Not an overager, but solidly 2 years older than the draft aged prospects that year (e.g., his 8/67 birthdate vs Joe Sakic’s 7/69).
I think the fact that he wasn’t drafted till the very last pick in a 12-round draft, didn’t get offered a contract out of training camp in Calgary, got offered a junior contract out of training camp in Edmonton, and offered one last shot at the AHL before being forgotten, tells us how he was viewed as a prospect. He was a long shot, treated as a long shot.
To emphasize the key point about this player — Tony Hand is not famous because he put up 200pt seasons in the BHL. A lot of no-name players did that, and nobody remembers them.
What makes Hand famous is that he never left the BHL... he stuck around putting up those 200pt seasons over and over, whereas his peers moved on to college or other Euro countries or back to Canada. So while his peers have one or two dominant BHL seasons followed by irrelevance in other places, Hand has goofy career numbers that look like a video game addict’s pride and joy. If not for that career accumulation, he’d just be another on a list of obscure players... but the huge numbers give him cult status, like the Scottish Trevor Jobe.