Don Lucia, the retired Gophers men's hockey coach, has a special place in his heart for Alaska. He began his coaching career there, started a family there and now spends about half the year there. Lucia, it's safe to say, has his finger on the pulse of college hockey in the Last Frontier.
So, when the announcement came last Friday afternoon that seven teams have started the process of withdrawing from the WCHA and forming a new men's hockey conference that wouldn't include current members Alaska, Alaska Anchorage and Alabama Huntsville, the news wasn't a total surprise to Lucia.
"I knew there were concerns on a number of fronts about the travel up here and Huntsville," Lucia said by phone from his home in Soldotna, on Alaska's Kenai Peninsula. "And the institutional commitments were questioned."
However, the news that Minnesota State Mankato, Bemidji State, Bowling Green, Ferris State, Lake Superior State, Michigan Tech and Northern Michigan were breaking away blindsided the rest of the WCHA.
"Shocked, upset and unexpected" was how Cade Smith, Alabama Huntsville's interim athletic director, described his reaction to the news.
WCHA Commissioner Bill Robertson has declined to comment beyond a statement that the conference will ensure members withdraw in accordance with its bylaws, which will keep those teams in the league for the next two seasons.
But the future of college hockey in Alaska already is uncertain, especially with the two schools facing a new wave of budget cuts that also were announced last week.
"You never want to see programs go away because there's just not that many," Lucia said of the 60 current teams playing NCAA Division I hockey. "The budgets aren't the same up here [in Alaska] as when the oil was really cooking in the '70s, '80s and '90s."