Elite 18/19 year old NHL prospects should NEVER be on the ice with 16/17 year olds. It's borderline gross negligence in terms of hockey development.
It will become even more so once the avalanche starts and all the top 18/19 year olds are in the NCAA. The BIG10/NCHC/HEA will become so dense with NHL prospects its wont even be comparable to Jr hockey.
P.S. the fact the NHL has to wait till 20 to get their hands on these assets is wild.
- It's criminal the CHL has made 18/19 elite NHL prospects wait till they're 20 to play pro hockey. All so some old guy who owns the Jr team can make $$$ of them and fill seats. I can't believe modern NHL owners allow this to happen.
If your argument is that those 18/19 year old prospects ought to be playing against the best competition available (gross negligence or whatever) then, ipso facto, those players ought to be playing in the AHL, correct? Unless your assertion is that the NCAA is actually on par or superior to the AHL; a ridiculous assertion that frankly ought to be laughed at by every poster on this board.
As
@Kingpin794 has pointed out, there are some CHL players that probably should be playing a level up in the AHL. And, as
@Corso has alluded to, the rule vis a vis the CHL is likely to be modified in the near future. So then what will your NCAA argument be?
Seemingly lost in all of this discussion is the development of the 16/17 year old player. You know, the pool of future, upcoming NHL draft picks. I think the NHL (and Pro hockey in general) greatly prefers the CHL experience where these players are playing against good/great/sometimes elite 18-20 year olds in the years prior to their draft. In no way would professional leagues want these players relegated to developing during this time in a lower level 16/17 year old heavy league.
Also, there are often parts of a prospect’s game (namely on the defensive side) that are easier to work on in the CHL, especially given the input and influence the NHL parent club would have with a CHL team during those post draft years that they simply would not have in the NCAA.
Personally, if there’s one thing I’m glad to see removed from this conversation between the CHL and NCAA that has been persistent over past decades, it’s the false assertion that the NCAA is somehow a universally superior academic route. CHL players get the costs of 1 year of schooling covered for each year they play in the league. Play 4 years, get 4 years covered. So, unless we’re talking an Ivy League School (and there are no scholarships here afaik) there is no academic advantage. A degree from UBC, UofT, Queens (Elon Musk went here for heavens sake), McGill, Dalhousie etc is as good or better than a degree from just about any D1 NCAA school. Academically speaking, Sascha Boisvert would have been better off playing in the Q for 4 years and then enrolling at McGill. His degree from McGill would be much more valuable in broader society than whatever he’s going to get from North Dakota.
Ultimately, once the AHL/CHL rules are adjusted, the only allure of the NCAA to CHL players will be lifestyle: lavish dorm rooms, lit frat parties, a higher calibre of hockey than they’d find in USports along with an equivalent academic outcome. We see this with the NCAA commitments thus far: all from players with little NHL upside who may consider lower level pro at some point down the road.
For the high end prospect, pampering and indulging one’s self for a year or two whilst playing only half the games, while perhaps attractive, I don’t think is particularly compelling when weighed against the end goal of making the NHL as soon as possible. The coming CHL/AHL hybrid route will be undeniably more effective. Furthermore, I certainly believe that any NHL parent club would be dissatisfied with a prospect’s decision to forgo this route given all of the developmental upside in terms of professional input and increased playing time when compared to the alternative.
Final point, if during the next CBA the NHL amends the ELC much more in favour of the player (greater signing bonuses, more $$ overall, better terms), well, that is obviously going to be a problem for NCAA recruitment. Even under the current ELC structure, of the 17 1st Rd picks from last June’s NHL draft presently playing in the CHL, 16 have signed their ELC.