Juniorhockeyguru
Registered User
- Nov 18, 2012
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Bryce Lampman is from Minnesota and signed with the Blazers way back when.I don't think you've looked at a map lately.
Bryce Lampman is from Minnesota and signed with the Blazers way back when.I don't think you've looked at a map lately.
I could identify every state on an unlabelled map of the USA or just by their own outlines as separately presented items. I can name every state, their capitals and largest cities.
Prince George is in the league, right?
Bryce Lampman is from Minnesota and signed with the Blazers way back when.
Are you implying that the majority of elite American prospects are going to react to this change by abandoning college hockey to spend the entirety of their amateur careers in the CHL? Because those types of prospects aren't going to the NCAA at 21+. I'm far less certain how this all plays out than most posters here, but that is one outcome I cannot see happening.
The only way you do that is if the NHL steps in, and decides that they are going to have one uniform "minor leagues" pathway. It would have to become almost like what it is with baseball. Could still be difficult with the European leagues. How are you going to get them on board? There would likely also have to be a realignment with how the CHL works.
As long as you have leagues like the USHL, NCAA, BCHL, AJHL, NAHL, players are going to go wherever it benefits them. Theoretically it would be good if everyone played in the same place, but the idea that it would be good for EVERYONE to play in the CHL as it's currently constituted doesn't make sense.
Minnesota is in WHL's territory, not OHL's. And Minnesota is a long way from any current OHL city.Congratulations! Now you can explain why an entire state EAST of the closest WHL outpost in Brandon would want to play in the WESTERN HOCKEY LEAGUE. If anything, they would join the OHL.
You also downplay the importance of the Minnesota High School system. It's absolutely huge down there, as some fellow US posters can attest.
This is not as simple as you make it out. Many kids stay in MN HS Hockey until they graduate high school, perhaps supplementing with the USHL when they are 17 if they are good enough, and then go to USHL when they are 18/19/maybe 20 followed by NCAA. Sub in the word "Prep School" for MN HS for much of the country... and that you're usually already starting from a position of "kids that weren't picked for the 25 player USNTDP" that it's not so straightforward that a bunch of 16 year olds are going to pack their bags and move to Canada [again I'd expect the biggest growth there to come in the OHL states]Minnesota high school hockey doesn't seem particularly relevant to the issue. USHL stripped most of its talent decades ago.
What I meant is that I felt that the presence of high school hockey wouldn't have all that much affect on whether or not the CHL puts a team in Minnesota. NCAA D1 programs would seem to me like the bigger deterrent in some towns. But there aren't any USHL franchises in Minnesota (a couple within just a few miles) so who knows, maybe anything other than high school or university hockey wouldn't fly there.This is not as simple as you make it out. Many kids stay in MN HS Hockey until they graduate high school, perhaps supplementing with the USHL when they are 17 if they are good enough, and then go to USHL when they are 18/19/maybe 20 followed by NCAA. Sub in the word "Prep School" for MN HS for much of the country... and that you're usually already starting from a position of "kids that weren't picked for the 25 player USNTDP" that it's not so straightforward that a bunch of 16 year olds are going to pack their bags and move to Canada [again I'd expect the biggest growth there to come in the OHL states]
Okay, so you meant something even more ridiculous.In no way did my post imply that...it's impossible for the CHL to absorb "everyone" because not everyone is good enough for the CHL, hence the likely continuation of Canadian Jr A. and the USHL.