NCAA to allow CHL players to play hockey?

Sideline

Registered User
May 23, 2004
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I think the Junior A issue now will be recruiting/retention. I am tied in with a club and know almost every kid on the roster has a goal of getting to NCAA at some level. Agents and Advisors will now push for those players to get to the CHL level as thats the route to getting an NCAA scholarship now. Will it only affect 3-4 players off each Junior A team....likely you are right there. But the kids that dont have a shot at the CHL ranks, and knowing full well they will have a much smaller or almost no chance at an NCAA scholarship playing in Junior A leagues will just decide to get on with their lives and go to university/college instead.

Junior A is not cheap for players at all anymore, decades ago players got paid to play and provided with everything they needed throughout the year. Now with Player Development Fees, league fees and some teams charging billet/transportation fees most players are paying $3000-$10,000 a year to play and that doesn't include any additional expenses such as vehicles, spending money, trips home etc. So as a parent, I won't be spending thousands of dollars for a kid whos not CHL bound to play a few years and end up in college/university a few years behind their friends. That money can go towards their education....not hockey for fun.

Also you have to think along the lines of scouts/coaches from the NCAA, where are they going to look to find players. If you can now scout/recruit from the best league in North America, which also includes going to bigger cities, nicer places and have less travel/better accommodations, are you going to travel to Nipiwin Sask for a less talented league in hopes of finding a gem, or are you going to go to do a BC swing and hit Kelowna, Vancouver, Lethbridge and Calgary? I know NCAA coaches who's gone on recruiting trips, they very much already avoid going to prairies as much as they can because the product isn't as good as well as who wants to spend a week in a car going from small town to small town.

I foresee several Junior A clubs closing up shop once all this hits, many of the community owned teams struggle to make ends meet already, and if the on ice product diminishes....it will be harder.

Also....top end talent in the CHL will still go the pro route, but how many of the CHL top end talent walk right on to a NHL/AHL team at 20 years old. Not as many as we want to believe, if your 5th round draft pick isn't quite ready for the pros yet, most NHL clubs will say....hey we can get you on Michigan for a couple years. Then we can re-assess after some more development.
It might have an impact on the ECHL for a similar reason. If you are a 20 year old jock would you rather go play in the ECHL or being big man on campus with a bunch of people your own age?
 

Bonk

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May 18, 2007
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It's funny how once upon a time, the junior hockey system within Canada was essentially farm teams for the development of teenagers by NHL teams, and with this, there's a circular return to sponsorships and major junior farm teams, except focused on putting kids towards D1 hockey.

Truthfully, that idea seems predicated on exponential growth of D1 hockey, especially in the south and west, that is completely out of line with what is actually happening in educational institution offices across the US, and that's cutting non-revenue or revenue losing sports in order to feed the beast of CFB and CBB to a lesser extent, and trying to justify conference TV revenue with hare-brained realignment ideas.
Very interesting assessment.
 

DaveG

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Apr 7, 2003
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Winston-Salem NC
I think the Junior A issue now will be recruiting/retention. I am tied in with a club and know almost every kid on the roster has a goal of getting to NCAA at some level. Agents and Advisors will now push for those players to get to the CHL level as thats the route to getting an NCAA scholarship now. Will it only affect 3-4 players off each Junior A team....likely you are right there. But the kids that dont have a shot at the CHL ranks, and knowing full well they will have a much smaller or almost no chance at an NCAA scholarship playing in Junior A leagues will just decide to get on with their lives and go to university/college instead.

Junior A is not cheap for players at all anymore, decades ago players got paid to play and provided with everything they needed throughout the year. Now with Player Development Fees, league fees and some teams charging billet/transportation fees most players are paying $3000-$10,000 a year to play and that doesn't include any additional expenses such as vehicles, spending money, trips home etc. So as a parent, I won't be spending thousands of dollars for a kid whos not CHL bound to play a few years and end up in college/university a few years behind their friends. That money can go towards their education....not hockey for fun.

Also you have to think along the lines of scouts/coaches from the NCAA, where are they going to look to find players. If you can now scout/recruit from the best league in North America, which also includes going to bigger cities, nicer places and have less travel/better accommodations, are you going to travel to Nipiwin Sask for a less talented league in hopes of finding a gem, or are you going to go to do a BC swing and hit Kelowna, Vancouver, Lethbridge and Calgary? I know NCAA coaches who's gone on recruiting trips, they very much already avoid going to prairies as much as they can because the product isn't as good as well as who wants to spend a week in a car going from small town to small town.

I foresee several Junior A clubs closing up shop once all this hits, many of the community owned teams struggle to make ends meet already, and if the on ice product diminishes....it will be harder.

Also....top end talent in the CHL will still go the pro route, but how many of the CHL top end talent walk right on to a NHL/AHL team at 20 years old. Not as many as we want to believe, if your 5th round draft pick isn't quite ready for the pros yet, most NHL clubs will say....hey we can get you on Michigan for a couple years. Then we can re-assess after some more development.
I don't think the AHL will be affected quite that dramatically but the ECHL absolutely will. Most of the players that are signed that need that extra year or two of seasoning after the CHL years are ending up in the ECHL as is instead of sticking at the AHL level.

Mind you it will also be interesting to see if any changes in drafted players rights are made based on this, an NHL team that only gets a CHL players rights for 2 years isn't going to be all that helpful in getting a player onto say Michigan or Northeastern if they no longer have their rights presuming the NCAA still won't be allowing players that are under professional contract.
 

WarriorofTime

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Jul 3, 2010
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I don't think the AHL will be affected quite that dramatically but the ECHL absolutely will. Most of the players that are signed that need that extra year or two of seasoning after the CHL years are ending up in the ECHL as is instead of sticking at the AHL level.

Mind you it will also be interesting to see if any changes in drafted players rights are made based on this, an NHL team that only gets a CHL players rights for 2 years isn't going to be all that helpful in getting a player onto say Michigan or Northeastern if they no longer have their rights presuming the NCAA still won't be allowing players that are under professional contract.
The ECHL already has a fairly old Weighted Average, around 26 (compared to 25 for AHL and 28 for NHL).
 
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MeHateHe

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Dec 24, 2006
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I don’t know this player, but this seems to be a harbinger for the USHL.
Interesting tidbit is that IIRC, BCHL players, because of the league’s “independent status” aren’t eligible to play major junior this season. It might be the only thing keeping players from leaving BCHL clubs this season.
 
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GKJ

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Feb 27, 2002
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Undrafted kid from last year’s draft. Scratched half the games this season. Looks like last played October 18.
Is Minnesota recruiting and signing the bottom of USHL rosters though?

Sounds like Sioux Falls got a player to come from the OHL through
 

Corso

Registered User
Aug 13, 2018
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No ambiguity here



I wonder how many will follow after the NCAA rules CHL players eligible next week? When this topic first arose, some months ago, I felt that the USHL would have to quickly get ahead of this or problems would arise. Now there are (credible) rumors of teams wanting to leave the USHL for the OHL and a steady trickle of players leaving even before the news of eligibility is formally announced.
 

GKJ

Global Moderator
Feb 27, 2002
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I wonder how many will follow after the NCAA rules CHL players eligible next week? When this topic first arose, some months ago, I felt that the USHL would have to quickly get ahead of this or problems would arise. Now there are (credible) rumors of teams wanting to leave the USHL for the OHL and a steady trickle of players leaving even before the news of eligibility is formally announced.
It feels like the league needs to figure out if they can merge before the teams themselves decide.

Also: what happens to the USNTDP if the league dissolves or merges? The OHL or CHL not gonna have time for that.
 

Corso

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Aug 13, 2018
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It feels like the league needs to figure out if they can merge before the teams themselves decide.

Also: what happens to the USNTDP if the league dissolves or merges? The OHL or CHL not gonna have time for that.

From everything I heard, the CHL does not want a merger with the USHL. Territorial rights is the main sticking point. The USHL is playing with a weak hand and may have to give up certain states and all of Canada for player rights in order to somehow move on with, if not a full merger, at least an affiliation of some sort.
 
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Voight

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Feb 8, 2012
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It feels like the league needs to figure out if they can merge before the teams themselves decide.

Also: what happens to the USNTDP if the league dissolves or merges? The OHL or CHL not gonna have time for that.

Thats been the burning question for me. I don't think anyone has answer for it right now, cause aside from the situation being unprecedented, there aren't many options for the UNTDP.
 

WarriorofTime

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Jul 3, 2010
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That would effectively render the impact of any changes to be incredibly unimportant, especially if it's coupled with CHL holding onto players until Age 20, as it'll maintain dual path.
 
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GGpX

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May 30, 2010
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To clarify, Dreger says that the years of eligibility are only for players that went to Canadian University, not the years in the CHL.

So if a player has spent two years in Canadian University, he'd only be eligible to two years in the NCAA.
 

WarriorofTime

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Jul 3, 2010
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To clarify, Dreger says that the years of eligibility are only for players that went to Canadian University, not the years in the CHL.

So if a player has spent two years in Canadian University, he'd only be eligible to two years in the NCAA.
Well that's not the same thing.

Key language will be around the level of compensation players are allowed to have previously received, imo. Never been fully resolved with Basketball and there's always questions with European guys.
 
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Corso

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Aug 13, 2018
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Muskegon & Youngstown to the OHL seems like a no brainer

I question whether either Muskegon or Youngstown have the financial wherewithal to join and compete in the OHL. They simply do not draw in enough revenue.
To clarify, Dreger says that the years of eligibility are only for players that went to Canadian University, not the years in the CHL.

So if a player has spent two years in Canadian University, he'd only be eligible to two years in the NCAA.

The eligibility rule change will allow any CHL players who has not signed a pro contract (ELC in the NHL or AHL ATO) to play, regardless as to how many years they played in the CHL.

The golden question now is how will the NHL and the PA decide on how long are the rights to drafted players who go from the CHL to the NCAA retained?
 
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cg98

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Oct 10, 2017
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I question whether either Muskegon or Youngstown have the financial wherewithal to join and compete in the OHL. They simply do not draw in enough revenue.


The eligibility rule change will allow any CHL players who has not signed a pro contract (ELC in the NHL or AHL ATO) to play, regardless as to how many years they played in the CHL.

The golden question now is how will the NHL and the PA decide on how long are the rights to drafted players who go from the CHL to the NCAA retained?
The NHL actively subsidizes all 3 CHL leagues and their teams with millions of dollars annually, Muskegon and Youngstown will recieve those payments under the CHL umbrella. The vast majority of CHL teams lose hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars annually and are not profitable, this isnt an issue unique to either of those 2 teams.

McDavids Erie Otters lost nearly $1mil the year after he was drafted, and even filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Pennsylvania during his draft year in 2015: Owner: Otters lost $831K last season
 
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WarriorofTime

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The NHL actively subsidizes all 3 CHL leagues and their teams with millions of dollars annually, Muskegon and Youngstown will recieve those payments under the CHL umbrella.
The vast majority of CHL teams lose hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars annually and are not profitable, this isnt an issue unique to either of those 2 teams.
Broadcast rights as well that they’d fall under
 

hockeykid87

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Apr 7, 2008
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So basically guys who played four years in the CHL (of which they are many) won't be eligible for the NCAA.
My interpretation of his comment was players who play in USports lose one year of NCAA eligibility per year they play in USports, not the CHL.

"If that graduated Major Junior player is playing USports, and he's in his second year, well that's two years of eligibility that now gets removed. That means that player only has two more years of college eligibility in the NCAA."
 

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