You still live in 2012. Enjoy your playstation 3
Bro, I'm not even arguing with you. I'm also saying he's going to be successful.
All I'm saying is he's going to have to be that much better than everyone else to succeed. You keep telling me there's precedent for small players to succeed, like I'm some sort of moron for not knowing this, but there is literally no defenseman that's been this small, ever, not to this extent.
Here is every defenseman that's played a single hockey game since 1956. Lane Hutson is the lightest of every single.
The official source for NHL Stats including skaters, goalies, teams stats and more.
www.nhl.com
So, go ahead and tell me he will succeed despite his size and I will whole heartedly agree with you.
But don't give me this better than thou attitude and bullshit about their being a standard of NHL players of this size or that it's the new norm, because their simply isn't anyone who's been in his situation. If anything if you look at the stats I provided (which I know you won't anyway), historically lighter defenseman has been becoming increasingly uncommon, and the guys you're thinking of are anomalies. Which is exactly what Hutson will be. But it's not some new norm that's being ushered in, it's just particular players that are so talented their size doesn't hold them back.
I know you're thinking of the Hughes brothers, but Quinn is 22 pounds heavier at the same height and Luke is 27 pounds heavier. They are 212nd and 266th lightest on the list I provided, so there's plenty of precedent of players of their size playing defense. 20+ pounds at that height makes a massive difference. Studies show the average man can only add between 35 to 45 of muscle in an entire lifetime of training.