Penn State Receives a 88 million dollar donation to jump start Division I hockey program. [Click to read the article]
Penn State to Launch Division I Hockey Program [Click to read the article]
Coming Soon: The Big Ten Hockey Conference [click to read the article]
Persistently battling with the Canadian Hockey League for the top developing prospects, the area landscape of NCAA hockey is soon to change. Beginning with the 2014-15 season, Penn State plans to ice a full-fledged hockey program and will join the newly-formed Big Ten Hockey Conference.Some of these comments by Wisconsin Badgers Head hockey coach Eaves are kind of puzzling to me. The Big Ten Network could show more hockey games than it does right now, however, the BTN fails to do so. All you have to do is look at their programming over the last few years; hockey takes a back seat to Division I Basketball. Last season the BTN didn't even show the hockey show case games.
“Like a lot of things, it’s money driven,” said Wisconsin Badgers coach and former Riverside resident and Assumption high school student Mike Eaves. “You’ve got the Big 10 Network that needs programming (beyond football and basketball). They need more stuff on the air to make it work. The next income sport is hockey, so if we had our own league, that’s going to be something that’s going to draw people to the network, and that’s going to drive the dollars in terms of advertising. That’s something the athletic directors and the (university) presidents realize needs to happen.”
Hockey became a viable program for the Nittany Lions thanks to a very generous benefactor, a Pennsylvania businessman named Terry Pegula, who recently sold his natural gas company for US $4.7 billion. An avid hockey fan, Pegula made a reported US $80 million gift to the school, which is expected to fund the construction of a 6,000-8,000-seat arena.
A formal announcement of Penn State’s plans could come as early as Friday. “Penn State has been knocking on the door since the mid-90s,” Eaves said. “But now, this donor has been able to sell his company and do what he wanted to do to get it going. It’s going to happen in the relatively near future.”
Fans react to D-I move [Click to read the article]
Penn State Athletic Director Tim Curley declined to comment on these reports when reached by phone Monday.Brad Schlossman has a pretty good articles of the pros and cons of the Big Ten Hockey Conference. I have to agree scheduling is going to be a major headache for the BTHC teams.
Currently, the Icers play as an ACHA Division I club team, but are not recognized as a Division I program by the NCAA.
Penn State would instantly become the second-largest university, in terms of enrollment, in the country to offer men's hockey, trailing only Ohio State. The Lions would become the 59th Division I men's hockey program.
Last month, The Altoona Mirror reported Penn State is planning on building a new rink that would replace its current home -- the Penn State Ice Pavilion. The Pavilion holds 1,350 fans while the new arena would accommodate 6,000 to 8,000 people.
2. Scheduling is the major issue. The more teams, the easier it is for scheduling. The sixth team means you can make 20 league games (playing everyone twice) instead of 16. That’s big, but is it big enough? With a six-team BTHC, those teams will get 20 league games and 14-16 nonconference. Your schedule is almost just as heavy with nonconference games and it won’t be a piece of cake filling them out.
3. The schedule isn’t going to be any more attractive. Take Minnesota or Wisconsin for example. You think you are getting a sexy schedule with the “name” schools on it by joining BTHC. But how are you going to fill out the 14-16 nonconference games? Schools like St. Cloud State, Minnesota-Duluth, UND and Denver? Well, then you’re schedule really doesn’t look any different than it does now, does it?