Thursday, May 27, 2021

On Robert Morris Discontinuing Hockey & Erasing Existence

Seven months after it came to an end, the only three remains were in two forgotten corners and a trophy case.

All I found in two treks around Ralph Engelstad Arena, a building showcased to celebrate North Dakota's hockey history, were three mentions of the women's hockey program shut down that previous March. 

One was in a trophy case highlighting UND players going to the Olympics and representing their country. Another featured the Lamoureux twins wearing the program's previous sweaters. A third, looking like it was missed, was a photo of former head coach Brian Idalski on the bench leading the Fighting Hawks.

Every banner, every mention of WCHA opponents, everything else had been taken down. Erased. I saw more North Dakota women's hockey sweaters on the concourse than reminders of its past. A place that spent decades fighting for a nickname did nothing to fight for a top-tier hockey team. Seven months after the university dropped the program so suddenly a recruit was on campus, it was treated like it never existed.

This trek came to mind yesterday (May 26, 2021) when Robert Morris brazenly discontinued its men's and women's hockey programs. 

Players and staff were given no warning, according to multiple reports. A 10-minute zoom call with an hour's notice and no subject was it before a coldly written press release under the subject "An update on men's and women's hockey."

The college world is no stranger to universities dropping Division 1 hockey. (It's my second straight column written about the subject.) Robert Morris, unfortunately, likely will not be the last. However, the Colonials' end differs from the Alabama Huntsvilles of the world. The signs usually show up before a program might meet its end.

In the case of Alabama Huntsville, UAH could not find a home. RMU simply did not want theirs.

Robert Morris got rid of two successful programs because they did not fit the new, purported image of the school. The university dropped a women's hockey team which made the 2021 NCAA Tournament. It dropped a men's hockey team, built from scratch 18 years ago, which has been Atlantic Hockey's most consistent program over the past 7-8 seasons.

It did so near Memorial Day at the expense of coaching staff and athletes now forced to find new teams after most programs are set for next season. Immediately eligible does not help RMU players when no one needs to sit out and everyone gets an extra year of eligibility.

Sifting through emotions, it's difficult realizing how open Robert Morris can be about not wanting to be a "hockey school." The university statement makes it clear that this decision was about "image," not money. (It discusses surpassing a $100 million fundraising campaign plus also goes into a discussion about a CEO Lecture series, which WTF?) Getting a national profile by making national tournaments means nothing when the school thinks it's an embarrassment.

Mostly, the news comes as a mixture of sadness and shock six weeks after RMU finished hosting the men's Frozen Four. At a time when NHL teams are teaming up with NCAA hockey nationally, the Colonials voluntarily leave Pittsburgh without a program. It leaves the CHA, now at five teams, in a precarious state.

I'm sad for Derek Schooley, who built the Colonials into a program that punched above its weight and earned its reputation among the hockey world. I'm sad for Paul Colontino, who made RMU a regular atop the CHA standings and championship game, all while producing a number of heralded players. I'm sad for the alums who no longer have a program to go back. I'm extremely sad for the approximately 55 current players who were done worse than anyone can imagine.

Robert Morris's "strategic course" wants to follow the North Dakota path by treating the programs like they never existed and leaving its student-athletes out in the cold. No one ever takes a breakup lightly, but it stings differently when the reason given is that the sport makes the school look bad in "positioning RMU for future growth and success."

Of course, the North Dakota women's hockey program - poised to be a top-five team the year it ended - lives on despite the lack of acknowledgment at Ralph Engelstad Arena thanks to the number of teams that used former Fighting Hawks players and recruits to further its own success. The same will happen with the Colonials.

Still, it's a sad day. Instead of the women's hockey team seeing a CHA conference tournament banner raised this fall, there will be no celebration. They'll hopefully be representing Robert Morris across a number of schools. 

All while the accomplishment gets tossed by RMU into some forgotten corner, never to be spoken of again by the university.

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Thursday, May 6, 2021

BLOG: The "Growing the Game" Paradox

Three pieces of news happened in the past week. All involve college hockey programs in the southern United States.

One was about Tennessee State reportedly conducting a feasibility study to determine how viable it is to start a Division 1 men's hockey program. TSU, based in Nashville, would be the first team from the country's Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

Another, from College Hockey News, features Lindenwood's quest to be the next Division 1 men's hockey team. The Lions, who already have a Division 1 women's hockey team, would play out of the St. Louis Blues' practice facility. According to the article, LU hopes to "secure a few lead gifts" in time to announce publicly its intentions this summer.

The third comes from Alabama Huntsville, the only D1 men's hockey team currently in the southern United States. For the third time in a decade and second in as many years, the Chargers will be suspending operations.

This news arrives as Alabama Huntsville is unable to find a conference to call home. The CCHA, where seven of the 10 WCHA schools are departing to form next season, denied the Chargers. Another potential fit, Atlantic Hockey, is doing the business version of ghosting someone.

It's very college hockey to see pure excitement of two possible potential programs contrast with an existing program needing to shut down due to no one wanting them. 

As much as the words "grow the game" get thrown around time after time, it comes with a NIMBY-sized asterisk. It is a platitude. Everyone wants to see more teams and more players get opportunities...at least it until it affects them.

No program understands this better than Alabama Huntsville. 

In the past 12 months, the Chargers have been the subject of a successful GoFundMe to keep the program alive. Fans, alums, and the college hockey world as a whole came together to raise enough money to keep the program going. It's not the lack of support and financial help that doomed Alabama Huntsville. Given the choice, the University decided to shut down and wait for a conference home rather than go as an independent.

(Coincidentally, another bit of news from last week was GoFundMe highlighting the Chargers' success.)

Sadly, this isn't new. Go back further and time repeats itself. In two separate iterations, for two similar yet separate reasons, over a decade apart, the CCHA denying UAH's application is the catalyst to the program shutting down. 

Right now schools find it easier to undertake feasibility studies and find ways to start men's hockey programs that even 3-4 years ago were missing. Look at the names who are starting and looking into joining during this time. This is not just a run of Power 5 schools as feared.

The sport comes out of a pandemic healthy with several new teams (and several more rumored) and yet remains as tough for those new and far-away teams to find a spot as it was 15-20 years ago when Atlantic Hockey, CCHA, and WCHA in various ways all danced around the issue of the former CHA teams. Even Bemidji State took some prodding.

Atlantic Hockey had a scheduling agreement with LIU this season, but the Sharks remain independent of the 11 team conference. The same goes with Arizona State and the Big Ten. After taking off last season, Alaska is hanging about as an independent while UAA is in the same situation as UAH. There are a few other programs on the horizon as no one looks to expand a decade after realignment gave conferences room to do exactly that after being stuffed to the 12-team brim with nowhere to add.

When all is said and done, nearly 10% of the sport - and all the geographic outliers - is on the outside.

Unfortunately for Alabama Huntsville, and any future southern teams, growing the game finds itself in a paradox. The most like-minded conferences for them are those who want to be regionally based. However, there aren't enough nearby teams to create regionally based conferences. 

The paradox gives advantages to bigger schools that can withlast being independent and those in the regional footprint, which makes it makes it more necessary for these schools to be regionally based and further drives the cycle. 

In this case, the CCHA denied UAH because it is eight teams of similar size joining together for geographic reasons that don't fit outliers. AHA is in a similar spot (and there are nearby like-minded teams).

College hockey needs more western/southern teams. It needs more teams, in general, to cut down on extreme geography. Outside of several joining at once, or enough teams lasting as independents where it makes sense to split into further conferences, it will be tough to achieve despite the interest last week showed from Tennessee State and Lindenwood. 

If the two take advantage of the growing number of high-end players and join, where would they play? Even Lindenwood acknowledged it likely would start as an independent in the CHN article.

In a more perfect world, there would be enough teams to space the gap and make it easier for geographic outliers, to fully turn a regional sport national. College hockey vastly outgrew the big school/small school regional alliance of the 2000s. Still, teams and conferences do not know what to do when it comes to further growth just as much now. It remains a sport of 60+ fiefdoms.

Reaction to the three pieces of news - excitement for TSU and Lindenwood possibly joining mixed with the reality of UAH's situation possibly ending...again - perfectly sums it up.

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