There are currently 17 players who are 26 or younger in the Top-50 in scoring.
8 went the NCAA or NTDP route
5 from Europe
2 from the WHL
1 from the QMJHL
1 from the OHL
Rookie scoring Top-20 (though Sat.)
8 from the NCAA/NTDP
4 from Europe
3 from the WHL
3 from the OHL
2 from the QMJHL
Last year there were 22 in the top-50 at 26 or younger
7 from the NCAA/NTDP
7 from Europe (counting Matthews who aged out of the NTDP)
6 from the OHL (counting Tkachuk who aged out of the NTDP)
2 from the WHL
2023-24 Top-20 rookie scoring
7 from the NCAA/NTDP
4 from the OHL
4 from the WHL
3 from Europe
1 from the USHL
1 from the QMJHL
There is no bias. Just facts.
The OHL is not superior to the NCAA by the simple fact that there isn't a universe where the average 17-year-old defenseman or an 18-year-old goalie from the CHL is better, stronger, faster, smarter, and more developed than the average 22-year-old defenseman or 24-year-old goalie in college. The SCSU team Hagens faced last weekend had over a dozen 22-year-olds and five were 24. How many 23-year-old goalies does Martone face per weekend? If Kitchener plays SCSU 10 times, the Huskies are taking the series without question.
That helps explain why there is the age cutoff for North Americans at the draft. Why can a team draft a triple-overager from Europe but not one from North America? It's the dumbest rule, but one designed partly to ensure more CHL kids are drafted than Europeans and NCAA prospects. A triple-overager in the CHL, i.e., a kid in his third look for the draft, is a rarity to begin with since they're already old enough for an AHL or ECHL contract. Conversely, the NCAA triple-overager is the rule and the exception, and teams know the player is more likely to honor the scholarship and finish his degree before ending up in the same place.
Tyler Boucher was a top-10 pick, albeit a bad one. Still, he went to BU and had 3 points in 17 games. So he quit the team and went to the London Knights and had 14 points in 24 games. Chaz Lucius averaged under a point a game as a frosh at Minnesota, then went to Portland in the Dub and averaged almost three points a game.
Teams drafting more CHL'ers is a recent trend after it bottomed out in 2019 -- the first time the USHL by itself without the NTDP out-drafted the OHL. Since then, we've seen a CHL spike and a dip in Russians, but that has not translated to NHL success. At least not yet. The 2021 OHL class is probably the best of the recent bunch.
Outside of London and maybe Kitchener, the quality in play in the OHL has become sloppy and there seems like there is very little structure with a lot of individualism. The Quebec Remparts under Roy exposed this in 2023 as they were insanely structured while Peterborough hung on for dear life and were only in games because of the goalie. Hamilton had great teams but crumbled in the tournament twice. Saginaw last year was a host team with all that rest, but they were the first OHL team to win it in years. I think London and Oshawa were the last OHL teams to win the Memorial Cup without hosting it and that was almost a decade ago. Not the end-all, be-all but part of the issue with overall quality of play in the OHL. London was a powerhouse but they are professionally structured so winning the MC would have been well deserved.
The college game is faster, meaner, and you get a ton of close games because of the structure and goaltending.
Tonight, 15 of the 56 D1 teams in action scored four or more goals. The OHL had seven, with 16 teams playing. Do the math.
That's why Hagens has 11 points in seven games and Martone has 32 in 15.
So ask the question -- why are the top NCAA players with lesser stats in college scoring more in the NHL than the top OHL-trained players with beefed-up numbers in junior?