Jacob582
Registered User
- Oct 16, 2012
- 10,217
- 3,830
Yes, I would think they would need to ammend the NHL-CHL transfer agreement.Wouldn't the CHL have to agree to this as well as the NHLPA?
Yes, I would think they would need to ammend the NHL-CHL transfer agreement.Wouldn't the CHL have to agree to this as well as the NHLPA?
Funny I just said that a few days ago in another thread. Give the CHL Team some cash which most probably could use buying the rights of the player from them.Not sure the best thread to throw this in:
Would be a gamechanger for some guys.
The weird thing is that this is not just a CBA thing, it is an NHL-CHL transfer agreement thing.Funny I just said that a few days ago in another thread. Give the CHL Team some cash which most probably could use buying the rights of the player from them.
Its a win-win.
If you think about it Benson would benefit a season in the AHL but he can't. Yet his WHL team gets nothing. So its a win-win to give the WHL team cash and let him play in the AHL. In the end it could be million(s) of dollars over 5-10 years for the CHL team from multiple teams for players.The weird thing is that this is not just a CBA thing, it is an NHL-CHL transfer agreement thing.
I wonder if they will update the transfer agreement to give teams cash for every season of eligibility teams lose. Even for guys like Benson and Bedard that make the jump straight to the NHL.
That is never going to happen.It's going to look odd. I think the NCAA is going to be accepting CHL players so you could have a situation where if the kid decides to go to college, the CHL team gets nothing but if they decide to go AHL, the team gets paid. They'll be fighting to phase each other out (NCAA vs. AHL) and it will be interesting to see how things evolve.
Well the AHL isn't going anywhere so it's probably more like the NHL and CHL trying to phase out the NCAA route.
It's going to look odd. I think the NCAA is going to be accepting CHL players so you could have a situation where if the kid decides to go to college, the CHL team gets nothing but if they decide to go AHL, the team gets paid. They'll be fighting to phase each other out (NCAA vs. AHL) and it will be interesting to see how things evolve.
Well the AHL isn't going anywhere so it's probably more like the NHL and CHL trying to phase out the NCAA route.
It won't. Allowing CHL players into the AHL at a younger age will lessen the likelihood of kids taking the college route.How will allowing CHL players into NCAA phase out that route?
I probably used too strong of terms but you have to realize that the NCAA and CHL/AHL are vying and posturing for good young players.That is never going to happen.
It won't. Allowing CHL players into the AHL at a younger age will lessen the likelihood of kids taking the college route.
As I fasten my tinfoil hat, the NHL would probably want to boost the CHL as more and more kids look to the NCAA as apposed to the CHL. The ability to earn money in college just sweetens that move. The same can be said for young foreign players and more and more Canadian players. Having to not spend an extra year in the CHL for a talented player is less of a deterrent to go that route.
I probably used too strong of terms but you have to realize that the NCAA and CHL/AHL are vying and posturing for good young players.
The players won't be paid enough to phase out the ncaa option. It will always be viable.It won't. Allowing CHL players into the AHL at a younger age will lessen the likelihood of kids taking the college route.
As I fasten my tinfoil hat, the NHL would probably want to boost the CHL as more and more kids look to the NCAA as apposed to the CHL. The ability to earn money in college just sweetens that move. The same can be said for young foreign players and more and more Canadian players. Having to not spend an extra year in the CHL for a talented player is less of a deterrent to go that route.
I probably used too strong of terms but you have to realize that the NCAA and CHL/AHL are vying and posturing for good young players.
I don't really think so either. It's more of an interesting situation where I believe the NHL will encourage the AHL/CHL but college will be the more enthusiastic routeThe players won't be paid enough to phase out the ncaa option. It will always be viable.
The thing is that the NCAA is looking at a different crop of athletes by and large than the CHL and AHL are.I probably used too strong of terms but you have to realize that the NCAA and CHL/AHL are vying and posturing for good young players.
Maybe 10 years ago but we see that trend changing. Less and less American kids go to the CHL and we see more Canadian and foreign kids going to college. Good, young top tier talent. It's not just for the undrafted players looking to make a name anymore.The thing is that the NCAA is looking at a different crop of athletes by and large than the CHL and AHL are.
The NCAA is the place for late bloomers where the CHL and AHL is the place for early bloomers.
The thing is that the NCAA is looking at a different crop of athletes by and large than the CHL and AHL are.
The NCAA is the place for late bloomers where the CHL and AHL are the places for early bloomers.
The NCAA does OK on that front with the NDTP to NCAA pathway being strong.IMO The NCAA would love those marquee early bloomers too. They just can't compete with the CHL at the moment.
Boston College would have gladly taken McDavid. Unfortunately for them he'd been getting paid in the CHL for a few years.
You still see the bulk of NCAA players playing at least a year or two of JR A before starting college. Given the age restrictions in the CHL, that is not an option.Maybe 10 years ago but we see that trend changing. Less and less American kids go to the CHL and we see more Canadian and foreign kids going to college. Good, young top tier talent. It's not just for the undrafted players looking to make a name anymore.
There's an uncapped amount of money to be made and I think the experience is a draw as well. Obviously the CHL and probably Hockey Canada in general don't want to see players in a different league.
What's not an optionYou still see the bulk of NCAA players playing at least a year or two of JR A before starting college. Given the age restrictions in the CHL, that is not an option.
Players rarely start playing in the CHL at 20 or 21 like many NCAA freshman are due to the age restrictions in the CHL.What's not an option
Yeah obviously. The conversation is from the proposed idea of allowing drafted 18 year olds from the CHL to the AHL. And how they are trying to compete with players going into the NCAA. Not just CHL v. NCAA. My thought was about the CHL/AHL v. NCAA paths. Of course there are a few non-CHL routes before college but it doesn't sound like that's what you're referring to.Players rarely start playing in the CHL at 20 or 21 like many NCAA freshman are due to the age restrictions in the CHL.
If you look at the average age of an NCAA D1 roster and a CHL roster, you will see that NCAA rosters are a few years older on average. And that is because of the rules differences between the CHL and the NCAA.
RIT's roster is a great example of that. They have 7 First Years on their roster. 5 are 21yo and 2 are 20yo (and one of the 20yos is a '23 birthyear who turns 21 in December).
I’m curious how many of those CHL studs would be the right age pre-draft to play in college (like Eichel was).IMO The NCAA would love those marquee early bloomers too. They just can't compete with the CHL at the moment.
Boston College would have gladly taken McDavid. Unfortunately for them he'd been getting paid in the CHL for a few years.
I’m curious how many of those CHL studs would be the right age pre-draft to play in college (like Eichel was).
Probably not a ton of them. The bigger effect is how the NCAA will be able to round out their rosters with ex CHL players instead of ex Jr A players.
Definitely not a ton but we may start to see overagers move to the NCAA from the CHL which is everyone that gets drafted from the CHL that doesn't make their NHL team out of camp. I may not have been being clear but I believe those players will be sought after by the colleges and probably soon the AHL.I’m curious how many of those CHL studs would be the right age pre-draft to play in college (like Eichel was).
I’m curious to see how that breaks. Do the powerful teams appeal most, or is it the schools that are built on older guys already. Or will it shake out somewhere in between?
Also will CHLers give more shrift to their schooling so they academically can clear the (often low) bar to get into an NCAA program and not be academically ineligible quickly. Anecdotes abound regarding the lack of regard for schooling among many CHLers.