But regarding the scheduling, he isn't making it up. They actually track strength of schedule in NCAA, and BC has by far the hardest schedule in the country and it's not particularly close:
Men's Division I RPI | Ratings Percentage Index | Rankings - College Hockey | USCHO.com
It was never that we didn't believe that to be true, and more that it doesn't solely account for Hagens' subpar performance this season. I get that he's played some tough teams. I get that his coach isn't utilizing him optimally, I get that BC isn't a run-and-gun OHL team and their PP is bad. It's not strictly about production.
I have no doubt that Hagens is going to be a good NHL player. He may even be a great one. That's not in question as far as I'm concerned. The problem is that doesn't look like a future star NHL player. He has no more physical disadvantages than Perreault or Smith did last season. He has no more age disadvantage than Celebrini or Buium or Fantilli before him. He isn't being asked to carry totally incompetent linemates. He isn't playing on a bad team that's constantly stuck in their own zone with little opportunity to create offense.
The Hagens proponents on this forum anointed him 1st overall before the season started yet are ignoring the uncomfortable fact that Hagens hasn't taken a step forward from what he was last season, while Schaefer and Misa have taken HUGE strides forward. Yes, I understand that Hagens has historically out-produced his draft classmates. That's why he was ranked #1 going into the season. But ignoring draft-year performance feels like an absolutely insane way to scout. Especially when the same people making excuses for Hagens lackluster stats this year are criticizing Schaefer's and Misa's lackluster stats from last year, whining about how hard Hagens has it this year and ignoring Schaefer's soul-crushing off-ice circumstances or Misa's crappy deployment last season.
Hagens goes whole games being largely invisible. I had hoped that that being separated from Leonard would give Hagens the opportunity to be puck-dominant and show that he can be The Guy on a line at a high level of hockey and prove that he deserves to go #1 overall. But every time I tune in, and I tune in a lot, I'm left disappointed.
I realize that it's a tall ask for an 18 year old to dominate college hockey. Yet other players, some of whom didn't even go 1st overall in their own draft years, did it. If Hagens is a 1st overall-caliber prospect, then why is he so often outplayed by his linemates? Why is he so often not the puck-carrier on his line? Hell, he was outplayed by Stiga at the Beanpot and a non-insignificant number of BC games I've caught.
To reiterate, all but one of his 9 WJC points came against Switzerland, Latvia, and Germany. He went invisible for long stretches against the teams that mattered. He certainly wasn't bad by any means and I wouldn't ding him for it (after all, most of Celebrini's points came against bad teams last WJC too), but holding Hagens' WJC performance up like a great victory seems foolish to me.
Again, if he was putting up the same numbers he has been but looked the part of a future true #1C, I would be in this thread defending him. I want him to succeed. And I don't think anyone sane is suggesting he won't go or deserves not to go top-4 at the absolute latest this summer. But it's exhausting seeing the Hagens defenders make the same excuses and not actually address what we're all seeing on the ice.
And fin.