But here’s the difference between then and now. In the 60s and well into 70s There were only 4 teams. Into the mid 80s it fluctuated between 5-8. And there were only a couple of leagues. It was a totally different world. Each league basically got together and picked its “best” team, ie the one it thought had the best chance to win. So if UNH had the best record but had been on a losing streak but Maine was 3rd but had won 5 straight the Black Bears might get the nod. At one point in fact each league got 1 bid for its tourney.champ and 1 to select however it wanted. The NCAA didn’t decide that at all. Now there are 10 at-large bids. So the Ivy champ isn’t bumping Clarkson. From 1948-early 1970s the ECAC picked 2 teams and the WCHA pick its 2. The NCAA was barely involved other than sponsoring the tournament. When the ccha came on the scene, the tournament went to 5 then 6 but the leagues still chose the teams, not the NCAA. When Hockey East came along it eventually went to 8. Each league got 2 automatic bids. One to the league tournament champ and one to whoever it wanted. Usually if they lost the tourney, the regular season champ, but not always. My recollection is that when the tournament went to 12 that system stayed in place but a couple of at-larges were added. When the late lamented CHA and the MAAC/AHA came along selection changed again, it was these 2 interlopers, not the established leagues that got screwed. The old guard leagues invented rules to delay giving bids to the newcomers. They extended the time line a league needed to play before it got an automatic bid. Then they invented out of whole cloth the “insularity” rule claiming the MAAC teams didn’t play enough non-conference games despite the majors being unwilling to schedule them. In any case no such rule was on the books. They just made it up. One year for some quirky schedule reason BC or BU , I think, actually played more games against other HEA opponents than any MAAC team did in its league. Theninsulsr schedule rule was determined not to apply for some reason. LOL.
I agree with you that a hot goalie can have a huge impact. Like a pitcher in baseball. But I don’t agree that current performance ought not be weighed at least somewhat. In theory, Penn State’s season could have gone in reverse. Piling up wins early then struggled late but still earning enough “points” in PWR to get into the tournament. I just think other factors deserve some weight. Most of the time it will only matter at the margins. I just think the current system makes assumption that aren’t any more accurate than a system that weights other factors would. For all the complex math involved it is nothing more than, as I said, a gussied up version of the transitive property applied the sports. If UConn beats BU and BU beats Denver than UConn is better than Denver. This years Frozen Four is a perfect example of how the glorified transitive property doesn’t predict anything. The NCAA tournament on the other hand both mens and womens, with 4 #1s and 3 ones and a 2 is much more what would be expected. And by the way, UConn was a 2 seed because of its NET which is basketballs PWR. Based on most metrics it was worthy of a 1 seed.