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(→‎Formation of the Big Ten Hockey conference: The six members was also important for internal Big Ten reasons.)
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===Formation of the Big Ten Hockey conference===
 
===Formation of the Big Ten Hockey conference===
   
The impetus for the realignment was put in motion in September 2010, when oil and natural gas magnate Terry Pegula and his wife Kim donated $88 million to establish Division I men's and women's hockey programs at [[Penn State University]]. This gave the [[Big Ten Conference]], at the time a Division I non-hockey conference, six members that had men's ice hockey competing at the D-I level. The specific membership number was critical for two reasons. First, Big Ten bylaws state that the conference may sponsor a sport once six members schools have varsity teams. More importantly, this is also the same number of members required for a conference's champion to receive an automatic bid to the [[NCAA Men's Division I hockey Championship]] tournament. The conference members voted to add men's ice hockey as a conference sponsored sport in March 2011.  The start date of the hockey was announced for the 2013-14 academic year.
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The impetus for the realignment was put in motion in September 2010, when oil and natural gas magnate Terry Pegula and his wife Kim donated $88 million to establish Division I men's and women's hockey programs at Terry's alma mater of [[Penn State University]]. This gave the [[Big Ten Conference]], at the time a Division I non-hockey conference, six members that had men's ice hockey competing at the D-I level. The specific membership number was critical for two reasons. First, Big Ten bylaws state that the conference may sponsor a sport once six schools have varsity teams. More importantly, this is also the same number of members required for a conference's champion to receive an automatic bid to the [[NCAA Men's Division I hockey Championship]] tournament. The conference members voted to add men's ice hockey as a conference sponsored sport in March 2011.  The start date of Big Ten hockey was announced for the 2013-14 academic year.
   
The result of the establishment of the league led to the folowing changes:
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The result of the establishment of the league led to the following changes:
 
*[[Penn State University]] started playing D-I hockey as an independent for the 2012-13 season and joined the Big Ten for the 2013-14 season.
 
*[[Penn State University]] started playing D-I hockey as an independent for the 2012-13 season and joined the Big Ten for the 2013-14 season.
   
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*This resulted in the [[Western Collegiate Hockey Association]] losing five members ([http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/Colorado_College Colorado College], the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_Denver University of Denver], the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_Minnesota-Duluth University of Minnesota-Duluth], the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_Nebraska-Omaha University of Nebraska-Omaha], and the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_North_Dakota University of North Dakota)], dropping to five members; one below the membership level to gain an automatic birth in the NCAA tournament. To rectify this the WCHA invited six of the remaining members of the [[Central Collegiate Hockey Association]] to join the WCHA.  At this point, the CCHA was down to 7 members (the [[University of Notre Dame]], [[Western Michigan University]], [[Ferris State University]], the [[University of Alaska-Fairbanks]], [[Lake Superior State University]], [[Bowling Green State University]], and [[Northern Michigan University]].
 
*This resulted in the [[Western Collegiate Hockey Association]] losing five members ([http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/Colorado_College Colorado College], the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_Denver University of Denver], the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_Minnesota-Duluth University of Minnesota-Duluth], the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_Nebraska-Omaha University of Nebraska-Omaha], and the [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/University_of_North_Dakota University of North Dakota)], dropping to five members; one below the membership level to gain an automatic birth in the NCAA tournament. To rectify this the WCHA invited six of the remaining members of the [[Central Collegiate Hockey Association]] to join the WCHA.  At this point, the CCHA was down to 7 members (the [[University of Notre Dame]], [[Western Michigan University]], [[Ferris State University]], the [[University of Alaska-Fairbanks]], [[Lake Superior State University]], [[Bowling Green State University]], and [[Northern Michigan University]].
 
*[http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/St._Cloud_State St. Cloud State] (then a WCHA member) and [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/Western_Michigan_University Western Michigan University ](then a CCHA member) were invited to join the [[National Collegiate Hockey Conference]] in the autumn of 2011.  Both schools accepted the invitations and further reducing both the CCHA and WCHA by one more member.
 
*[http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/St._Cloud_State St. Cloud State] (then a WCHA member) and [http://icehockey.wikia.com/wiki/Western_Michigan_University Western Michigan University ](then a CCHA member) were invited to join the [[National Collegiate Hockey Conference]] in the autumn of 2011.  Both schools accepted the invitations and further reducing both the CCHA and WCHA by one more member.
*[[Ferris State University]], the [[University of Alaska-Fairbanks]], [[Lake Superior State University]], [[Bowling Green State University]], and [[Northern Michigan University|Northern Michigan University all]] accepted invitations to join the WCHA, making it a nine team league.
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*[[Ferris State University]], the [[University of Alaska-Fairbanks]], [[Lake Superior State University]], [[Bowling Green State University]], and [[Northern Michigan University|Northern Michigan University all]] accepted invitations to join the WCHA, making it a nine-team league.
*The [[University of Notre Dame]] accepted an invitation to join [[Hockey East]], making it an eleven team league
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*The [[University of Notre Dame]] accepted an invitation to join [[Hockey East]], making it an 11-team league. (In 2017, the Fighting Irish would leave Hockey East to join Big Ten hockey.)
 
*On January 17, 2013, the [[University of Alabama in Huntsville]] accepted an invitation to join the WCHA, starting with the 2013-14 season after previously playing as a Division I independent since the 2010-11 season.  This now gave the WCHA 10 members.
 
*On January 17, 2013, the [[University of Alabama in Huntsville]] accepted an invitation to join the WCHA, starting with the 2013-14 season after previously playing as a Division I independent since the 2010-11 season.  This now gave the WCHA 10 members.
*[[Hockey East]], now being at 11 members, was facing a scheduling issue for league play with the odd number of teams, entered into talks with the [[UConn Huskies|University of Connecticut]] to join the league from the [[Atlantic Hockey Association]].  The women's program was already playing in Hockey East. On June 21, 2012 the school accepted the league's invitation to join the league starting with the 2014-15 season.  The school was planning on playing its conference games at the [[XL Center]] in [[Hartford]], which already hosts the school's men's and women's basketball teams, until the facilities for the schools hockey team can be upgraded.  They will still play non conference home games at the [[Mark Edward Freitas Ice Forum]] on the schools campus in [[Storrs, Connecticut]].
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*[[Hockey East]], now being at 11 members and facing a scheduling issue for league play with the odd number of teams, entered into talks with the [[UConn Huskies|University of Connecticut]] to join the league from the [[Atlantic Hockey Association]].  The women's program was already playing in Hockey East. On June 21, 2012 the school accepted the league's invitation to join the league starting with the 2014-15 season.  The school was planning on playing its conference games at the [[XL Center]] in [[Hartford]], which already hosts the school's men's and women's basketball teams, until the facilities for the schools hockey team can be upgraded.  They will still play non conference home games at the [[Mark Edward Freitas Ice Forum]] on the schools campus in [[Storrs, Connecticut]].
 
*The only men's Division I conference left unaffected by all of the realignment was the [[ECAC]].
 
*The only men's Division I conference left unaffected by all of the realignment was the [[ECAC]].
   
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*The [[National Collegiate Hockey Conference]] was formed to start play for the [[2013-14 NCHC Season ]]with 8 teams.
 
*The [[National Collegiate Hockey Conference]] was formed to start play for the [[2013-14 NCHC Season ]]with 8 teams.
 
*The [[CCHA]] was dissolved after playing from 1971 to 2013.
 
*The [[CCHA]] was dissolved after playing from 1971 to 2013.
  +
** In a postscript to this realignment, Bowling Green, one of the final CCHA members, retained ownership of the conference name. In November 2019, Bowling Green was one of seven members of the post-2013 WCHA that jointly announced in late 2019 that they would leave the WCHA after the 2020–21 season. The seven schools announced in February 2020 that they would begin play in a new CCHA in 2021–22.
 
 
*[[Hockey East]] expanded to 11 teams for the [[2013-14 Hockey East Season|2013-14 season]] and to 12 teams for 2014-15.
 
*[[Hockey East]] expanded to 11 teams for the [[2013-14 Hockey East Season|2013-14 season]] and to 12 teams for 2014-15.
 
*The [[Western Collegiate Hockey Association]] would now have 10 men's teams for the 2013-14 season.
 
*The [[Western Collegiate Hockey Association]] would now have 10 men's teams for the 2013-14 season.
 
*[[Atlantic Hockey]] would drop by one team for the 2014-15 season.
 
*[[Atlantic Hockey]] would drop by one team for the 2014-15 season.
 
*The only men's Division I conference left unaffected by all of the realignment was the [[ECAC]].
 
*The only men's Division I conference left unaffected by all of the realignment was the [[ECAC]].
*A total of 21 (out of 59 D-I) programs are in new conferences for the 2013-14 season and a 22nd  will change conferences for the 2014-15 season.
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*A total of 21 D-I programs (out of 59 at the time) were in new conferences for the 2013-14 season, and a 22nd changed conferences for the 2014-15 season.
 
*Only [[Michigan Tech]] along with the founding members of [[Hockey East]] (Boston College, Boston University, UMass-Lowell, Maine, New Hampshire, and Providence College) have been in the same conference continuously since at least 1988 and all seven of the these schools joined their present conferences for the 1984-85 season.  So no school has been in their conference more than 30 seasons as of the end of the 2013-14 season
 
*Only [[Michigan Tech]] along with the founding members of [[Hockey East]] (Boston College, Boston University, UMass-Lowell, Maine, New Hampshire, and Providence College) have been in the same conference continuously since at least 1988 and all seven of the these schools joined their present conferences for the 1984-85 season.  So no school has been in their conference more than 30 seasons as of the end of the 2013-14 season
Strangely, with all these moves in the men's leagues, the only changes to the women's Division I leagues were that [[College Hockey America]] (which only sponsors a women's league) would lose [[Niagara Purple Eagles women's ice hockey|Niagara]], which was droping the sport and added [[Penn State Nittany Lions women's ice hockey|Penn State]], [[Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey|Lindenwood]], and [[RIT Tigers women's ice hockey|Rochester Institute of Technology.  ]]The Big Ten only has 4 schools participating in women's varsity hockey (Minnesota, Ohio State, Penn State, and Wisconsin) and the CCHA never sponsored women's hockey in its history as Ohio State was the only member with a women's varsity program and they played in the WCHA
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*Strangely, with all these moves in the men's leagues, the only changes to the women's Division I leagues were that [[College Hockey America]] (which only sponsors a women's league) would lose [[Niagara Purple Eagles women's ice hockey|Niagara]], which was dropping the sport and added [[Penn State Nittany Lions women's ice hockey|Penn State]], [[Lindenwood Lady Lions ice hockey|Lindenwood]], and [[RIT Tigers women's ice hockey|Rochester Institute of Technology. ]]The Big Ten only had four schools participating in women's varsity hockey at the time (Minnesota, Ohio State, Penn State, and Wisconsin), and none of its other members have added varsity women's hockey as of 2020–21. Also, the original CCHA never sponsored women's hockey in its history; Ohio State, whose women played (and still play) in the WCHA, was the only CCHA member with a women's varsity program.
 
 
===Conference Memberships by Season (based on information from above)===
 
===Conference Memberships by Season (based on information from above)===
 
<u>Conference                 2011-12       2012-13             2013-14        2014-15</u>
 
<u>Conference                 2011-12       2012-13             2013-14        2014-15</u>

Revision as of 06:31, 15 July 2020

Formation of the Big Ten Hockey conference

The impetus for the realignment was put in motion in September 2010, when oil and natural gas magnate Terry Pegula and his wife Kim donated $88 million to establish Division I men's and women's hockey programs at Terry's alma mater of Penn State University. This gave the Big Ten Conference, at the time a Division I non-hockey conference, six members that had men's ice hockey competing at the D-I level. The specific membership number was critical for two reasons. First, Big Ten bylaws state that the conference may sponsor a sport once six schools have varsity teams. More importantly, this is also the same number of members required for a conference's champion to receive an automatic bid to the NCAA Men's Division I hockey Championship tournament. The conference members voted to add men's ice hockey as a conference sponsored sport in March 2011.  The start date of Big Ten hockey was announced for the 2013-14 academic year.

The result of the establishment of the league led to the following changes:

  • Penn State University started playing D-I hockey as an independent for the 2012-13 season and joined the Big Ten for the 2013-14 season.

Fallout from Formation of Big Ten Hockey conference

The final results of the realignment

  • The Big Ten Conference was formed to start play with the start of the 2013-14 Big Ten Season with six teams.
  • The National Collegiate Hockey Conference was formed to start play for the 2013-14 NCHC Season with 8 teams.
  • The CCHA was dissolved after playing from 1971 to 2013.
    • In a postscript to this realignment, Bowling Green, one of the final CCHA members, retained ownership of the conference name. In November 2019, Bowling Green was one of seven members of the post-2013 WCHA that jointly announced in late 2019 that they would leave the WCHA after the 2020–21 season. The seven schools announced in February 2020 that they would begin play in a new CCHA in 2021–22.
  • Hockey East expanded to 11 teams for the 2013-14 season and to 12 teams for 2014-15.
  • The Western Collegiate Hockey Association would now have 10 men's teams for the 2013-14 season.
  • Atlantic Hockey would drop by one team for the 2014-15 season.
  • The only men's Division I conference left unaffected by all of the realignment was the ECAC.
  • A total of 21 D-I programs (out of 59 at the time) were in new conferences for the 2013-14 season, and a 22nd changed conferences for the 2014-15 season.
  • Only Michigan Tech along with the founding members of Hockey East (Boston College, Boston University, UMass-Lowell, Maine, New Hampshire, and Providence College) have been in the same conference continuously since at least 1988 and all seven of the these schools joined their present conferences for the 1984-85 season.  So no school has been in their conference more than 30 seasons as of the end of the 2013-14 season
  • Strangely, with all these moves in the men's leagues, the only changes to the women's Division I leagues were that College Hockey America (which only sponsors a women's league) would lose Niagara, which was dropping the sport and added Penn State, Lindenwood, and Rochester Institute of Technology. The Big Ten only had four schools participating in women's varsity hockey at the time (Minnesota, Ohio State, Penn State, and Wisconsin), and none of its other members have added varsity women's hockey as of 2020–21. Also, the original CCHA never sponsored women's hockey in its history; Ohio State, whose women played (and still play) in the WCHA, was the only CCHA member with a women's varsity program.

Conference Memberships by Season (based on information from above)

Conference                 2011-12       2012-13             2013-14        2014-15

Atlantic Hockey               12                      12                      12                   11

Big Ten                  Established for 2013-14 season            6                6

CCHA                              11                      11                Disbanded

ECAC                              12                     12                     12                   12

Hockey East                    10                     10                     11                   12

NCHC                      Established for 2013-14 season         8               8

WCHA                              12                     12                     10                    8

Div. I Independents            1                       2                      0                     0