Funkymoses said:
copperandblue: I'm pretty sure you mean Hockey Canada is exerting pressure here, not the CHL.
Yeah you could be right, in hindsight it may have been a guy from Hockey Canada doing the interview as opposed to a guy from the dub like I said.
Funkymoses said:
I bet the CHL thinks the fact that anyone who plays a CHL game is ineligible to play in the NCAA is great. They don't have to worry about defections like NCAA teams do... every year there are a few players who move from the NCAA to the CHL and no players who go the other way.
I disagree on two fronts;
1) For every NCAA player that defects to the CHL, there is potential for a player who loses his spot to also have lost their opportunity to develop in the NCAA due to inelligibility.
2) I hope beyond hope that this doesn't turn into an American vs Canadian thing but I have to think that history has shown that players persuing the NHL have a greater chance (beit by exposure, surrounding talent, more credence to the league) to get drafted out of major jrs than out of the NCAA (although the NCAA does appear to be closing the gap somewhat), therefore there is likely less incentive for these star defectors to jump over to the NCAA. In general I think we are talking moreso about bottom 6 guys...the same ones who are on the bubble when the NCAA players choose to jump to the CHL.
Funkymoses said:
US junior leagues like the USHL or NAHL work with the NCAA to keep their players eligible. I believe this also goes for Canadian junior B leagues like the BCHL, which has become an important talent feeder for WCHA and CCHA teams.
I can't speak with athority on this but the gist of what I recall is that Hockey Canada feels that a double standard is being applied...irregardless of the talent differences by the leagues in question.
Funkymoses said:
I fail to see how this would put pressure on the NCAA. The net effect would be to keep a small number of CHL-bound kids in the US development system and eventually D1 hockey. And the number would be small... the article cited 340 USA kids playing in all of Canadian junior hockey, but I'm guessing that a majority of those kids are playing in Junior B leagues like the BCHL, looking to get NCAA scholarships. There might be 100 kids total who would be affected over their four years, or about 25 a year.
It's not clear to me where the pressure comes from either as I can't specifically recall but to make a guess I would think it ultimately comes from USA Hockey.
It kinda becomes a double edged sword. If Canadian teams are limited to the number of US kids and many of these kids are therefore looking to the NCAA for their exposure, there is still no guarantee that these kids would be high enough on the talent charts to take one of the import's spot's. (Just spit balling)
The other factor could be the education angle. Would these kids even qualify to play at many of these places? There has got to be somekind of educational standards that need to get met.
It would be interesting to see how those 340 kids are spread out in Canadian leagues.
Funkymoses said:
The idea that the NCAA is placing artificial restrictions on the number of Canadians in hockey is pretty ridiculous... 41% of the CCHA is Canadian. If 41% of a CHL league was American you'd be shooting anyone who tried to cross the border. The NCAA just perpetually overreacts and is generally stupid.
But it comes down to talent. Again not trying to start a border issue but clearly in the past the depth of Canadian talent was enough to keep the import ratios low simply by competetive elimination.
So if there was a totally open roster policy in the NCAA you could potentially see that 41% rocket to above 60% without seeing the same thing happening with the Canadian teams and US born players.
Frankly I suspect that this whole thing stems from the fact that US kids are closing the gap on Canadian kids in terms of talent and Hockey Canada is nervous about the Canadian percentage in US schools staying static while the American percentage in Canada will continue to increase.