NCAA to allow CHL players to play hockey?

MeHateHe

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Dec 24, 2006
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I could see less interest in stuff like the Centennial Cup and World Junior A challenge, but I think local teams will be alright.
I think this could lead to greater interest in national championships. The focus in Junior A has been heavily skewed toward individual success - leagues and teams promote themselves as ways to get players to scholarships. With that now limited, teams and leagues will need to boast more about team success.

This is how things were in the 80s and 90s. I suspect we go back there.

As for the BCHL, the smart thing for them to do is to continue to market themselves as a development spot for players coming out of high school who still need some seasoning before they go the college. They won't be playing as high quality competition every night as in the WHL, but avoiding some of the ridiculous road trips in the Dub would surely be a selling feature. It might lead to some retrenchment in the BCHL, but they could still survive with 12-16 teams in a purely BC league. Those Alberta teams should probably go crawling back to the AJHL.
 
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edog37

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Jan 21, 2007
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Statement from the WHL commish:

Statement from WHL Commissioner on NCAA men's hockey eligibility changes - Western Hockey League

We are thrilled that upon graduation from the WHL, players will have additional options as they pursue the next step in their personal and hockey journey. We look forward to the opportunity to welcome a new wave of talent and we take great pride in our responsibility to support all WHL players in the pursuit of their goals – be that on the ice, in the classroom, and as contributing members of the community.

Players completing their eligibility with the WHL will continue to receive access to our leading post-secondary scholarship, funded by our 22 Member Clubs. In the 2023-24 season, the education bills for over 300 WHL Alumni were paid directly by the League and Clubs totalling in excess of $3 million in funding. The WHL is proud to continue this practice.


The key points are "graduates"...so this implies that you can't break the CHL contract to join a college. This muddies the water a bit.
Sure they could. The NCAA team offers said kid a full ride, thereby negating the CHL scholarship.
 

Bubbles

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Apr 16, 2004
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I'll say it again: this will re-order the hockey landscape. Junior A will revert to its prior status as a feeder league for major junior and, as a result, will likely get younger. A couple of teams may see this as the death of their raison d'etre and pack it in, but the majority are going to look for ways to adapt.

I don't know what the BCHL does, given that they have sold themselves as being the primary path from Canadian junior to NCAA, and burned a lot of bridges on the way.

But as long as there are players and paying customers (whatever the product), there will be hockey teams and leagues to house them. Predictions of the widescale death of junior A in Canada are wildly premature.

The BCHL has been a feeder league to the NCAA, not major junior.

The quality will take a dive in Junior A. The top recruits will now join the WHL and have an opportunity to play NCAA.

Sure, there will still be lower level kids trying to get scholarships to NCAA but not Div 1 schools because those teams will be recruiting heavily from the CHL ranks. Perhaps the talk of Junior A's death is a bit premature, but for sure it will no longer be considered a decent path to an NHL career.
 

Corso

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Aug 13, 2018
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The BCHL has been a feeder league to the NCAA, not major junior.

The quality will take a dive in Junior A. The top recruits will now join the WHL and have an opportunity to play NCAA.

Sure, there will still be lower level kids trying to get scholarships to NCAA but not Div 1 schools because those teams will be recruiting heavily from the CHL ranks. Perhaps the talk of Junior A's death is a bit premature, but for sure it will no longer be considered a decent path to an NHL career.

Consider current Junior A leagues as the new B leagues, and consider the USHL as the new BCHL. The various Junior leagues in the U.S. like the NAHL will primarily be a development path for D-III colleges while the leagues in Canada such as the OJHL will mainly be feeders to the CHL and U-Sports.
 

Voight

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Via 23 Thoughts -

17. A few sources in the junior world said there are already conversations between some NCAA schools and some CHL teams about “partnerships.” A kind of “scratch-my-back-and-I’ll-scratch-yours” setup where, say, a school will advise commits to go to a certain CHL team as long as that team agrees to send back the players when eligible to enrol.
 

LPHabsFan

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Not sure if this has been asked or discussed, but how to the changes to the rules affect prospects ability to attend things like rookie and development camps. Are they allowed to now?
 

LadyStanley

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Sep 22, 2004
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Not sure if this has been asked or discussed, but how to the changes to the rules affect prospects ability to attend things like rookie and development camps. Are they allowed to now?
AIUI NCAA players will be now able to attend training camp (and rookie tournaments) on their own $$; but would be missing week+ of school. (Previously could not)
Still will have to pay own way for summer development camps.

But CHL drafted players get their way paid to development camp and training camp. So it they go the NCAA route that may change.
 

Blue and Green

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Dec 17, 2017
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Via 23 Thoughts - 17. A few sources in the junior world said there are already conversations between some NCAA schools and some CHL teams about “partnerships.” A kind of “scratch-my-back-and-I’ll-scratch-yours” setup where, say, a school will advise commits to go to a certain CHL team as long as that team agrees to send back the players when eligible to enrol.
NCAA could only direct a player to a specific CHL squad if he hadn't been drafted.
 

Takuto Maruki

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Dec 13, 2016
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More speculation on how things might work
And specifically, since there was chatter on potential expansion:

22. Other stuff: There are lots of rumours about both CHL expansion — particularly to New England, which would be a QMJHL location — or USHL defections. MacKenzie: “There’s some real excitement in our organization and I think in probably other organizations about…what the possibilities for junior hockey in North America could look like going forward. We don't have the answers. We don't know exactly where it's going to go. But I think that there's some real opportunity here. We just have to determine what it looks like.” Sharks in the water.

Again, I seriously doubt the Q has the desire to move into New England - and I doubt the teams that were bandied about for defection from the USHL into the OHL are going to ultimately last (especially Youngstown)
 

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