The situation came up recently on the NCAA Div. 1 level when Duke cancelled two games. The Duke/Georgetown game was cancelled approx. 1 hour prior to faceoff by the Duke University Adminstration when both teams were on site. It was later confirmed by the NCAA that this was to be considered a no contest rather then a forfeit.
The NCAA rulebook is very clear on this subject:
Page 32 of the 2006 NCAA Rule Book (Rule 3/Section wrote:Forfeited Game vs. No Contest
Section 8. No forfeit is charged unless the referee or other appropriate contest official has assumed jurisdiction of the contest (see 2-7). When a team does not appear (e.g. due to weather, accidents, breakdown of vehicles, illiness, or catastrophic causes), a forfeit is not recorded. An institution shall not, for statistical purposes, declare a forfeit for non-fulfillment. of a contract. Such instances shall be considered a "no contest."
Neither the outcome nor the statistics in any completed contest are reversible by a forfeit due to postgame adminstration actions, except as provided in the NCAA manuals. The actual results of the game and the statistics shall be entered as such in both teams' all-time records, as well as in the coaches' records and in individual statistics. Games later forfeited shall be designated by an asterisk and a footnote.
It is frustrating for all involved (players, coaches, referees, parents, fans) when a MDIA game doesn't take place as originally scheduled. But 99.9% of the time when a game doesn't take place because one of the teams didn't show, it isn't considered a forfeit.