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After 4 years away from hockey, Crawford is finding his groove in goal

For the first time in over four years, Cameron Crawford took to the ice for live game action.

The Michigan native had spent those four years as a midfielder for the UAH lacrosse team. Now he was back between the pipes for the UAH club hockey team, facing Auburn to open the new season.

Crawford’s re-debut was unexpectedly busy. He faced 67 pucks, stopping 62 of them as the Chargers battled the Tigers to a 5-5 draw.

“Going into the first game this year against Auburn was kind of nerve wrecking to say the least,” Crawford said. “In the moment though, I was just happy to be playing hockey again and having fun.

“I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t extremely exhausted. After the game I was extremely light headed and could barely walk once I got home as my body was simply not used to the all-out nature of competitive hockey. Both of my groin muscles felt strained and I was overall extremely sore and drained. Even some of my old gear wasn’t really able to hold up to the increase in effort during the game as early in overtime one of my toe ties on my right leg pad snapped allowing it to freely rotate on my leg for the remainder of the game. Overall, the fact we were able to leave Friday night in a tie was a miracle from my perspective.”

Cameron Crawford celebrates with Josh Campball, and Zachary Wolfe after UAH’s overtime win over Tennessee (photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography)

Since then, Crawford has been steadily getting back into the groove, and it’s showing in the results. The Chargers have won in his last four starts, including big victories over AAU D1 Alabama (avenging 17-0 and 7-1 losses to the Tide last season) and a strong Clemson team that is tied with UAH atop the College Hockey South Division 2 North. Along with a 3.53 goals against average, the 22-year-old senior has a .922 save percentage, which leads College Hockey South Division 2 and is second in all of AAU College Hockey Division 2 (minimum four starts).

“My hockey fitness has gotten a lot better and I am finally starting to get used to playing two games in a row,” Crawford said. “My favorite memory this season definitely has to be our overtime win against Alabama as I was told about what happened last year and how much it meant to the team. That was also the best I’ve felt physically throughout a full game. However, I hope and expect that memory to be surpassed as we have a lot of potential and a big season still ahead of us.”

“Craw has been awesome for us this year,” UAH head coach Tim Flynn said. “I think when all of us coaches saw him at tryouts, we knew we had something special. Getting to know him off the ice has been great, he’s really become a leader on and off the ice in the short time he’s been here. He gives us a chance to win every night he plays and is one of the main reasons we’re in the position we’re in as we approach the end of the first semester.”

Getting back to hockey was not something Crawford originally expected. He joined the UAH lacrosse team in the 2020 season, and played 23 games over four seasons. He was allowed a fifth year of eligibility because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but it was not offered by now-former head coach Connor Doyle.

“At the time I was obviously devastated and angry,” Crawford said. “However, after some time I was able to accept what happened and realized I needed to move on. I was satisfied with my time playing lacrosse here at UAH and even though I didn’t get the closure I wanted there was no point in dwelling on it.

“Once I came to terms with that several people around me suggested I try and play hockey again, and with lacrosse out of the picture it was a no-brainer. Growing up, hockey was always my first love as a sport, and the opportunity to lace up the skates again and just have fun was too good to pass up.”

Crawford’s last hockey action before UAH was at Saline High School in Michigan, just outside of Ann Arbor. Coincidentally, his mother followed a similar path: She played NCAA Division I soccer at the University of Michigan but left her senior year to play club hockey.

“Getting back into the swing of things has definitely had its ups and downs,” Crawford said. “Mentally, it has been easier to jump back into it. The muscle memory is still there as well as the fundamentals of positioning, and movement. However, the physical side of it has definitely fallen behind a bit since my high school days. The muscles required for playing hockey goalie definitely aren’t the same as a lacrosse defenseman. At this point in the season most of it has come back enough that it’s not bothering me as much. However, there are days where I can definitely feel how much my flexibility has declined since high school.”

Crawford isn’t the only UAH lacrosse player on the hockey team, and those teammates have been a boon to him.

“I also want to mention and give a shoutout to all of my friends and roommates that are still on the lacrosse team as they have been extremely supportive this year by showing up to as many of the games as they can to cheer on myself and the other lacrosse guys on the team such as Josh Campbell, Matteo Siciliano, Ian Arnt, and Andrew Bauer. Their support, along with my girlfriend Catey Welch (on the UAH women’s lacrosse team) and my family have meant the world to me this year and I could not be happier with how things have turned out.”

Crawford is finishing up his degree at UAH in atmospheric science and meteorology. He hopes to stay in the Huntsville area as he prepares for his career.

UAH (5-3-1) returns to action on Nov. 3 at Georgia and Nov. 5 at Tennessee. The Chargers are home for the Veteran’s Cup on Nov. 10 and 11.

Pictured at top: Cameron Crawford squares up to make a save in UAH’s win over Middle Tennessee on September 29. Photo by Jaime Crawford/JC Sports Photography.

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Chargers end Clemson’s streak with 4-2 decision

Special teams were the difference in the UAH club hockey team’s 4-2 victory over Clemson on Friday night at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center.

The Chargers (5-2-1) had three power-play goals to snap Clemson’s seven-game win streak and move to 4-0-0 atop the College Hockey South’s D2 North standings. The Tigers fell to 7-2-0 overall and 3-1-0 in CHS play.

The second game in the series is Saturday at 12:30 p.m., just over 12 hours from when this game ended.

BOX SCORE

Clemson broke through with 2:42 remaining in a free-flowing first period with a Ronan Bryant goal, but Keaton Watts tied it up for UAH in the final minute with a score from the right circle. Kolton Watts and Tyler Trombly got the assists.

The Tigers regained the lead at 2-1 near the halfway point of the game thanks to Cade Reinhold, but UAH capitalized on Clemson slashing and elbowing penalties nine seconds apart with about 6 1/2 minutes left in the second period.

Keaton Watts put in another equalizer with 6:03 to go on the ensuing 5-on-3, and Henry Hoff gave the Chargers their first lead from the right circle a minute later.

Matteo Siciliano made it 4-2 on UAH’s third power-play goal, a drive from long-range up the middle that got over the glove of Clemson goaltender Parker Dietz.

The Chargers were also perfect on the penalty kill, denying the Tigers on five attempts. UAH goaltender Cameron Crawford came up big when it mattered, making 30 saves.

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Tide turns against UAH in overtime

The UAH club hockey team saw its four-game win streak snapped Saturday as the Alabama AAU D1 team bit back with a 4-3 overtime decision at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center.

A day after the Chargers sniped the Tide 3-2 in overtime, UAH surrendered a 3-0 lead to fall to 4-2-1 on the season. Alabama improved to 5-4-0.

Keaton Watts scored the first two Charger goals, one coming three minutes into the contest, the other on a tap-in rebound two minutes into the second period.

BOX SCORE | PHOTO GALLERY

At the 4:36 mark of the second, Josh Corrow’s back-hand pass from behind the goal line found Henry Hoff all alone in the slot, and Hoff buried it to give UAH a 3-0 lead.

The Frozen Tide got on the board with three minutes left in the second on a Dylan Dreveny goal. Early in the third, Finn Forster cut UAH’s lead to 3-2.

Alabama then tied the game halfway through the third on a Matt Dumond power-play goal that wasn’t without controversy. The UAH bench was very vocal as it appeared a lineman missed an offsides call against the Tide right before the goal.

The Chargers survived a late Kolton Watts interference penalty that extended into overtime, but Seb Henault scored the game-winner for the Tide with 1:51 remaining.

Andrew Sledge made 38 saves, including some big saves in the overtime penalty kill to keep the Chargers alive. The Tide outshot the Chargers 42-32.

UAH gets back into College Hockey South Division 2 North action next weekend with a big series at home against Clemson. Both the Chargers and Tigers are 3-0 in conference play.

Pictured: UAH goaltender Andrew Sledge makes a save against the Tide. Photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography.

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Chargers nip Tide in OT for 4th straight win

Josh Corrow scored with 37 seconds remaining in overtime as the UAH club hockey team won its fourth straight game, a 3-2 seesaw affair over the Alabama AAU D1 team Friday night at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center.

UAH (4-1-1) got another great performance from goaltender Cameron Crawford, who stopped 44 Frozen Tide shots. He made 16 saves in the third period and five in overtime.

Game 2 of the series is Saturday night at 6 p.m.

BOX SCORE

UAH strick first when Kolton Watts scored off the post on the power play at the 7:39 mark. After Jacob Best tied the game for Alabama almost seven minutes later, Watts struck again, popping in a rebound with 2:22 left in the first for a 2-1 Chargers lead at intermission.

Tyler Trombly and Keaton Watts got assists on both goals.

There was no scoring in the second period, with the lone penalty coming against the Chargers. The Tide used that power play to get 11 shots on UAH goaltender Cameron Crawford.

Matthew Dumond scored early in the third period to tie the game for Alabama (4-4-0).

In overtime, Kolton Watts in the left corner found Corrow in the slot. Corrow went top shelf on Alabama goalie Luc Haggitt for clinch it for UAH.

Keaton Watts also assisted on the game-winner for his third assist of the game.

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Resilient Chargers finish off sweep of MTSU

Kolton Watts scored two goals to lead the UAH club hockey team to a 7-5 win over Middle Tennessee on Saturday for a series sweep.

The Chargers (3-1-1) have won three straight to start College Hockey South play. MTSU falls to 1-5-0 overall and 1-3-0 in league play.

A much quieter first period compared to Friday’s frenetic game, but there were still many shots on goal to be had. UAH outshot MTSU 16-15 in the period.

BOX SCORE | PHOTO GALLERY

This time it was the Chargers who scored first, with Elijah Howard netting his first goal of the season from the slot at the 6:35 mark. However, Brendan Ogle would equalize for the Blue Raiders almost a minute later.

Things picked up in the first half of the second period, however. Keaton Watts and Kolton Watts scored to put UAH up 3-1, but Middle Tennessee fought back to tie the game by the halfway point.

MTSU took its first lead of the game at the 2:43 mark of the third, but Josh Corrow, who had a hat trick in Friday’s 13-7 win, rifled a score from the left side just five seconds into a UAH power play to tie the game at 4-4.

Zachary Giblin put the Blue Raiders up again near the halfway point of the third. The Chargers then showed resiliency yet again, tying the game at 5-5 as Kolton Watts finished a tic-tac-toe play with Keaton Watts. Kolton has a team-leading seven goals on the year.

With 7:11 to go, Henry Hoff took a snipe up the middle to regain the lead for the Chargers at 6-5. Then with under two minutes to go, Hoff finished the 7-5 win with a goal on a two-on-none with Bradly McDonald.

Drew Sledge played in goal for UAH, stopping 32 of 37 MTSU shots. UAH had 45 shots on goal in the contest.

The Chargers have the next weekend off before hosting Alabama’s AAU D1 team in non-conference action at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center on Oct. 13 and 14.

Pictured: Bradly McDonald (forward) celebrates as Kolton Watts scores one of his goals. Photo by Jaime Crawford/JC Sports Photography

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UAH scores 13 in win over MTSU

The UAH club hockey team rolled to an 13-7 win over Middle Tennessee on Friday night in Antioch, Tenn.

UAH (2-1-1 overall, 2-0-0 College Hockey South) actually fell behind 3-0 in the first ten minutes, but then cruised to win the opener of the two-game set. Game two against MTSU (1-4-0, 1-2-0) Saturday night is at 8:45 p.m.

BOX SCORE | PHOTO GALLERY

It was the worst possible start for the Chargers, who allowed goals on the first two MTSU shots in the first minute of play. Add a power-play goal at the halfway point of the opening period and the Blue Raiders rolled to a 3-0 lead.

UAH was short-handed again after that third goal, but got on the board 44 seconds later. Keaton Watts stole the puck at center ice and then scored high stick-side from the left circle, cutting MTSU’s lead to 3-1.

The Chargers tied the game at 3-3 with back-to-back power-play goals 1:30 apart on blasts from Josh Corrow and Bradly McDonald. Then with 1:01 remaining in the first, Henry Hoff gave UAH its first lead as he roofed in a rebound.

About seven minutes into the second period, UAH scored three goals in a span of 32 seconds to lead 7-3. Kolton Watts, Corrow, and Nathan Litton provided the tallies.

MTSU got one back with 9:03 remaining in the period, but Corrow’s third goal of the night and Elijah Howard’s pickpocket in the slot gave the Chargers a 9-4 lead in the second intermission.

UAH outscored MTSU 4-3 in a garbage-time third period. Keaton and Kolton Watts, Hoff, and Jacob Harrison scored for the Chargers.

Cameron Crawford stopped 27 of 34 shots between the pipes for UAH, which outshot MTSU 42-34.

Pictured: Josh Corrow fires a shot that led to one of his three goals on the night. Photo by Jaime Crawford/JC Sports Photography.

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Watts power: Chargers sting Vols in OT

Keaton Watts’s power-play goal early in overtime gave the UAH club hockey team its first victory of the season, a 4-3 decision over Tennessee on Friday night at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center.

The Chargers got a four-point night from Keaton’s brother Kolton and 43 saves from goaltender Cameron Crawford to win the College Hockey South opener for both teams.

Tennessee (0-3-0 overall, 0-1-0 CHS) scored the opening goal halfway through the first period on a close call. Connor Frazer’s shot in the slot was just before a whistle, and the officials determined that the puck crossed the goal line past Crawford in time.

BOX SCORE | PHOTO GALLERY

The Chargers (1-1-1 overall, 1-0-0 CHS) tied the game at 1-1 just under five minutes remaining in the second period when Matteo Siciliano’s blast from the left point found its way home. Kolton Watts and Henry Hoff got the assists on the power-play goal.

The Vols regained the lead about six minutes later on a Michael Consentino tally, but UAH equalized again with 1:07 to go in the period. Kolton Watts followed up a rebound from the right circle after a Charger breakaway to make it 2-2 after two.

Kolton scored his second goal of the night halfway through the third, taking Keaton’s pass from the defensive zone up the right wing and beating Patrick Green for UAH’s first lead.

The Chargers committed back-to-back tripping penalties, and Louis Gimbert tied the game for Tennessee at 3-3 with 2:19 left in regulation.

Then the Vols got the penalty bug, with boarding and roughing calls to set up a two-man advantage in the final 1:22 of regulation.

The game did go into overtime, and with a 5-on-4 advantage, Keaton Watts found the puck in the slot and wristed it home for the winner 52 seconds in.

The Chargers won despite the Vols holding a 46-30 advantage in shots.

UAH sees its first road action next weekend at Middle Tennessee State.

Pictured: Cameron Crawford, Josh Campbell, and Zachary Wolfe celebrate UAH’s overtime victory. Photo by Todd Thompson/RiverCat Photography.

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Club Chargers ready for more after last year’s late surge

Building on a late charge last season and veteran experience, the UAH club hockey team is ready to build momentum and enthusiasm in the 2023-24 season.

The Chargers open the new campaign this weekend against Auburn at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center. Puck drop is 7:30 p.m. on Friday and 6 p.m. on Saturday.

UAH has nine home games in its 19-game regular-season schedule. The Chargers will host the College Hockey South Veteran’s Cup on November 10-11 with Alabama, Auburn, and Middle Tennessee State. The CHS Division II playoffs will also take place in Huntsville on February 15-18.

The Chargers made strides last season, finishing with a 9-6-1 record. It was the best showing for the club team since its 2018 re-establishment.

UAH finished hot, winning six straight. However, the Chargers finished just short of making the College Hockey South D2 playoffs. UAH head coach Tim Flynn knows there’s some unfinished business.

“Our goal for the season is to make the playoffs and compete for a championship,” Flynn said. “I don’t know if there is a specific number of wins in mind to get there, but the goal is to improve over last year’s total. We understand that while we had a strong finish to last season, we ultimately fell short of our goal. I think we have a better understanding of how difficult it is to win games in this league and the amount of work it is going to require to get to where we want to be.

“So far I’ve been impressed with our pre-season skates. The team has been driven and they’re ready to get started. If we can build on that and get better week in and week out, I think we’ll have a great chance of being in a good spot at the end of the year.”

Senior Bradly McDonald, who had a team-high 23 assists to go with his 10 goals last year, will be the captain and team president.

“This upcoming season is probably the most excited we have been for a season in a very long time and I would say the other captains would agree with that,” McDonald said. “Coming off a positive record last year and going from a team with only 10 skaters to a full team of 25 is a huge step in the right direction and makes everyone excited to show up to the rink and work everyday. Not only do we have a full team, but we have a full team that can seriously play hockey and create depth throughout all four lines.”

The Chargers return their top two scorers from last season, Kolton and Keaton Watts. Kolton, now a junior, scored a team-high 22 goals and 41 points, while Keaton, a senior, had 37 points on 15 goals and 22 assists.

“This season we are definitely ready to be competitive against any opponents we face,” Kolton Watts said. “Our core guys have been through adversity over the past couple of seasons and are excited to keep the program moving the right direction.”

“I am excited for a great season and to play with a great group of guys,” Keaton Watts said. “This year we are going to have a strong team with a lot of talent. This year our team is really going to focus on the little things in practice and the games. Ultimately we hope to make the playoffs.”

Two former members of the varsity team sparked UAH’s late surge last season. Josh Corrow and Adrian Danchenko, who were on UAH’s last NCAA team in the 2020-21 season, combined for 30 goals over the Chargers’ final eight games.

Corrow and the Watts brothers will be assistant captains.

“We have more depth on our team than ever and great chemistry off the ice,” Corrow said. “Going into the season, we have high expectations for this group. This group of players and coaches is determined to bring a championship back to this university.”

Hence the Chargers will have veteran leadership experience, which will help their several newcomers this season. Flynn expects Kaleb Watts, Adrian Mai, and Nate Litton to “contribute meaningful minutes throughout the season.”

“We will rely on this group for their play on the ice, but the biggest thing they’ve done since coming on board is help create a culture in our locker room where everyone understands what our team goals are and what it is going to take to get us there. They’re working off the ice and after practice with some of our younger and inexperienced players to help everyone get better and contribute to the team’s success.”

“Despite the results of our last few seasons, I’ve been very impressed with the team leadership since I got here. Guys like Ralph Drensek Jr. and Nick Boyce, who have graduated, really pushed to keep this program going during the tough times and did more than anyone will ever know to make that happen. (Defensemen) Zach Wolfe and Jacob Harrison, who are still on our roster and a part of the leadership group, played through those tough times and stuck with it to help us get to this point where we’re able to compete and have playoff aspirations. We wouldn’t be here without those guys.”

Flynn said that the team wants to expand its reach at the university and community this season.

“I’m excited that we’re able to play at a more family-friendly hour this year to hopefully start attracting the youth hockey crowds,” Flynn said. “That’s really our goal for the program: Be a local team to cheer for and be an outlet for local players to realize there is a place to play college hockey at a high level while representing Huntsville with pride.

“We’ll be trying to get more involved with the alumni and youth hockey groups for out the year. If anyone is interested in sponsorship or donations you can reach out to the officers at ClubHockey@uah.edu.”

The team has also launched an online merchandise store featuring authentic and replica Charger jerseys for this season.

Opinion: Want UAH hockey? Join the club

A little background

If you are new to UAH club hockey, here is who and where the Chargers play.

The club was re-established in 2018, bringing back club hockey to UAH for the first time since the original club team was lifted to varsity status in 1985. This is the team’s sixth season.

The Chargers’ national affiliation is Division II of AAU College Hockey, a new partnership between the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) and the original organization, the Collegiate Hockey Federation (CHF). This is the first season of play for AAU College Hockey.

UAH’s conference is College Hockey South (formerly the South Eastern Collegiate Hockey Conference). CHS has multiple divisions based on its teams’ AAU College Hockey national division. The Chargers are in Division 2 North, which includes UAH, Clemson, Georgia Tech, Middle Tennessee State, Ole Miss, Tennessee and Vanderbilt. UAH will play two games against each division opponent (a total of 12) during the regular season, as well as series against Division 1 opponents Alabama, Auburn, and Georgia.

The CHS Division 2 tournament will take place at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center on February 15-18, 2024. The top four teams in the North and South divisions will qualify.

UAH’s 2023-24 schedule (home games at the Huntsville Ice Sports Center in bold). All times are Central.
* College Hockey South D2 North conference game.

  • Sept. 7 vs. Auburn, 7:30 p.m.
  • Sept. 8 vs. Auburn, 6 p.m.
  • *Sept. 22 vs. Tennessee, 7:30 p.m.
  • *Sept. 29 at Middle Tennessee, 8:45 p.m.
  • *Sept. 30 at Middle Tennessee, 8:45 p.m.
  • Oct. 13 vs. Alabama, 7:30 p.m.
  • Oct. 14 vs. Alabama, 6 p.m.
  • *Oct. 20 vs. Clemson, 9:30 p.m.
  • *Oct. 21 vs. Clemson, 12:30 p.m.
  • Nov. 3 at Georgia, 8 p.m.
  • *Nov. 5 at Tennessee, 12:15 p.m.
  • Nov. 10 vs. Alabama (Veteran’s Cup), 8:30 p.m.
  • Nov. 11 vs. Auburn or MTSU (Veteran’s Cup), 4 or 6:30 p.m.
  • *Jan. 19 at Vanderbilt, 7:30 p.m.
  • *Jan. 20 at Vanderbilt, 7:30 p.m.
  • *Feb. 2 at Ole Miss, TBA
  • *Feb. 3 at Ole Miss, TBA
  • *Feb. 9 at Georgia Tech, 6:10 p.m.
  • *Feb. 10 at Georgia Tech, 6 p.m.
  • Feb. 16-18 CHS D2 Tournament
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Atlantic split necessary for UAH, new programs

A whole college hockey season has happened since our last post, mainly because nothing has happened since last summer in regards to the UAH hockey program. It remains suspended without a conference affiliation. The situations at Atlantic Hockey and CCHA haven’t changed.

Things may be coming to a head, however. More realignment could be on the horizon, and UAH will need to pay attention if it wants to get back into the game.

The focus right now appears to be on Atlantic Hockey, which closed a door on UAH last June when it voted not to expand. Back then, UAH, Long Island, and an unnamed third school had expressed interest in joining that league.

That third school may have been Utica University. Utica currently plays hockey at the Division III level, but the whole athletic department is planning a move up to Division II (which will be voted on by the Division II body at the NCAA convention next February). The Pioneers, which have led all of Division III in attendance with over 3,000 per game this last two seasons, would have to make a decision for hockey: Play at the Division II level, which has only six other schools, or play up to Division I, which they can do because there is no Division II championship.

If Utica plays up, Atlantic Hockey would be their target. According to Atlantic Hockey commissioner Bob Degregorio, the league and Utica have been talking informally for several months. The conference had this season’s tournament at the Utica Memorial Auditorium last month.

It may be a while before Utica’s move is official, but one school announced a change last week. Stonehill College, one of those few remaining hockey programs playing at the Division II level, is moving its entire athletic program to Division I and joining the Northeast Conference as its primary league. Hockey will play as an independent starting this fall.

And then there’s Long Island University in Brooklyn, which just completed its second season in men’s hockey. The Sharks had a scheduling agreement with Atlantic Hockey during the pandemic-shortened 2020-21 season.

Atlantic Hockey’s athletic directors voted last week to reinstate Robert Morris University when the Colonials return to the ice in 2023. The presidents of the league are expected to make it official in the summer, which would put the conference back at 11 teams.

If Atlantic wanted to bring in Stonehill, Long Island, and Utica, it would have 14.

These potential and newly-announced Division I programs are fits for Atlantic Hockey from geographical and financial perspectives, but the conference may be hesitant to take them all. Aside from the lack of uniform scheduling that would come with a conference that big, that’s a lot of competition for the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, which is usually its only bid to the NCAA tournament.

It would be best from a competitive standpoint if Atlantic Hockey split into two leagues. In fact, Atlantic Hockey splitting may be the only way these new programs can get into a conference at all. According to sources telling Mike McMahon in College Hockey Insider, Atlantic is very split on Utica joining.

What would the two conferences look like? Let’s start by geographically splitting the current Atlantic Hockey into west and east, separated by the Catskills, and then putting Air Force along with Army because apparently the service academies are joined at the hip. Since this new league primarily includes schools in New York and Pennsylvania, I’ll call it Mid-Atlantic College Hockey (MACH) and let someone else come up with a better name.*

Then, to the original AHA, add Long Island and Stonehill. In the MACH, add Utica and a certain school in Alabama.

Next, consider Lindenwood University, which announced in March that it’s men’s team is going varsity and Division I this fall. Lindenwood’s women’s team is in College Hockey America, which has Mercyhurst, RIT, and Robert Morris, so the men’s program can join those same schools in the MACH.

The result: Two conferences of eight. Four new programs have homes, and we get our hockey team back.

MACHAHA
CanisiusAIC
MercyhurstAir Force
NiagaraArmy
RITBentley
Robert MorrisHoly Cross
UAH*Sacred Heart
Lindenwood*Long Island*
Utica*Stonehill*
* Added teams.

A couple of things could trip this up. Utica could somehow not be approved to move to Division II, meaning its hockey program would have to stay at Division III. It’s possible Lindenwood could join the CCHA, making that conference 10 members if it brings in it and Augustana, whose program is planning a Division I start in fall of 2023. (It’s theoretically possible that the CCHA looks at UAH as that tenth team, which would be great, but I’m pessimistic about that.)

As for timing, it would be fabulous if the split was announced this summer, allowing for this dream timeline:

  • Summer 2022: The announcement of the new league featuring Canisius, Lindenwood, Mercyhurst, Niagara, RIT, and Robert Morris, with the aim of adding two more, to begin play in the 2024-25 season. Two years was the same amount of time the seven teams who broke away from the WCHA took to start up the new CCHA.
  • Late summer 2022: UAH soon applies to join the new league and is accepted. UAH immediately announces it will bring back the hockey program, playing an independent schedule in 2023-24 to get back into the swing of things and then MACH play in 2024-25.
  • 2022-23 season: Lindenwood and Stonehill begin Division I play as independents, with Long Island starting its third season as an independent.
  • February 2023: Utica is officially approved to join Division II at the NCAA Convention. Utica soon announces its men’s hockey program will play at Division I as an independent in the 2023-24 season. Utica then applies to join the new league and is approved to play starting in 2024-25.
  • By summer 2023: Long Island and Stonehill are accepted to join Atlantic Hockey beginning in the 2024-25 season.
  • 2023-24 season: Robert Morris plays in Atlantic Hockey one last time (or because they’re leaving for the MACH anyway, RMU plays as an independent to get ready, just like UAH). Utica is now a Division I independent. UAH, Lindenwood, RMU, and Utica could even schedule each other in sort of a MACH preview.
  • 2024-25 season: Let’s play MACH hockey.

Somebody with the power please make this happen.

I hope that if any split takes place, it’s done transparently and amicably among all members of Atlantic Hockey and its staff. The idea is not to tear down Atlantic Hockey but giving new programs into Division I but giving them a fair chance to succeed, while opening up an extra slice of the NCAA tournament pie for these teams to shoot for.

Realignment has been speculated for a while, but it really is a necessity at this point. Unless you’re a school from a Power 5 conference like Arizona State, being an independent is a serious disadvantage, with added difficulty of securing home games and not having a championship and NCAA automatic bid to play for. While it’s great that these new programs are starting, if they do not find conferences to play in, they will likely be non-factors competitively.

I suspect more programs would start up if they knew they had a conference home to go to. UAH being in a conference with openings would make that feasibility study at Tennessee State look better, for example.

If you’re a UAH supporter, it’s understandable if you’re skeptical about the university even trying to find a conference and resurrect the program after all that’s happened. The upside is that there hasn’t been any indication that the advisory board has given up, which I think is important in making sure that UAH, as stated in the press release announcing the suspension of the program, continues “to advocate for conference membership” and “to promptly reinstate its hockey program” once membership is secured.

A lack of opportunities is what put things to a halt over the last year. There’s no guarantee an opportunity will appear this offseason, but if college hockey is going to grow like this, realignment isn’t just expected, it’s necessary. UAH must be ready to make that call.

* The inclination I've seen for this hypothetical conference is to call it "College Hockey America." That could happen, but I'd want a new league to have a fresh start (much like UAH itself) and not tie itself to a league that, on the men's side, never was stable enough or lasted long enough to develop a history or tradition to attach your identity (unlike what the new CCHA did). "MACH" would be interesting though. I'd think aerospace-centered UAH would love to be in a league whose tagline is "Hockey at MACH speed" and could colloquially be called "The MACH 8."
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Atlantic Hockey votes no on expansion

UAH will not be joining Atlantic Hockey, either.

Atlantic Hockey has notified UAH that its members have unanimously voted against conference expansion, denying the Chargers’ chance at membership. No date was set for the discussion of potential future expansion.

UAH athletics director Dr. Cade Smith said next steps have not yet been decided. Taso Sofikitis of the UAH hockey advisory board said more information will be available at the appropriate time as they work with UAH and the University of Alabama System.

If Atlantic Hockey had chosen to expand, it would have looked at UAH, Long Island University and a third unnamed school that also expressed interest, according to AHA commissioner Robert DeGregorio Jr. back in March. LIU’s men’s program began play this past season with a scheduling alliance with the AHA because of the pandemic but was not made a full member.

UAH suspended operations for the hockey program in May while it continued to pursue Atlantic Hockey, which currently stands at 10 schools. UAH officials and the alumni group spearheading efforts to keep the program going have said that conference affiliation is vital.

The other conference that UAH had targeted was the rebooted CCHA, which rejected UAH’s proposal in March. The CCHA begins play this fall with seven teams that broke away from the WCHA, leaving UAH, Alaska Anchorage, and Alaska Fairbanks. The WCHA officially dissolved on July 1.