2015 CIS University Cup

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2015 CIS University Cup
Halifax, Nova Scotia
2016 2015 University Cup Logo.png
Host teamSt. Francis Xavier X-Men
ChampionsAlberta Golden Bears
VenueScotiabank Centre
DurationMarch 12–15, 2015
Number of games8
Number of teams8
Total attendance30,703 (3,838/game)
TelevisionSportsnet 360
2014
2016

The 2015 CIS Men's University Cup Hockey Tournament (53rd Annual) was held March 20–23, 2014. It was the first of two consecutive CIS Championships to be held at the Scotiabank Centre in Halifax jointly hosted by the St. Francis Xavier University and Saint Mary's University. Each school was a designated 'host' for one of the events; St. Francis Xavier was the 2015 host while Saint Mary's was the host in the second year (2016).

The defending champions were the Alberta Golden Bears which advanced to the tournament as the Canada West Champions and #1 seed.

New Tournament Format[]

This two-year bid included a format change that saw eight teams compete and the re-introduction of the bronze medal game.[1] Previous tournaments, going back to 1998 (17 seasons), were a 6-team 2-pool format (3 teams per pool) where one team from each pool would advance to the championship final (in some seasons, the runner-up in each pool would play for Bronze). Instead of a pool format, a tradition single elimination 8-team bracket was chosen and the teams seeded 1–8. The tournament length was the same (4 days) with two games on each day (the same half of the bracket per day; 1–8 & 4–5 versus 2–7 & 3–6 with Thursday's winners playing Saturday afternoon and Friday's winners playing Saturday night). The losers of Saturday's semi-finals play in the bronze medal game held prior to the championship final on Sunday.

USPORTS announced they would reevaluated the format after the two-year run in Halifax for subsequent years.[1]

Tournament Seeding[]

In the previous six-team two-pool format, the conference champions were seeded 1-3 and the remaining three teams were shuffled between the pools based on the CIS balancing criteria to reduce intra-conference match-ups (e.g., when there were only two teams from one conference, they were placed in separate pools, and if a conflict arose based on 1-4-6 vs 2-3-5 placement, the lower seeded team was swapped with a lower seeded team in the other pool to maintain the integrity of the draw).

In the new format, teams were seeded based on the last Top 10 Poll (the Saturday/Sunday prior to the tournament). The three conference champions were seeded one through three, with the order based on their rank. The OUA Runner-up (loser of the Queen's Cup) was seeded 4th, regardless of their rank. The remaining four teams are seeded 5-to-8 based on their rank. Teams in the bottom half could be shuffled by two spots, up or down, to reduce intra-conference match-ups in the first round (quarterfinals) while maintaining the integrity of the draw (e.g., if the AUS Champion was seed #1 and the host is an AUS team seeded #8, the AUS host would be swapped with #7 to avoid an AUS-vs-AUS first round match). The Tournament Committee does not have to swap teams to avoid intra-conference matchups in the 1st round, but it is expected and they are afforded the opportunity. An example of not swapping – in 2019, tournament host Lethbridge, chose to remain seed #8 and play #1 Alberta in their first game of the tournament rather than be seed #7 and play #2 UNB.

Team Selection[]

The 8 participating teams and their selection criteria are listed below. Each conference would qualified two teams – champion and runner-up. The OUA Conference had an additional selection (3rd-place finisher) and the final spot was the designated host. Where the host has qualified as one of the other 7 spots, the 'host' would be replaced with another team from that conference.

Conf. Criteria
AUS Champion
AUS Finalist
Canada West Champion
Canada West Finalist
OUA-East Champion
OUA-West Champion
OUA 3rd Place
Host

Road to the Cup[]

AUS playoffs[]

Quarter-finals (Best of 3) Semi-finals (Best of 5) AUS Championship (Best of 5)
1 UNB Varsity Reds 3
4 St. Francis Xavier X-Men 2 4 St. Francis Xavier X-Men 2
5 UPEI Panthers 0 1 UNB Varsity Reds 2
2 Acadia Axemen 0
2 Acadia Axemen 3
3 Saint Mary's Huskies 2 3 Saint Mary's Huskies 2
6 Moncton Aigles Bleu 1

OUA playoffs[]

Division Quarter-finals (Best of 3)
OUA Sweet 16
Division Semi-finals (Best of 3)
OUA Quarter-Finals
Division Finals (Best of 3)
OUA Semi-Finals
Queen's Cup (Single Game)
OUA Championship
            
1E McGill Redmen 2
8E Concordia Stingers 1
1E McGill Redmen 2
5E Queen's Golden Gaels 0
4E Laurentian Voyageurs 1
5E Queen's Golden Gaels 2
1E McGill Redmen 0
OUA East
3E UQTR Patriots 2
2E Carleton Ravens 2
7E UOIT Ridgebacks 0
2E Carleton Ravens 0
3E UQTR Patriots 2
3E UQTR Patriotes 2
6E Nipissing Lakers 0
3E UQTR Patriots 0
6W Guelph Gryphons 4
1W Windsor Lancers 2
8W Brock Badgers 1
1W Windsor Lancers 2
7W Lakehead Thunderwolves 0
2W Western Ontario Mustangs 0
7W Lakehead Thunderwolves 2
1W Windsor Lancers 0
OUA West
6W Guelph Gryphons 2
4W Ryerson Rams 0
5W Toronto Varsity Blues 2
5W Toronto Varsity Blues 0
6W Guelph Gryphons 2
3W Waterloo Warriors 0
6W Guelph Gryphons 2
Bronze Medal
   
1E McGill Redmen 1
1W Windsor Lancers 2

Canada West playoffs[]

Quarter-finals (Best of 3) Semi-finals (Best of 3) Canada West Championship (Best of 3)
1 Alberta Golden Bears 2
4 UBC Thunderbirds 2 4 UBC Thunderbirds 0
5 Manitoba Bisons 1 1 Alberta Golden Bears 2
2 Calgary Dinos 0
2 Calgary Dinos 2
3 Mount Royal Cougars 2 3 Mount Royal Cougars 1
6 Saskatchewan Huskies 1

University Cup tournament[]

Participating Teams[]

The eight teams to advance to the tournament are listed below.

Rank Seed Team Qualification
1 1 Alberta Golden Bears Canada West Champion
2 2 UNB Varsity Reds AUS Champion
3 3 Guelph Gryphons OUA-West and Queen's Cup Champion
4 4 UQTR Patriotes OUA-East Champion (Queen's Cup Finalist)
5 5 Acadia Axemen AUS Finalist
6 6 Calgary Dinos Canada West Finalist
7 7 Windsor Lancers OUA Third Place
8 8 St. Francis Xavier X-Men Host

Tournament format[]

The tournament was a traditional 8 team - single elimination ladder with a bronze medal game between the two semi-final losers. Games that were tied after regulation played a 10-minute overtime period following the third period. If there was no score after the first overtime, the ice was cleaned and they play 20 minute periods (with ice cleaned between periods) until there was a winner.

The higher seed was the 'home' team for each game (the home team had to wear their 'white' jerseys and got the last change during stoppages of play).

Quarter-finals
(Single Game)
Semi-finals
(Single Game)
Championship Final
(Single Game)
         
3 Guelph Gryphons 3
6 Calgary Dinos 1
3 Guelph Gryphons 2
Thursday
2 UNB Varsity Reds 5
2 UNB Varsity Reds 6
7 Windsor Lancers 2
2 UNB Varsity Reds 3
1 Alberta Golden Bears 6
4 UQTR Patriotes 6 OT1
5 Acadia Axemen 5
4 UQTR Patriotes 1
Friday
1 Alberta Golden Bears 5
1 Alberta Golden Bears 5
8 St. Francis Xavier X-Men 1
Bronze Medal (Single Game)
   
3 Guelph Gryphons 3 OT1
4 UQTR Patriotes 2

Overtime[]

Games that ended in a regulation tie were resolved solely on 5-on-5 overtime (5 skaters and a goalie for each side) until one team scored. The first overtime period was 10 minutes and started after a three-minute rest. Following this period, the ice was resurfaced and subsequent 20 minute periods were played.

Bronze game[]

March 15, 2015
14:00 (local)
Guelph Gryphons #33-2 OT1
(1-1, 0-1, 1-0, 1-0)
UQTR Patriotes #4Scotiabank Centre, Halifax
Attendance: 2,175 (20.7%)
Game MVPs: Kyle Neuber - (GPH) & Guillaume Asselin (UQTR)

Championship final[]

March 15, 2015
18:30 (local)
Alberta Golden Bears #16-3
(2-0, 1-1, 3-2)
UNB Varsity Reds #2Scotiabank Centre, Halifax
Attendance: 4,404 (41.9%)
Game MVPs: Levko Koper - (ALB) & Dylan Willick (UNB)

Record 15th Title[]

Alberta's victory was their 15th, the most by any team to date, and five more than University of Toronto Varsity Blues. It also marked the 5th time they had defended a championship title (1979, 1980, 2000, 2006, and 2015). The University of Toronto Blues held the record for title defenses at the time, with 6.

Tournament All-Stars[]

, from the Alberta Golden Bears, was selected as the Major W.J. 'Danny' McLeod Award for CIS University Cup MVP.[2] Reddick had 3 goals (1 in each game) and 1 assist for 4 points and a +3 rating in the tournament.

Joining Reddick on the tournament All-Star team were:
Forward: Jordan Hickmott (Alberta Golden Bears)
Forward: (UNB Varsity Reds)
Defenseman: (Alberta Golden Bears)
Defenseman: Jordan Murray (UNB Varsity Reds)
Goalie: (Guelph Gryphons)

References[]

  1. ^ a b "CIS National Championships: Format Changes". Canadian Interuniversity Sport. March 27, 2014. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  2. ^ http://english.cis-sic.ca/championships/mice/2015/releases/final Golden Bears capture back-to-back CIS University Cup crowns

External links[]

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