The Big Ten hockey conference and Gophers men's hockey team enter this season searching for the same thing — an identity.
The Big Ten has nearly 120 years of success in sports such as football and basketball. Now it's the first major conference to sponsor ice hockey, which on some fronts is a risky move.
The Gophers are one of college hockey's traditional powers. But they've replaced five NHL signees off last season's NCAA tournament team with eight freshmen.
Uncertainty is relatively uncommon for the Big Ten and the Gophers hockey team, and officials of both are realistic that it might take time to develop their separate identities.
"I don't know exactly what kind of team we're going to be this year," junior forward Travis Boyd said. "We got a lot of new players and a lot of new guys that need to fill roles that we lost last year. So I think it's still a work in progress."
Jennifer Heppel, Big Ten associate commissioner, has a similar view on the conference's new endeavor. She said the league's work began two-plus years ago asking the most basic question: "How we do this?"
Now the Big Ten is focused on how to become the face of college hockey, although the league has yet to play a game.
Building the brand
The conference's inaugural media day last month in St. Paul looked more like a playoff gathering than a preseason introduction. The scene matched that of an NCAA hockey tournament, Wisconsin coach Mike Eaves said.