NCAA / CHL Lawsuit

AUS Fan

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Aug 1, 2008
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A lot of unknowns in this article. Hope to see some clarity after the mettings.
 

dm8895

V-Reds , McJesus Stan , Beer Leaguer
Apr 3, 2015
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Freddy Beach
Obviously I’m just speculating and I know no more than anyone else does but my two cents …

I keep seeing people saying “this level will be the winners, this level will be the losers” . The two that I most commonly see being mentioned as losers happen to be the two I follow closest CIS and Tier 2.

In both cases I don’t think you can say the product will be affected negatively or positively as a whole . You almost are going to have to judge it on a league by league/conference and even team by team basis .

In USports I think you are kidding yourself if you don’t think the elite programs will be hurt , look at UNB’s top 6 , those are the kind of overages US teams would have had interest in , however I look at a team like Dalhousie and it probably has very little if any impact on them, so this could almost accomplish what the “roster cap” was intended to do and create more parity in the league.

The people who say “this hurts Jr.A the most” are actually saying “this hurts Jr.A out west and in the States the most” , the further East in Canada you go, the more tier 2 operates as a feeder to Major Junior and not the NCAA , hell before Josh Henry this past month I’m pretty sure the last Maritime League player to commit to a Div.1 team was Nadeau , so out west it could have a big impact but in leagues like the MHL and Quebec it could honesty be a good thing , more players going to Major Junior could push the bottom Q guys into tier 2 and raise the calibre , which would have a trickle down into Jr.B etc.

This is all speculation and as has been said so many moving parts and it will probably take a decade to get the full picture but what I’m trying to say is I don’t think it will be a black/white (good/bad) to those two levels that inevitably will be impacted most .
 
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FreddyFoyle

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Mar 12, 2008
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My gut feelings:

Teams like UNB might lose their "destination program" status for top-end Major Junior 20-year-olds. But I think UNB, Alberta, etc. will still attract "the best of the rest" so it shouldn't change the power dynamic much.

However, the NCAA Div I programs will have probably have to offer full-ride scholarships to be comparable to the CHL education packages for players going to USports. How many kids can afford half-tuition if the cost is $25-50K USD?

There will be turmoil in the transfer portal. You will now have CHL players added to the current recruit pool. More choices for coaches in Div I. Will even more players end up coming back to USports if they get cut and can't land at another top Div I school?

I believe the top Junior A leagues are going to take the biggest hit. Potential star committs aren't going to want to continue to do their "red shirt" time in the USHL or BCHL; they'll go to the CHL and then to NCAA.
 
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hockeyinsiderusports

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Nov 20, 2017
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Here challenge if you enroll in post secondary education your ncaa eligibility starts. Unless ncaa change that rule which I don’t see in new agreement
 

UNB Bruins Fan

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Mar 11, 2008
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This is kind of how I see it…and maybe it’s an overly simplistic/optimistic view. At the end of the day there are going to be the same number of good players available + the same number of teams. So while I think U Sports teams may have to broaden their recruiting net, so to speak, to find players…I’m not sure how much the quality of play is going to drop.

I find the biggest detriment to the quality of the league comes when the NHL/AHL/ECHL add expansion teams, which provides more pro opportunities to guys who otherwise might’ve went the university route.

I’m also curious what happens to the NCAA players who are at bottom of the depth chart now and will either get pushed further down or there will no longer be a spot for them once the CHL players come in…do they look towards U SPORTS?
 
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AUS Fan

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Aug 1, 2008
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At the Rink
This is kind of how I see it…there are going to be the same number of good players available + the same number of teams. So while I think U Sports teams may have to broaden their recruiting net, so to speak, to find players…I’m not sure how much the quality of play is going to drop.

I find the biggest detriment to the quality comes when the NHL/AHL/ECHL add expansion teams, which provides more pro opportunities to guys who otherwise might’ve went the university route.

I’m also curious what happens to the NCAA players who are at bottom of the depth chart now and will either get pushed further down or there will no longer be a spot for them once the CHL players come in…do they look towards U SPORTS?
I can't see too many US born players going to the CIS if they're pushed off the team by a CHL player.
 
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JMCx4

Welcome to: The Dumbing Down Era of HFBoards
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FloHockey's Chris Peters offers his take on the latest news ...
NCAA Approves New Rule Making CHL Players Eligible: What You Need To Know

Nov 08, 2024
Chris Peters

The entire developmental landscape in hockey is about to undergo its most dramatic shift in the modern era.

Thursday afternoon, the NCAA’s Division I council adopted rule changes that will allow athletes to retain eligibility even if they are involved with professional teams prior to enrollment. This decision is not final until the meeting is concluded, but this measure has already passed the vote.

This now opens the door to players from the Canadian Hockey League to be eligible to participate in NCAA hockey.

With the current rules, the CHL is expressly considered a professional league by the NCAA, largely because players with NHL contracts can be loaned back to the league. That will no longer be the case.

Per the NCAA, the new rule would allow men’s hockey and skiing athletes to compete with and against professionals. Per the NCAA, the new rule “would enable prospects who participate in major junior ice hockey or on professional teams to retain NCAA eligibility as long as they are not paid more than actual and necessary expenses as part of that participation.”

This ruling comes on the heels of a legal challenge filed earlier this year by a Canadian player who saw his NCAA eligibility lost after playing in preseason games with a team in the OHL. While that lawsuit specifically is not the cause of this, it probably hastened the action.
The NCAA has been losing legal battle after legal battle when it comes to amateurism and anti-trust laws. This is one they almost certainly would have lost, too.

This is a seismic change that could significantly alter the landscape of hockey’s developmental ladder. It may take years to fully understand the impact of this decision.

Here are some of the burning questions that may have answers, and many more that do not. ...

Read the Questions & a few Answers at:
 

hockeyguy0022

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Feb 20, 2016
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Melfort Mustang legend and Saskatoon Blades coach Kevin Dickie? Martin Erat, Ryan Keller, Mike Green... Kevin Dickie?

Takes me back a few lifetimes.
 

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