CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
The CCHA Tournament was the conference tournament for the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA), an NCAA Division I men's ice hockey conference whose original version existed from 1971 to 2013. The winner of the tournament received an automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament. The winner of the tournament also received the Mason Cup, which began in 2001. In other years, the trophy was known as the CCHA Tournament Championship Trophy.
CCHA Tournament (defunct) | |
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Conference Hockey Championship | |
Sport | Ice hockey |
Conference | Central Collegiate Hockey Association |
Format | Single-elimination best two-of-three tournament |
Current stadium | Joe Louis Arena |
Current location | Detroit, Michigan |
Played | 1972–2013, 2022–future |
Last contest | 2013 CCHA Tournament |
Current champion | Notre Dame |
Most championships | Michigan State Spartans (11) |
Winner trophy | Mason Cup |
Official website | CCHA.CSTV.com |
The tournament was first held in 1972, the first year of conference play. It was held at The Arena in St. Louis, Missouri from 1972–77. From 1978–81, the CCHA Tournament was held at the rink of the higher seed. Starting in 1982, the CCHA Tournament first round was held at the rink of the higher seed with Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan hosting the CCHA Tournament semifinals and finals. From 1993–94 and 2002–05, the CCHA championship format had six teams competing at Joe Louis Arena with the bottom four teams competing for the third and fourth spots in the semifinals.
In February 2020, seven schools that had announced several months earlier that they would leave the Western Collegiate Hockey Association after the 2020–21 season announced that they would form a new CCHA, with the 2021–22 season as the first for the revived league. The tournament will most likely resume in 2022, though the members of the revived CCHA have yet to announce any tournament plans.[1]
CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament champions
Formats
- 1972
The CCHA Tournament format begins as a single-game elimination two-round format.
- 1973
A round-robin championship format was adopted. Although not a member of the CCHA's Division I, Western Michigan is invited as the fourth team in the CCHA Tournament.
- 1974–75
The single-game elimination format returns. Western Michigan is invited for a second year as the fourth team in the CCHA Tournament.
- 1976
Championship game is changed to a two-game, total-goals series.
- 1977–81
All tournament rounds are changed to a two-game, total-goals series.
- 1982–85
First round series remain a two-game, total-goals series. Semifinals and finals are changed to single-game elimination format. The CCHA Tournament is expanded from four teams to eight teams in a three-round format.
- 1986
First round series changed to a best two-of-three format. Semifinals and finals remain single-game elimination.
- 1993–94
With the addition of Kent State and Notre Dame to the league and Alaska as an affiliate member, the tournament expanded to 12 teams. A quarterfinal at Joe Louis Arena narrows the field from six to four. Alaska is placed in the tournament by team choice. In order, the top six teams select their opponent for the first round among the bottom five teams and Alaska. The CCHA eliminates the consolation game.
- 1995
The tournament retracts to 10 teams. A highest seed-hosts, midweek play-in game narrows the field from five to four.
- 1996–99
Tournament format returns to eight teams.
- 2000–01
The tournament field expands back to 10 along with the midweek play-in game.
- 2002–05
All 12 teams qualify for the tournament with a quarterfinal at Joe Louis Arena narrowing the field from six to four. The consolation game returns to boost records and rankings for NCAA Tournament selection.
- 2006–13
All 11 league members qualified for the tournament. A four-round format was introduced beginning in 2006 with the top five seeds receiving byes and the remaining six teams playing in an on-campus best two-of-three first round series. After the first round, the field was reseeded for the quarterfinal round for an on-campus best two-of-three series. The remaining four teams were reseeded for the CCHA Championship at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit.
Championship appearances
By school[2]
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By coach[2]
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"Modern Era"
In 1981–82, four teams from the WCHA (Michigan, Michigan State, Michigan Tech and Notre Dame) defected to the CCHA. The four teams brought their long, storied history with 12 combined NCAA National Championships giving the young, up-start league instant credibility. The tournament championship was moved from small on-campus rinks to Joe Louis Arena, home of the NHL's Detroit Red Wings. These events give the league a distinct turning point at which the "Modern Era" of the CCHA Tournament begins.
"Road to the Joe"
Commissioner Bill Beagan coined the phrase "Road to the Joe" in describing the CCHA Tournament in 1985–86. The phrase is commonly used in reference to the CCHA Tournament.[3]
"Super Six"
With the tournament expanding to 12 teams in 2001–02, the CCHA adopted the name "Super Six" in reference to the six teams who advance past the first round to the CCHA championships at Joe Louis Arena. The name was dropped following the 2005 season when the CCHA championships were reduced back to four teams.
References
- Johnson, Randy (February 18, 2020). "CCHA will be new name for seven teams leaving WCHA in 2021-22". Star Tribune. Minneapolis. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
- "CCHA All-Time Champions". CCHA.com. Archived from the original on 2013-03-25. Retrieved 25 March 2013.
- Mackinder, Matt (September 22, 2011). "Checking In: Former CCHA commissioner Bill Beagan". U.S. College Hockey Online. Retrieved March 27, 2020.