My numbers were based on the 2016-17 season:
The College Hockey Landscape: A Study of the 21-year-old Freshman - Neutral Zone
Really the age of NCAA players is somewhat irrelevant because things will change in the NCAA once some of the best 18 and 19 year old's in the world become eligible to play in the NCAA. Do you really think NCAA teams won't be interested in these talented players because their young? If they are going to help their program, they're going to be recruited. There will be some high end players who will leave and that will hurt the CHL.
In the 2023-2024 season, there were a total of 236 Men’s Hockey NCAA Division I players who have been drafted by an NHL team. (
236 NHL draft picks are currently playing college hockey - Lets Play Hockey)
There were 10 NCAA teams with at least 10 NHL draftees on their roster:
Boston College – 14 (4 were first-round draft picks)
Boston University – 14
University of Massachusetts – 13
University of Minnesota – 13
University of Wisconsin – 13
Denver University – 12
Harvard University – 11
University of Michigan – 11
University of North Dakota – 11
University of Minnesota-Duluth – 10
Here is a neat fact. Boston College brought in $2,592,474 in revenue from its men’s ice hockey program while paying out $4,360,627 in expenses. That means the program lost $-1,768,153. (
Boston College Athletics Programs) But since they are financed by the college, they don't need to turn a profit so they can concentrate on building the best program possible. I doubt many CHL teams have a budget of $4.3 million and are okay losing $1.7 million per season. Some of these college teams have player facilities that would rival NHL teams.
Remember, the NCAA is the top developmental league for most professional North American Sports Leagues (NBA, NFL, etc.) Is it really that hard to imagine them becoming the top developmental league for the NHL, especially now when the top 18 and 19 year old's become eligible to leave the CHL for the NCAA. This opens the door for them to do that.