These are the most chaotic times faced by current generations of college coaches, as they attempt to have their teams navigate COVID-19's easy-to-acquire omicron variant, the possibility of midseason departures because of opportunity or unhappiness among athletes, and the old reliable for disruption, injuries.
"It is an understatement to say the last couple of years, mostly due to COVID, have been way more challenging for players, and also for us as coaches," said Mike Hastings, coach of Minnesota State Mankato's No. 1-rated men's hockey team.
"We used to go into a season with a Plan A, but knowing we would at some point need Plan B. Now, A, B and Plan C probably aren't going to be enough.
"You can't be sure there's a game, who will be available, until the puck is dropped."
The all-timer came in March 2020, when the Mavericks were 31-5-2 and ranked No. 2 nationally as the NCAA tournament approached, only to have the pandemic swoop in and cancel everything. And last year's trip to the Frozen Four had serious behind-the-scenes drama, too.
"We were getting ready to play St. Cloud State in the Frozen Four semis last April. The day of the game, we had positive tests for the virus. We were tested again and they turned out they were false positives.
"And we were part of an all-time great game with the Huskies."
St. Cloud State won 5-4 in overtime, for those keeping track at home.