2021 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament explained

Year:2021
Gender:men's
Division:Division I
Teams:16
Frozenfourarena:PPG Paints Arena
Frozenfourcity:Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Champions:Massachusetts Minutemen
Titlecount:1st
Runnerup:St. Cloud State Huskies
Gamecount:1st
Semifinal1:Minnesota State Mavericks
Frozenfourcount:1st
Semifinal2:Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs
Frozenfourcount2:8th
Coach:Greg Carvel
Coachcount:1st
Mop:Bobby Trivigno
Mopteam:Massachusetts
Attendance:3,963 (Championship)
11,283 (Frozen Four)
16,985 (Tournament)

The 2021 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament was the national championship tournament for men's college ice hockey in the United States. It took place between March 26 and April 10, 2021. The tournament involved 16 teams in single-elimination play to determine the national champion at the Division I level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the highest level of competition in college hockey. The tournament's Frozen Four – the semifinals and finals – was hosted by Robert Morris University at the PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh from April 8 to 10.[1]

The SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire, was selected to host the Northeast Region, but pulled out on January 26, 2021, due to concerns over the COVID-19 pandemic.[2] The Times Union Center in Albany, New York, was selected as a replacement site.[3]

This year's tournament featured, as of 2024, the longest game in NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament history, when the Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs defeated the North Dakota Fighting Hawks by a score of 3–2 in five overtimes, totaling 142:13 minutes of play, in the West Regional Final.

This tournament's Frozen Four teams were also notable for a number of reasons. First, it was just the second time in NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament history in which three of the final four teams came from one state. This first occurred in 1992, when the Michigan Wolverines, Michigan State Spartans, and Lake Superior State Lakers, all from Michigan, made the Frozen Four. In this year’s tournament, three teams came from Minnesota, these teams being the Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs, St. Cloud State Huskies, and Minnesota State Mavericks. Also, this year's tournament was only the third time since 1992, when Regional Tournaments were first conducted, that no teams ranked no. 1 in their respective Regional Tournament advanced to the Frozen Four. This also occurred in the 1998 and 2007 tournaments.

Tournament procedure

The tournament is composed of four groups of four teams in regional brackets. The four regionals are officially named after their geographic areas.[4]

Regional semifinals and finals

East Regional, Webster Bank ArenaBridgeport, Connecticut (Hosts: Sacred Heart and Yale)

Midwest Regional, Scheels ArenaFargo, North Dakota (Host: North Dakota)

Northeast Regional, Times Union CenterAlbany, New York (Hosts: ECAC)

West Regional, Budweiser Events CenterLoveland, Colorado (Host: Denver)

National semifinals and championship (Frozen Four and championship)

PPG Paints Arena – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Host: Robert Morris University)

Qualifying teams

See main article: 2020–21 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season.

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. As a result, the NCAA Selection Committee awarded seeds manually based on varying factors, including perceived strength of conference and performance against the best teams in conference. Once seeds were determined, matchups were adjusted to prevent teams from the same conference meeting in the first round, as well as minimize the amount of traveling required due to the pandemic.

The NCHC and Big Ten each had four teams receive a berth in the tournament, Hockey East and WCHA each had three teams receive a berth, and one team from Atlantic Hockey and the ECAC each received a berth.

ECAC Tournament champions St. Lawrence earned an autobid but were forced to withdraw from the tournament as a result of a positive COVID-19 test among the team's coaching staff.[6] Quinnipiac was selected to replace St. Lawrence as ECAC's autobid.[7]

On March 25, it was announced that Notre Dame would be forced to withdraw from the tournament due to COVID protocols.[8] As a result, their matchup with Boston College was ruled a no-contest and the Eagles automatically advanced to the Northeast Regional Final. Similarly, on March 26, the NCAA announced Michigan was forced to withdraw as well due to COVID protocols.[9] As a result, Minnesota–Duluth automatically advanced to the Midwest Regional Final.

Midwest Regional – FargoEast Regional – Bridgeport
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bidSeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bid
1North Dakota (1)NCHC21–5–1Tournament champion33rd20171Wisconsin (4)Big Ten20–9–1At-Large bid26th2014
2MichiganBig Ten15–10–1At-Large bid38th20182MassachusettsHockey East16–5–4Tournament champion3rd2019
3Minnesota DuluthNCHC14–10–2At-Large bid14th20193Lake Superior StateWCHA19–6–3Tournament champion11th1996
4American InternationalAtlantic Hockey15–3–0Tournament champion2nd20194Bemidji StateWCHA15–9–3At-Large bid5th2010
West Regional – LovelandNortheast Regional – Albany
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bidSeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth typeAppearanceLast bid
1Minnesota (3)Big Ten23–6–0Tournament champion38th20171Boston College (2)Hockey East17–5–1At-Large bid36th2016
2Minnesota StateWCHA20–4–1At-Large bid7th20192St. Cloud StateNCHC17–10–0At-Large bid15th2019
3QuinnipiacECAC17–7–4Replacement Autobid7th20193Boston UniversityHockey East10–4–1At-Large bid37th2018
4OmahaNCHC14–10–1At-Large bid4th20154Notre DameBig Ten14–13–2At-Large bid12th2019

Number in parentheses denotes overall seed in the tournament.

Tournament bracket

Results

Midwest Region – Fargo, North Dakota

Regional Final

Northeast Region – Albany, New York

Regional Final

West Region – Loveland, Colorado

Regional Final

East Region – Bridgeport, Connecticut

Regional Final

Frozen Four – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

National semifinal

2021 National Championship

(E2) Massachusetts vs. (NE2) St. Cloud State

Scoring summary
PeriodTeamGoalAssist(s)TimeScore
1stalign=center style=";" UMAAaron Bohlinger (1) – GWSullivan and Farmeralign=center 7:26align=center 1–0 UMA
align=center style=";" UMAReed Lebster (2)Kiefiukalign=center 18:56align=center 2–0 UMA
2ndalign=center style=";" UMAPhilip Lagunov (6) – SHunassistedalign=center 25:10align=center 3–0 UMA
align=center style=";" UMAMatthew Kessel (10) – PPChau and Gaudetalign=center 33:45align=center 4–0 UMA
3rdalign=center style=";" UMABobby Trivigno (11)Lebsteralign=center 46:00align=center 5–0 UMA
Penalty summary
PeriodTeamPlayerPenaltyTimePIM
1stalign=center style=";" UMAAnthony Del GaizoSlashingalign=center 15:27align=center 2:00
2ndalign=center style=";" STCSeamus DonohueTrippingalign=center 20:24align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" UMARyan SullivanTrippingalign=center 23:57align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" UMAJake GaudetElbowingalign=center 30:31align=center 2:00
align=center style=";" STCBench (served by Zach Okabe)Too Many Menalign=center 32:35align=center 2:00
3rdalign=center colspan=5 None
Shots by period
Team123T
align=center style=";" St. Cloud State align=center 3 align=center 12 align=center 10 align=center 25
align=center style=";" Massachusetts align=center 7 align=center 6 align=center 9 align=center 22
Goaltenders
TeamNameSavesGoals againstTime on ice
align=center style=";" STC align=center 17 align=center 5 align=center 60:00
align=center style=";" UMA align=center 25 align=center 0 align=center 60:00

All-Tournament team

* Most Outstanding Player(s)

Record by conference

ConferenceBidsRecordWin %Regional FinalsFrozen FourChampionship GameChampions
NCHC45–4321
Big Ten41–21
Hockey East34–22111
WCHA33–321
Atlantic Hockey10–1
ECAC Hockey10–1
Note: Two regional semifinal games were declared 'No Contest' and the four teams involved were not credited with a win or a loss in those games.

Media

Television

ESPN had US television rights to all games during the tournament for the sixteenth consecutive year.[12] ESPN aired every game, beginning with the regionals, on ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNews, ESPNU, and ESPN3, which were streamed online via WatchESPN.

Broadcast assignments

Regionals

Frozen Four

Radio

Westwood One had exclusive radio rights to the Frozen Four and broadcast both the semifinals and the championship.[13]

References

  1. Web site: 2019–22 NCAA Championship Sites . NCAA.com.
  2. Web site: 2021-01-27. New Hampshire, SNHU Arena withdraw from hosting 2021 Northeast Regional championship. 2021-02-13. College Hockey.
  3. Web site: Myers. Jess. NCAA hockey chair: regional and Frozen Four attendance capped at 25% of building capacity. 2021-02-23. Brainerd Dispatch. February 22, 2021 . en.
  4. Web site: NCAA announces DI men's ice hockey regional sites for 2020 and 2021. www.ncaa.com. en. 2020-05-23.
  5. News: 2021 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey championship selections announced . NCAA.com. March 21, 2021. March 18, 2021.
  6. Web site: St. Lawrence Withdraws From NCAAs Over Positive COVID-19 Test. 2021-03-22. College Hockey News.
  7. Web site: 2021 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey championship selections announced. 2021-03-22. www.ncaa.com. en.
  8. Web site: BC advances in NCAA men's hockey tournament as Notre Dame has to forfeit Saturday's game - The Boston Globe. 2021-03-25. BostonGlobe.com. en-US.
  9. Web site: Paul. Tony. Bianchi. Nolan. UM hockey forced out of NCAA Tournament because of positive tests. 2021-03-27. The Detroit News.
  10. News: Notre Dame Hockey Removed from NCAA Tournament . Notre Dame Athletics. 2021-03-25. 2021-03-25.
  11. News: Ice Hockey Removed from NCAA Tournament Due to COVID Protocols . Michigan Athletics. 2021-03-26. 2021-03-26.
  12. Web site: Margolis. Rachel. December 15, 2011. ESPN and NCAA® Extend Rights Agreement through 2023-24. ESPN. December 15, 2011.
  13. Web site: NCAA, Westwood One extend deal. NCAA. May 12, 2013. January 13, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20130516174340/http://www.ncaa.com/news/ncaa/2011-01-13/ncaa-westwood-one-extend-deal. 2013-05-16. dead.