Fortunately, your projections are completely meaningless. Everyone who puts up X points in the AHL does not automatically go on to post Y points in the NHL. It doesn't work like that, especially when we're talking about the development of two different young players with two different skillsets.
Fortunately, most people have reading skills that you don't. I specifically said that this isn't based purely on the two of them having identical stats, but rather that it was part of the equation. I cited stats because some people act like him scoring 0.5 points per game as a 19 year old is a great achievement and a sign of great offensive strength, and it was important to show that 0.5 points per game doesn't mean he'll be a scorer.
Then I went on with the rest of the argument based on actually watching him play. You know, that thing I do that you don't do: watch prospects.
This forum (and others) functions on a joint opinion of people who mostly have no clue and base it on hype, or lack of it. One person who doesn't know what he's talking about says something to the other and he repeats it to the third person, and it becomes common knowledge. And any opinion to the contrary is ridiculous. Then a report comes out and suddenly everyone's opinion changes.
The latest example of it is Hrivik. For over a month nobody gave me the time of day on Hrivik. Then yesterday Brooks writes that the Rangers are thinking of making him the only prospect to be invited to camp next week, and suddenly he's everyone's choice as a surprise prospect of the year. That had nothing to do with what Brooks wrote, right?
Other prospects, whether good (JAM) or bad (Pashnin), any deviation from the chorus makes your opinion ridiculous, until it becomes clear to the chorus that they were wrong and they quietly move on.
This is true in other spheres as well. For two years I was making a ridiculous argument that the cap will not go down, and that it is likely to be higher in 2012-13 than it was in 2011-12, and it will never be lower. What a ridiculous opinion that was. After all, it went against the chorus.
And let's not forget the chorus belief that mid and late first rounders are projected second liners who'll be in the NHL in 2 years after their draft year. Every year this is said by every team's fans and two years later, nobody remembers making this projection, as the same projection is made for yet another first rounder.
So yeah, there's an advantage to watching games (instead of falsely insinuating that you do) and keeping track of all draftees, not just the couple stars that were the exception to the rule for the position they drafted.
But you stick with your nasty comments because it makes you feel superior and it makes it look like you actually know what you are talking about and you actually watch games.