singlesliceofcheese
Registered User
- May 9, 2018
- 220
- 107
Interesting player. He is leading the EBYSL in points as a 15 year old. He is Japanese.
Kenta Isogai at eliteprospects.com
Kenta Isogai at eliteprospects.com
japanese players gets hyped just becuse they are japanese. not a single of all those endless hyped japanese players has ever turned into a good player in the best leagues (nhl, khl, shl, nla, ahl)
I was thinking the same thing but also thought at some time that will change.
There's no compelling reason for talented players to go to another continent when they can also earn a living in domestic hockey.
I didn't see him on any lists i saw for the draft, is he ranked somewhere or it's more likely he's not drafted this year?
I remember when Shuhei Kuji dominated the Asian League and then went to Eisbare Berlin and he scored 2 points in 37 games.. japanese players are a bit of a fraud lol, but i think Yushiro Hiranoh could play some games in the NHL next season.
Fame, nationalism, and perhap better living if the player moves overseas.There's no compelling reason for talented players to go to another continent when they can also earn a living in domestic hockey.
Also, I think the money looks better on paper overseas than Japan.
Yes, very good skating abilities, skilled, not afraid to crash the netKenta looks a lot better than his stats. High-end skater with solid skill. Works really hard. Just hasn’t been able to turn his tools into production. I think he can be a pro in Europe for sure. His agent is German, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see him end up there one day.
While your statement isn't wrong, I just think being in Europe still can be a stepping stone for Asian players to enter the North American league, although the likelihood of entering the NHL is quite slim.Unless you can make the NHL there's no point really, in Europe a Japanese player that is no better than domestic talent isn't going to be paid more than in the Asia League.
Jordan Keller comes to mind among current players.First WHL goal! First by a Japanese born player in the WHL? I'm not sure.
He might just be good enough that a team might sign him to play on an NHL Roster as some sort of historic milestone. (First Japanese born and trained skater in the NHL.)Yeah, an interesting prospect, still pretty far from playing in NHL, but good chance he'll become a solid professional player in AHL or Europe.
He might just be good enough that a team might sign him to play on an NHL Roster as some sort of historic milestone. (First Japanese born and trained skater in the NHL.)
Hell, he might have a small chance that he could genuinely carve out a fringe NHL career.
This guy is 100 times the player Aito Iguchi ever was.