
In a perfect world, those of us who follow college hockey closely would be putting the finishing touches on our NCAA men's tournament brackets, figuring out in our minds if Minnesota Duluth would three-peat, if North Dakota would hang banner No. 9 and if Minnesota State finally would end its national tourney hex.
Instead, we're left to wonder what might have been. That's exactly what I'll try to do with hockey maven Nate Wells as we break down the NCAA tournament and give our opinions on how it might have played out.
First, we pick the field based on where the PairWise Ratings stood on the afternoon of March 12, the day the NCAA pulled the plug on the season. Conference tournaments were about to start their final two weekends, and we've projected the highest remaining seeds as tourney champions. That means the Gophers, who were to play at Penn State in the Big Ten semis, didn't make the field. We do have two Minnesota teams – MSU and UMD – as No. 1 regional seeds, plus Bemidji State in the field. And neighboring North Dakota is the No. 1 overall seed.
Nate and I will pick each game and give our explanation. And there's one caveat: We each must pick a No. 1 seed losing in the first round. It's happened every year since 2006, so we might not be going too far out on a limb.
Here are our picks:


First round
Albany (N.Y.) Regional
No. 1 seed North Dakota vs. 4. American International