Quasar wrote:frederick61 wrote:greybeard58 wrote:I have not heard who was the reason for the change.
Could D16, D15, D4 petition Minnesota Hockey to allow Grand Forks, Fargo, and Sioux Falls teams that participate in their regular season play be allowed to play in their district playoffs and be allowed to advance if they win?
This could be done as an experiment for a few years and North Dakota/South Dakota could still have their state tourneys.
If I understand what your saying, the teams you mentioned play with the Minnesota teams in their area. Then if they win they could be in the Minnesota State tournament? They have to make that choice at the beginning of the season? I believe that hockey should be played with out a lot of interference from "the regulators" I would like to know more about the situation with North and South Dakota. Would you spell it out for me? Thank's Q
My view is always focused at the peewee level simply because it is one of the drivers in youth hockey organizationally as well as in player development. As an observer at the rinks watching all sorts of peewee teams play including teams from North and South Dakota, this is what I believe is happening.
D16 hockey is shrinking as the more remote associations struggle over loss of numbers and lack of competition. Moorhead has become too dominant in D15 to the point that last year other D15 teams forfeited their games rather then play the Spuds. D15 needs a competitive "shot in the arm". D4 needs teams at the peewee A level and better competition at the B level and need to find those teams in reasonable driving distance.
So lets hypothesize what could be achieved if it were allowed at the peewee level.
In D16, 7 associations (Bemidji, Warroad, Roseau, TRF, Red Lake Falls, East Grand Forks and Crookston) fielded A level teams last year. Hallock and LOW did not. Grand Fork last year fielded two A1 teams (Seawolves and Greyhounds) and one A2 team (Golden Eagles). Devils Lake and Grafton also fielded A level teams.
Two new D16 leagues could be formed (A and a B1/A2). The A league could have Bemidji, Warroad, Roseau, TRF, East Grand Forks, Crookston, Grand Forks Seawolves, Grand Fork Greyhounds and a Devils Lake or Grafton (or both). That would provide the A-level teams a solid 16-game schedule with good competition for all the teams and shorten driving distance by doubling up on weekends. The Grand Forks and East Grand Forks teams would only be separated by one bridge.
The North Dakota teams entered in D16 and playing a regular D16 schedule would be eligible for D16 playoffs and would be eligible to advance to the regionals as outlined in the current Minnesota Hockey handbook.
Teams like Hallock, LOW, Red Lake Falls, and Grand Forks Golden Eagles can bounce between the A/B levels based on their talent for that year and play either B1 or A leagues, but the B1 level of competition would be tougher and would provide for better player development and more games in a reasonable driving distance.
Moorhead and Fargo are also separated by a bridge. Last year, Moorhead fielded an A and an A2 team. Those two teams played in D15 with Alexandria, Brainerd, Detroit Lakes, Northern Lakes, Little Falls, and Fergus Falls. Prairie Centre (Sauk Centre and Long Prairie), Wadena, and Park Rapids played A in the previous years.
Fargo had two peewee A Flyer teams (Gold and Black), two West Fargo teams, the Fargo Angels and the Fargo Raiders.
I could see two strong, competitive, leagues (A/B1-A1) formed in D15 also. The A level could end up with Alexandria, Moorhead Black, Brainerd, Detroit Lakes, Fargo Gold, Fargo Angels, West Fargo and Fargo Raiders and a 16 game regular season schedule. Associations like Little Falls, Prairie Centre, Park Rapids and Wadena could combine with the Fargo A2 teams (Fargo Black, West Fargo, etc) to form a competitive B1/A2 league.
D4 sits in the southwest corner of Minnesota and had three D4 teams at the A-level last year (Marshall, Redwood Falls, and Luverne). There are three South Dakota border towns that played peewee A last year (Sioux Falls, Brookings and Watertown). There is also an I-90 corridor of D4 associations to the east of Luverne (Worthington, Windom, and Fairmont). D4 also has an associate agreement with Mason City Iowa.
If you use Watertown, Redwood Falls, Fairmont and Sioux Falls as points on a square on a map, the distance on a single side would be 100 miles, corner to corner would be 200 miles.
The potential D4 league would be Sioux Falls, Luverne, Marshall, Redwood Falls, Brookings, Watertown and Mason City. That would yield a 12-game season. The D4 B1 level would have Luverne, Sioux Falls, Redwood Falls, Marshall, Fairmont, Worthington, Windom, Brookings, and Watertown.
This arrangement would fix a number of problems with D16, D15, and D4. D16 has struggled to keep A level team numbers around seven teams. The D16 better teams (four to six) are quality teams and tend to dominate the weaker teams to the extend the weaker team’s associations could start to fail; and the weaker association teams need a better competition fit at the B1 level to improve their programs. North Dakota’s economy is starting to boom and they will have increased interest in the sport and will be looking for better competition.
D15 has been dominated by Moorhead and the addition of the Fargo teams will create better competition for all teams involved. D15 tends to let the weaker associations opt out late between A and B levels (a team will be entered at the A level and drop to the B level as late as December 1). The addition of the Fargo teams will provide those associations better competition at that B1/A2 level.
Finally D4 needs more teams to get their regular season on track. Last year, Marshall and Redwood Falls played a guest D5 schedule and Luverne played a guest D4 schedule. They could have a seven team A league and a larger more competitive B1 league.
Finally, why would North and South Dakota associations want to play Minnesota Hockey? They also need the regular season competition (a 12-16 game schedule plus a 14-16 game North Dakota or South Dakota Hockey Schedule) would give the teams a 45-55 regular season games.
But the big plus would be the year end opportunity to play in the Minnesota A and B tourneys.
The other question to be answered is would the bantams and girls youth hockey levels benefit? My guess is it would for the same reasons, more games, more competitive games, played closer to home.