Celly4Celebrini
pray
- Jul 10, 2010
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i looked at their birthdays. Sure its closer to 1 year, but assuming they started hockey as early as they could, they would have 13 total seasons. As a Canadian, youll have to bare with me here for age groupings.Based on how condescending you're being here (and how condescending you were when you raised this point before), I was surprised to look at their actual birthdays and see that you're mostly wrong about it as well.
Smith was born 03/17/05. Hagens was born 11/03/06. Smith was 226 days older than Hagens on the date of their first games with Boston College. That's closer to 1 year than it is to 0.
If Smith were like 26 days older than Hagens on the first game of their season, you'd be on the mark here and the condescension may be at least somewhat justified. But in the real world, where Smith was 226 days older, it is more accurate to say "Smith was a year older" than it is to say "they were the same age."
It may be most accurate to say "Smith was in his D+1, but was not quite a full year older than Hagens, so the advantage of D+1 Vs. D+0 may be slightly overstated." And I do think this context might be worth considering. But the way you're bringing it up is completely off the mark. The stance that other posters are taking (which, as cooldude mentions, really is just the standard draft year convention) is more correct than yours is in this particular case.
They would have been eligible for U11 the year they turned 9. U13 the year they turned 11. U18 the year they turned 15. If they were born the same year, they would have grown up playing together, but with different draft years due to the legality in signing NHL contracts. I'm saying D+0 and D+1 when comparing across early vs late birth years is very misleading, and again the only reason it's used this way is because of the legal issues with an NHL contract.
Take the NBA for example, when players have to play at least 1 year of college before declaring. You don't have people comparing late birthdays to early birthdays of the next year but rather based on "freshman season vs sophmore" etc. Thats the point i am trying to make, evaluate freshman seasons as freshman seasons.