BleedGopher
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per RandBall:
But really, we knew it wasn’t about the high school hockey tournament long before Sunday. Back in 2012, the Gophers drew announced crowds in excess of 9,000 for both games of a first-round playoff sweep over Alaska-Anchorage in the old WCHA.
Ah, so the Big Ten is to blame!
Well, a little. Minnesota averaged more than 9,500 fans during the regular season eight years ago before those big playoff crowds; this year, the number has dipped to 7,456 — still No. 3 in the country, but even 500 fewer than last year.
Fans have not bought into Big Ten hockey the way they supported the old rivalries of the WCHA, but that only tells a little of the weekend story. In the old days of the Gophers in the WCHA, season ticket packages included first-round playoff games. And the season ticket base was substantial back then.
Last year and this year, playoff tickets are not part of a season ticket package. If they were, one would imagine playoff crowds would be announced at levels much closer to the regular-season levels.
Take the season ticket base out of a lot of crowds, and you will see a pretty small number.
All that said: It’s still pretty stunning to see so many empty seats in a 10,000-seat hockey arena in Minnesota for a playoff game.
Just don’t blame it on high school hockey.
www.startribune.com
Go Gophers!!
But really, we knew it wasn’t about the high school hockey tournament long before Sunday. Back in 2012, the Gophers drew announced crowds in excess of 9,000 for both games of a first-round playoff sweep over Alaska-Anchorage in the old WCHA.
Ah, so the Big Ten is to blame!
Well, a little. Minnesota averaged more than 9,500 fans during the regular season eight years ago before those big playoff crowds; this year, the number has dipped to 7,456 — still No. 3 in the country, but even 500 fewer than last year.
Fans have not bought into Big Ten hockey the way they supported the old rivalries of the WCHA, but that only tells a little of the weekend story. In the old days of the Gophers in the WCHA, season ticket packages included first-round playoff games. And the season ticket base was substantial back then.
Last year and this year, playoff tickets are not part of a season ticket package. If they were, one would imagine playoff crowds would be announced at levels much closer to the regular-season levels.
Take the season ticket base out of a lot of crowds, and you will see a pretty small number.
All that said: It’s still pretty stunning to see so many empty seats in a 10,000-seat hockey arena in Minnesota for a playoff game.
Just don’t blame it on high school hockey.

Dismal Mariucci crowds the sad new playoff normal for Gophers
Fans have not bought into Big Ten hockey the way they supported the old rivalries of the WCHA, but that only tells a little of the weekend story.
Go Gophers!!