RobertKron
Registered User
- Sep 1, 2007
- 16,442
- 10,214
@RobertKron
I don't care what that article says, he finished high school at the normal age, i.e., the calendar year in which he turned 18. Fantilli, Power, Beniers, Kent Johnson, I could go on and on and on with guys who all played their pre-draft season in university at the same age that Hughes did. All guys who turned 18 after the Sept 15th cutoff. There might be areas where they start a year later if they are born late in the year but for many you start Grade 1 in the calendar year when you turn six and you finish in the year that you turn 18. It's no big deal for a late-birthday guy to start university before his 18th birthday.
Brady Tkachuk was taken three picks before Quinn Hughes. Same thing, born just after the Sept 15 cutoff, spent his pre-draft year in university. Charlie Stramel, Dylan Holloway, Jake Oettinger, Charlie McAvoy, Eichel, Tage Thompson, Jamie Oleksiak... those are just the other first-round guys in the past dozen years, there are more from the second and third rounds (including none other than Phil Di Giuseppe). It's not uncommon at all.
And there's a few guys like Celebrini, Wood, Hanifin and Werenski who started university in the calendar year in which they turned 17, which is rarer and even more difficult.
I said he was the youngest player in D1 and accelerated his studies to go to Michigan a year ahead of schedule, not that he was the youngest in history.
The original claim was that he did nothing to hint at his NHL future, and my point was that this was an undersized defenseman who accelerated his studies to move to the NCAA a year earlier than he was slated to arrive, and became an immediate impact player despite the significant step up in competition. That's obviously not conclusive, but is basically about the best indicator you can find that player will continue to excel going forward.