Lazy Scout wrote:Then why has Hermantown been in the championship 4 straight years in a row? If Breck (a private) has such an unfair advantage, then why did Hermantown beat them? Why was Hermantown beating STA up until the third period? I don't know about you, but I call that a great hockey championship game to watch. So basically declaring class A or AA shouldn't go on school size or community, it should be based on past success rate. As of now I see no difference in Hermantown and STA having to move up to AA. Hermantown has built a reputation of a good hockey program and that is why they are good year after year... just like some of the other metro schools like Edina, Tonka, Wayzata, etc
Metro private schools have won 12 of the last 15 Class A titles. Can you honestly say that being located in the Twin Cities isn't a
huge advantage? How is it that a team can pull top players from several AA sized areas and then call themselves a legitmate A team? How is this not hiding behind the enrollment number to dominate smaller schools that have no access to this insane amount of talent?
Why have other states implemented multipliers or separated public and private into different tourneys? Read the article I posted a link to in a few posts prior to this. Private schools enjoy advantages, and these are magnified greatly in Class A. Did I mention metro private schools have won 12 of the last 15 Class A titles? Did you know it's the same domination in girls hockey?
Hermantown has a great program. Their players are from Hermantown, a town of 9,000, not an amalgamation of all stars from a metro area of 2.5 million, plus other states. Opting up because you are successful and opting up because you are located in
huge metro area are very different things. If private schools had been placed in AA, as they should be, then Hermantown would have a few more titles and the pressure would absolutely have been on them to opt up, and I'm sure they would have.
If you see no difference between Hermantown and STA then I don't know what to tell you.