defenseman who would have been a senior this season, had nine goals and 47 assists for 56 points last year. He was named WCHA Player of the Year and was a Hobey Baker Award finalist and a first-team All-American. He is Minnesota’s second-leading blueliner in career scoring, and is responsible for the Gophers’ top two scoring seasons among defensemen.

He is expected to receive a signing bonus of $425,000, and will report to the Ducks’ camp in September.

LaCouture Bolts BU, Signs With Edmonton

Boston University forward Dan LaCouture has signed a multiyear contract with the NHL’s Edmonton Oilers. LaCouture would have been a sophomore this fall.

The signing came soon after the Oilers acquired LaCouture, 20, in a trade with the New York Islanders, who drafted him 29th overall in 1996.

The 6-foot-3-inch, 210-pound LaCouture played in 31 games for NCAA runner-up BU last season, recording 13 goals and 12 assists. He also took home a silver medal after playing for Team USA at the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.

LaCouture is the second big-name Hockey East underclassman within a week to announce he has turned pro, following on the heels of New Hampshire’s Eric Nickulas several days ago.

Nickulas To Leave UNH For Pros

Hockey East power New Hampshire lost its leading goal-scorer Wednesday, as forward Eric Nickulas announced that he will renounce his senior year to play professionally.

“It was a really tough decision, but right now I think it’s the best choice I can make,” Nickulas said. Although his NHL rights are held by the Boston Bruins, he does not intend to restrict his options.

“If we can’t agree on a contract, then I’m looking toward the IHL (International Hockey League),” Nickulas said, naming the defending champion Detroit Vipers as one possibility.

UNH head coach Dick Umile, who learned of Nickulas’ decision Tuesday, was resigned but not surprised.

“It was in the back of my mind all summer,” Umile says in Foster’s Online, a New Hampshire news and sports website. “When [Nickulas] called and said he wanted to talk to me…I kind of had an inkling of what he was going to say.”

The timing of Nickulas’ decision essentially precludes his replacement with a new recruit. He totaled 29 goals and 22 assists last season for the high-powered UNH offense, and would have been an assistant captain this year.

Ice Breaker Tourney Moves to Wisconsin

The new season-opening Ice Breaker Cup tournament has undergone a change of venue and taken on a new name and corporate sponsor.

The tournament is now the Team Cheerios Ice Breaker Invitational, and will be played at Dane County Coliseum in Madison, Wis., home of the host Wisconsin Badgers. Originally, the tournament was to be played at the Rosemont Horizon, outside of Chicago.

Matchups remain the same for this season’s inaugural incarnation of the tournament, featuring one team from each major Division I conference. On Friday, Oct. 10, Michigan State (CCHA) takes on Boston University (Hockey East), followed by Clarkson (ECAC) against Wisconsin (WCHA). The consolation and championship games will take place the next day. Tickets are available through the Wisconsin Athletic Ticket Office.

The Ice Breaker Invitational is sponsored by the WCHA, the American Hockey Coaches Association and the University of Wisconsin.

Gophers’ Rasmussen to Sign With Sabres

According to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Minnesota winger Erik Rasmussen will announce today that he has signed with the National Hockey League’s Buffalo Sabres.

Rasmussen was the first American-born player taken in the 1996 draft, when the Sabres made him the seventh overall pick. His salary of $875,000 per year for three seasons is fixed by the NHL’s collective bargaining agreement; he is expected to receive a $1 million signing bonus.

He turned down a contract offer last year, opting instead to play his sophomore season with Minnesota. However, his production — 15 goals and 12 assists in 34 games — didn’t measure up to the promise of his freshman year, when he scored 48 points.

Comrie to Return to Denver

Denver junior Paul Comrie has decided to return to school this year, passing up an offer from Red Deer of the Western Hockey League, according to an article in the Denver Post.

The Post had earlier reported that Comrie would renounce his final two years of collegiate eligibility to play Canadian major junior hockey for Red Deer.

In Friday’s (Aug. 15) article, Comrie said, “I’m happy to be going back and having two years to develop rather than going for one year in a make-it-or- break-it season.”

Denver coach George Gwozdecky called Comrie’s choice “a very mature decision [and] the right decision. … There were a lot of people pushing him to play junior hockey in Canada, and there was a point where I really felt he wouldn’t be back. But we’re glad to have him back, no question.”

CCHA Commissioner Announces Retirement

CCHA commissioner Bill Beagan, who is in his 13th year, has announced his retirement effective June 30, 1998.

“I made my decision to retire two years ago,” said Beagan. “It was the right decision then, and it is the right decision now. I can think of no place on this planet that I would have sooner spent the past 12 years. My involvement with NCAA Division I college hockey is a romance I will cherish forever.”

During his tenure as commissioner, Beagan has guided the conference through the addition of Notre Dame, Alaska-Fairbanks and Northern Michigan. CCHA teams have won five national championships during his term, and last week Beagan signed a ground-breaking 20-game television package for the CCHA with FOX Sports Net for the upcoming season.

Minnesota’s Woog Put On Notice

As reported by the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, Minnesota head coach Doug Woog has been placed on notice by athletic director Mark Dienhart for letting several hockey players — none underage — have access to beer at his expense after some games.

“Under different athletic directors I’ve served [with], we’ve had different policies and no policies on making beer available to players,” Woog said. “It’s been over a year since we’ve allowed any players to drink beer in the presence of coaches. Dienhart’s policy is no beer, and that’s my policy.”

Last year, Woog was suspended for a week after it was revealed he gave $500 to former Gopher Chris McAlpine. Woog’s job could be in jeopardy if there are any further violations.

The NCAA has been kept apprised of the investigation, and the university expects no sanctions.

MAAC To Become Fifth D-I Hockey Conference

Like any good rumor, the one about the formation of a fifth NCAA Division I men’s ice hockey conference has taken on a life of its own.

Well, the facts are in — the grist for the mill is expended.

An official announcement is not expected for at least a few weeks, but eight schools have already given written notice of their intention to be part of a new hockey conference, set to begin play in 1998-99.

The eight schools — American International (AIC), Canisius, Connecticut, Fairfield, Holy Cross, Iona, Quinnipiac, and Sacred Heart — will play in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. Three of the schools — Canisius, Fairfield, and Iona — were already MAAC members for all other sports, so it was a natural fit.

The new conference’s members had also considered becoming part of the ECAC or America East before settling on the MAAC.

Another school, Mercyhurst, is a possible ninth member. The Erie, Pa., school is relatively close to Buffalo (N.Y.)-based Canisius and would be a good fit, but it would first have to downgrade its lacrosse program before upgrading hockey. As a Division II institution, Mercyhurst is only allowed to designate one sport as Division I.

Sources say the conference’s scheduling committee has come up with a tentative schedule. Assuming a nine-member conference, each team would play every other one three times, a total of 24 games. There is currently no plan to restrict the number of games played to fewer than the NCAA maximum of 34. The ECAC, for example, limits its teams to 32 games, and the Ivy League schools can play only 29.

Army and Niagara were heavily lobbied to join the new conference, and representatives of those programs were at many of the meetings. But Niagara is still setting its sights on one of the four established conferences, possibly the CCHA.

Army wanted to keep the flexibility in its current schedule. The Cadets play a host of solid Division I teams each year, and didn’t want recruiting to suffer if those games are eliminated. Nevertheless, they may consider joining the MAAC in the future.

Teams like Holy Cross and UConn are happy because they’ll finally have a real home. Those schools, like several others, have been playing in the cross-division ECAC structure with mostly Division-III teams. They’ve been able to compete for league titles, but unable to play at the NCAA tournament level.

The ultimate goal for the pioneers of the new conference is to receive an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. The NCAA allows only a certain number of teams in each sport’s year-end tourney, based on the percentage of NCAA member schools playing that particular sport. Hockey already receives an exemption to allow the current 12, but with nine new D-I programs, the MAAC is hoping the NCAA will stretch the exemption to 16.

A strong case can be made in that hockey is one of the few money makers for the NCAA, ranking fourth behind football and men’s and women’s basketball. The NCAA will surely wait until the MAAC gets its feet wet before deciding anything, but a newly-organized championship cabinet in the NCAA includes the athletic director at UConn and the president of the MAAC.

“[The committee has] said, ‘Let’s make hockey part of the agenda,'” according to a well-placed source.

Working against the MAAC, however, is the concern that the new league may not be competitive at the tournament’s level of play. The NCAA once included a bid for independents, but eliminated that several years ago due partly to such worries — and partly because of the tendency of the best independents to join established leagues. In other words, the MAAC will have to prove itself before an automatic bid can become reality.

Nonetheless, all of this will add to the recruiting pressure for these schools, which can’t be satisfied with simply calling themselves a Division I league. As Holy Cross coach Peter Van Buskirk says, they must be competitive.

“We need to get as good as we can get — better than we have been,” said Van Buskirk, “to the point of being a quality opponent for the established [D-I] programs. And you want the whole league to survive. You’re hoping you do your part and the other schools do their part to become legitimate contenders.”

It will be a strange year for some of the schools as they play one last season in the old structure.

“We’ve already moved in terms of preparation and recruiting,” said AIC hockey sports information director Chris Hermann.

“This is a transition year. We’re not focusing on it for the season, but we are for recruits.”

Van Buskirk reiterated what a lot of people are saying; that a new conference will only help strengthen the sport as a whole. That is, the more teams playing Division I hockey, the merrier.

“With hockey most of the change or growth is in women’s,” Van Buskirk said. “So this is a new thing. We’re excited.”

The size and quality of facilities in the new conference vary, but most are in the 1,000-2,000 seat range.

Quinnipiac, which is in the process of upgrading its entire athletic department to the Division I level, has plans for a brand-new arena. A school such as AIC, on the other hand, will move out of its 20-year home at Smead Arena and play eight miles away just to find a rink good enough to house a D-I team. Holy Cross’ rink is small, holding just over 1,000 for now, but is a good facility all-around.

Other schools that at one time considered joining the MAAC were D-I school Villanova; D-I club schools Central Connecticut State and Penn State; D-II schools Assumption, Bentley, St. Anselm, St. Michael’s and Stonehill College; and D-III schools Elmira (N.Y.), Oswego (N.Y.) St. and Rochester Institute of Technology.

The door is open, and the hope is that more schools will join after recognizing the viability of the MAAC.

Said one athletic director, “This could be the tip of the iceberg.”

Oh, no … more rumors.

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