Yet you are the one who made the following statements:
You brought up the education part, and I responded to that:
That's interesting. Should there be a "Finnish factor" then?
@Vector how would going the CHL route help if the issue is their development gets stalled? Finland does do fine producing draft-eligible prospects and they do fine at the WJC. Like in 2022 when they were in the WJC finals and Lundell was on the team.
Personally I'm not sure that I really buy into it. Many Canadian and American NHL players for example just go back home and do their own thing. Of course, given that there are more NHL players from Canada and USA, it's easier to find trainers who have trained NHL players/stars but it's
not like a player like Raty doesn't have the education to work on things himself back home.
Then I clarified that almost no pro athlete has the education necessary to program them selves.
As in, its not about lack of education. It was more a general statement about athletes.
Again, you haven't answered the question. Are you saying that all a Finnish needs to "have the education to work on things properly" is the 1-2 years of CHL experience? And they learn to track their blood from playing in the CHL?
Because these two are not directly related.
Going to CHL will improve their in season progress and likely reduce their risk of injuries as a result of poor in season training.
Is there a CBA that prevents CHL teams being more hands on for the summer? If not. Then that way it would help with the summer training.
I would not fixate on the blood work part too much. Its just an example of what the top athletes in the world do at the moment, and one that obviously needs expertise that no hockey player should be expected to possess.
It's off topic (and mods can move this discussion to the Raty or prospects thread) but not nonsense. You are 1) making an insider claim and 2) supporting that claim with what you have posted.
I know I'm making a weird vague claim, but I cant be more specific. And I dont blame anyone if they think I'm talking out of my ass.
I don't think anyone here would disagree that Raty should have been told that he needed to work on his skating. There's no evidence to suggest that the Canucks trainers and developmental staff have not properly advised what Raty should work on over the summer.
They probably give him a training program.
But with no follow up its really not going to even close to optimal development.
Also... If its anything like our sports medicin department in Vancouver, its not going to be state of the art science.
But you are saying Raty "lacks the education to work on things properly." One example you gave of what it means to "work on things properly" is to track his recovery through blood work.
You seem to possess knowledge that many of us don't have and I don't think this is nonsense. Raty is in his second summer as a Vancouver Canuck and however you want to phrase it, something like "he lacks the education to work on things properly" is concerning.
Ok. This sounds cool to me. (Except we can forget the education part IMO)
The issue is that Finnish pro hockey clubs are not up to the task of handling the NHLers summer training. And with the CBA preventing NHL being more hands on, Finland is a really shitty place to train for the NHLers, during the summer.
This all is related to how Finland was left with ZERO medals in the summer Olympics for the first time ever. So many of the coaches even at the Olympic level have other jobs, and coaching is basically their hobby.
When you've flushed away as many first and second round draft picks as the Canucks have since 2020, all you have left is 'hope'. Some of these late round picks have work out somehow. Otherwise, once Wilander and Lekkerimaki age out as prospects, the Canucks could end up with one of the worst prospect pools in the entire league.
I think it is pretty safe to say that we are heading that way.
We are in win now mode with very limited resources to spend.