KingsHockey24
Registered User
- Aug 1, 2013
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You only have to be 18 years old to play in the AHL. The age issue comes into play due to the CHL/NHL agreement. CHL does not want to lose their star players, the 18 and 19 year olds (and key to their business model and teams). So it's only players who are playing in the WHL, OHL or the Q where age becomes a restricting factor. Players coming out of Europe, the NCAA, National Development programs etc can play in the AHL at 18 or 19 years old. So for instance, if Turcotte leaves the NCAA after one season, then signs a pro contract but the Kings determine he is not quite ready for prime time at 19, he can play for the Reign next season. Kupari, who is only 19, is playing for the Reign this season too. Same thing Kempe did at 18 and 19.
After his season ends, Aiden Dudas can officially join the Kings/Reign right
MacDermid is injured.
He was in warmups last night. Looked fine.
Well on the bright side tomorrow we play against Calgary. Maybe we'll actually show up for this game.
Also please dress MacDermid TM.
I thought 18 year old players weren't eligible for the ahl? Or does this count towards his 10 game thing?I think based upon your statement and the fact they moved Bjornfot down to ONT, he's probably ready to roll.
I thought 18 year old players weren't eligible for the ahl? Or does this count towards his 10 game thing?
See I'm not sure. You know the Flames will want to get back for all the Doughty stuff, and when is the last time the Kings won a big game at home, especially against a division opponent? Not that the 8th game of the season is all that big, but with the hype that will be around it. Just this season so far, they're 1-3 on friendly ground, and gave up a 3 goal 3rd period lead in the win. If it's not 6-1 Calgary, with a hat trick for Tkachuk, it'll be a minor miracle.
Thanks! Great job explaining.The 9 games or less is only applicable to NHL games played. The minimum age for the AHL is 18, however, if you played in the any of the Canadian Junior Leagues, you cannot play in the AHL at 18 or 18 or 19 years old per the CHL/NHL agreement. European players, players that in the USHL, National Development teams, or leave their NCAA team early can play in the AHL. Kupari is 19 and playing there this season, now joined by Bjornfot at 18. Both came from Europe so it's age is not an issue at long as the make the minimum of 18.
I've been amped for the Calgary games here in LA ever since the elbow but--outside of the one where Doughty lost his **** in the penalty box--the Kings have been very meek.
Oh, except last year when MacDermid tried to take out Bennett for the rest of the year with the biggest hit we saw last season. Sure, the Kings lost like 9 to negative 3 and MacDermid gave himself a concussion on the hit, but there were going to be fireworks in the 3rd if MacDermid wasn't injured. That was with Tkachuk scratched. Hopefully it is exciting tomorrow night because Calgary has taken over as the only real "must-see" opponent as a Kings fan because the Ducks rivalry significantly cooled last season and, even with Clifford getting concussed against Vegas last year, the Kings don't seem to mind that Vegas embarrassed them in the playoffs two years ago.
I guess, in summation, the common denominator in exciting Kings hockey is Kurtis MacDermid. I know there is this thought going around about how much more exciting they are this year but, really, the Calgary game this season was the only one that felt like a real hockey game. A combined 12 or 13 goals like in the Edmonton game doesn't automatically equal excitement when the goals being scored are generally sloppy. McDavid was exciting: the Kings not as much. Just a case of Kings hockey being back and, holy ****, they actually scored goals. Now we are back to not scoring for over two games in a row. Anyways, exciting hockey means two teams really caring about the win while also showing some real disdain for the opponent. We've had that one time this year. Hopefully, we get it again tomorrow.
I have to disagree with the Kings only being sloppy, not trying and not being exciting. They are leading the league in scoring chances, ahead of the offensively loaded Maple Leafs. They are adapting to a new system and I think the goals will come as soon as the lines get cemented.
A team that does not try or care is not going to be leading the whole ****ing league in basically every single possession metric. If the Kings are good enough to be lazy and still do that, then pencil them in as Stanley Cup contenders if the coach ever motivates them.
So they play a system that leads to a lot of shots. Great.
Everyone loves playing offense. No big deal. Being hard to play against is a different story.
I'm not the guy that just ****s on advanced stats, but look at the results so far. I know you're searching for the positives but it's hard to get excited about a possession metric when they haven't scored for over two games.
Regardless, the game is a lot more than just shots and goals. There is still a lack of intensity that I chalk up to a lot of the vets on this team believing they will lose. They've been on winners and they know this isn't it. Since it isn't, they aren't going to run through a wall to win a puck, something they would do 12 years ago.
So they play a system that leads to a lot of shots. Great.
Everyone loves playing offense. No big deal. Being hard to play against is a different story.
I'm not the guy that just ****s on advanced stats, but look at the results so far. I know you're searching for the positives but it's hard to get excited about a possession metric when they haven't scored for over two games.
Regardless, the game is a lot more than just shots and goals. There is still a lack of intensity that I chalk up to a lot of the vets on this team believing they will lose. They've been on winners and they know this isn't it. Since it isn't, they aren't going to run through a wall to win a puck, something they would do 12 years ago.
Sad but trueHelp us Kurtis MacDermid, you're our only hope.
I AM a guy who ****s on advanced stats. They mean absolutely nothing. Hockey is now and has always been a game of managing tone and momentum, rising and falling to occasions. Its winning or losing key battles, trusting or mistrusting your teammates. Recovering from or succombing to challenges.
The same folks who put stock in metrics also tend to be the ones who believe in luck to explain why the team with tbe best numbers loses. Its all just nonsense, and a fundamental misunderstanding of the game.
I AM a guy who ****s on advanced stats. They mean absolutely nothing. Hockey is now and has always been a game of managing tone and momentum, rising and falling to occasions. Its winning or losing key battles, trusting or mistrusting your teammates. Recovering from or succombing to challenges.
The same folks who put stock in metrics also tend to be the ones who believe in luck to explain why the team with tbe best numbers loses. Its all just nonsense, and a fundamental misunderstanding of the game.
Not to sound out of touch, but I know what I see out there and it isn't good hockey no matter what the fancy numbers say.
Better than last year? I don't know. More fun? Sure. It's still not a lot of fun though.