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The Pepsi Center, now known as Ball Arena, hosted the 2008 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament. The NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament is a college ice hockey tournament held in the United States by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
The 2020–21 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season began on November 14, 2020, and concluded with the Frozen Four on April 10, 2021. Due to the cancellation of the previous year's tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic , this was the 73rd season in which an NCAA ice hockey championship was held, and was US college hockey's 127th year overall.
The Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) is a college athletic conference in the Midwestern United States that participates in the NCAA's Division I as a hockey-only conference. The current CCHA began play in the 2021–22 season; a previous incarnation, which the current CCHA recognizes as part of its history, existed from 1971 to 2013.
^G Minnesota State won a Division II National Championship in 1980. ^H RIT won a Division II National Championship in 1983 and a Division III Championship in 1985. ^I Union also competed in Division I from 1947 to 1949. Map. The below maps show the locations of teams that have won the championship; the color of the dot indicates the number of ...
The at-large bids and seeding for each team in the tournament were announced on March 21, 2021. [5]Typically, teams are seeded according to their PairWise rankings (PWR); however, due to the COVID-19 pandemic causing a severe lack of inter-conference games among the league, using the PWR would not be a reliable representation of overall NCAA standings.
Eight teams qualify for the national tournament each season: automatic bids are awarded to the playoff champions of the Central Collegiate Women's Hockey Association, the Western Women's Collegiate Hockey League and Women's Midwest College Hockey, with the remainder of the field filled out by the highest-placing teams from the last of a series ...
The Ivy League recognizes ice hockey champions for both sexes, but it does not sponsor the sport; it instead uses the results of regular-season ECAC Hockey matches involving two Ivy League schools to extrapolate an Ivy champion (all six Ivy League schools that sponsor varsity hockey do so for both men and women, and compete in the ECAC).
Hockey East regular-season champions 2007: Boston College: 5–2: New Hampshire: lost to Michigan State in National Championship game 2008: Boston College: 4–0: Vermont: defeated Notre Dame in National Championship game 2010: Boston College: 7–6 (OT) Maine: defeated Wisconsin in National Championship game 2011: Boston College: 5–3 ...