The tournament was first held in 1972, the first year of conference play. It was held at
The Arena in
St. Louis, Missouri, from 1972 to 1977. From 1978 to 1981, the CCHA Tournament was held at the rink of the higher seed. In 1981–82, four teams from the
WCHA, Michigan, Michigan State,
Michigan Tech and Notre Dame, defected to the CCHA. The four teams brought their long, storied histories with 12 combined NCAA National Championships giving the young, up-start league instant credibility. The tournament semifinals and championship were moved from small on-campus rinks to
Joe Louis Arena, then-home of the
NHL's Detroit Red Wings. Commissioner
Bill Beagan coined the phrase "Road to the Joe" in describing the CCHA Tournament in 1985–86. The phrase was commonly used in reference to the CCHA Tournament while it was being played at Joe Louis Arena. With the tournament expanding to 12 teams in 2001–02, the CCHA adopted the name "Super Six" in reference to the six teams who advance past the first round to the CCHA championships at Joe Louis Arena. The name was dropped following the 2005 season when the CCHA championships were reduced back to four teams. The CCHA, and thus the CCHA tournament, would be discontinued following the 2013 season, due to a large conference re-alignment following the Big Ten's sponsorship of ice hockey. In February 2020, seven schools that had announced they would leave the
Western Collegiate Hockey Association after the 2020–21 season announced that they would form a new CCHA, with the 2021–22 season as the first for the revived league. The tournament resumed in 2022 with the Mason Cup once again being awarded to the tournament champion. Minnesota State would win the 2022 tournament, the first CCHA tournament in nearly a decade. ==Championship Round Performance==