I dont mean to be condescending but obviously you dont know the difference between USHL and CHL team financial situations.
USHL is 100% in a bad place.
Yeah some posters here are not really understanding what is going to happen.
The belief that U.S. born players will want to stay closer to home and would not want to bother with "visa" and "immigration" issues is not in anyway supported by a shred of evidence. I know some posters here are hoping/praying that the impact of this decision will be minor or of little consequence to the other leagues that are not the CHL but they are deluding themselves; much like certain league commissioners and a few NCAA coaches were when they believed that this was unlikely to happen.
Americans don't want to travel far you say? Well then please explain why the BCHL is made up of almost a third of American born players? Many of those players could have easily found spots in the NAHL or the NCDC, and some of them even the USHL. Many of those 155 American born players currently in the BCHL are from the eastern seaboard of the U.S.
Players, no matter the nationality, will go where they feel they have the best opportunities to develop. Believe me when I say that a large majority of CHL teams are among if not the best places to develop for elite talent. You can keep your head in the sand and believe that a league like the USHL will not be greatly impacted but reality is going blow that sand away in a very short time.
Now will the USHL cease to exist; all depends on how many teams bolt to the CHL. The one thing in its favor for this not to happen is geography. Most of the solid franchises in the U are simply to far away from either the WHL or the OHL to join. If the U can keep it's core teams, then yes they will be fine. Fine, however, is something totally different than what fine looks like for the league today. They will lose a lot of their top young talent. The large majority of the teams cannot compete with what the CHL offers. Few teams in the U have dedicated nutritionists like the vast majority of CHL teams do to ensure proper diets. No teams in the U, that I am aware of, have dedicated academic advisors, counselors and tutors to help players in school like all CHL teams do. Every team in the OHL pays it's players gym and training facility membership costs in the offseason so they can continue to develop. I am not aware of a single USHL team that does this. Every CHL team covers the tuition, fees and books for college classes while still in the league. No USHL team does that. Virtual all CHL clubs employ power skating instructors, strength and conditioning coaches and many even employ or have under contract sports phycologists. How many U teams do that???
We have to remember, that the CHL was not competing with the USHL for elite talent but with the NCAA (who also have everything that I mentioned that the CHL offers) and the U was merely a holding spot, if you will, before those players got to college for further development. The U no longer has that special advantage with the NCAA and it must now directly compete against the CHL. Most clubs do not have the financial resources to do so. As a result, we can expect that yes, even the majority of top American born players will choose to go to the CHL before embarking on their NCAA careers.
As for the USHL merging with the CHL, the question you have to ask yourself is why would the CHL want to merge with the U? In such a transactional world (as the business of sports is), what benefit could the USHL offer the CHL? Do you think that the OHL is simply going to give up the territorial rights to Michigan, Ohio, NY and Pennsylvania now? Absolutely not and why would anyone expect them to? Every body that I know and talked to who is close to this situation is telling me that the CHL has almost no desire to form a partnership with the USHL.
The main worry for the CHL right now is its new battle with the NCAA, not of attracting the top talent but of keeping that top talent through their 19 year old season. As for the USHL, they will have to face the fact that they will be the new NAHL of the hockey development ladder. An older league that may lack the star power of NHL bound players but still a league that churns out a ton of NCAA D-1 commitments; and you know what? There is nothing wrong with that.