You seem wildly ignorant to this topic if you think that the tournament being played in American border cities is some theory that I made. It's widely discussed by media and people on this forum because it is incredibly obvious. Once again though I doubt that you are serious given that you described Pittsburgh and Chicago as "virtually" border cities. I also can't tell if you are aware or not of how badly the tournament did economically in Boston, when they didn't put the tournament in a Canadian border city, but I'm sure you will just ignore that or claim baselessly that it supports your point. The tournament is in Buffalo because that's where the easiest money is, which is obvious to seemingly everyone.
The fact that I said it was "your theory" doesn't imply I think you made the theory. The fact that it's been placed in cities like Grand Forks and Boston which are relative proximity to your bid cities shows that they are within the range of considered cities. Your range of what you think is a border city is irrelevant. The selections by the IIHF in the past already preface and define what a border city is, and that is inclusive of the cities you peddle.
Unfortunately for you, claiming that your argument is supported doesn't make it so. As I already said, the tournament heavily used for scouting "U18 and Ivan Hlinka) are played in the summer. The hockey that is is used to generate the most interest and make the most money is played in the winter. The timing of the tournament only adds to its popularity, and is a big reason for the disparity between the popularity of this event and the similar events that take place in the spring and summer. As for the round robin format, the IIHF always preferred that method but Hockey Canada, the largest and wealthiest federation, lobbied for change and the IIHF eventually gave in. Shocking that it wasn't at the behest of scouts, I know.
You literally just pulled arguments out of your behind right there and you expect to be taken seriously. First of all you make the absolutely ridiculous claim that the U18 is held "in the summer" when it is held in April. Summer is defined by Merriam Webster as "the months of June, July, and August or as reckoned astronomically extending from the June solstice to the September equinox", April has never been one of those, so that's moot first next point. There is no evidence to prove that running the tournament in the winter against NHL competition is more profitable than running it against nothing in the summer, if anything the timing of the WCOH would demonstrate otherwise. Your only argument to that is "it does, and that's why they do it." As for the round robin format, it was switched at the expansion to ten teams but regardless of who the initial resolution was channeled through you're really pulling crap out of your behind to say that you know the specific motive behind which the resolution to cut 30% profits upfront was passed. HockeyCanada is a comprehensive organization that can lobby at the behest of any interest it deems defendable. You merely saying "hockeycanada! hocheycanada!" doesn't mean crap because you're completely unaware of the parties of interest and what they want out of a shorter, less lucrative tournament.
Ah, so your assumptions about what the person means are more significant than what the person actually said. I see. The quotes, which were found in maybe 30 seconds and are only a small sample of many similar quotes, simply demonstrate how significant money is in where those tournaments were played. The IIHF only started going to Canada so often after a deal was struck whereby the IIHF got more money when the tournament was held in Canada. Everyone other than seemingly you can see this. It has next to nothing to do with scouts, but a lot to do with money.
Ok, only a small sample then find the ones that fit your narrative, not these that don't fit your narrative. You seem so incensed by business dealings, deals are signed and can be bid at any point by any federation and the IIHF has many deals with many federations. You don't know the figures behind them, and as your quote pointed out you don't know how the figures compare in the global age of television and online marketing. You think somehow that because a president mentions finances then oh his concern must primarily be money and even bordering on cash grab language and these quotes are amazing. That's ridiculous, in his quote he even refers to it off of hand and the second quote explicitly defines itself as regardless of location in the modern tech world. The problem with your later request for evidence is that yours is circumstantial at best, "he talks about money so it must be the primary concern, they sign typical monetary deals so money must be the prime concern" even as my point only uses circumstantial evidence "he forgoes the attainment of money therefore it is superseded by another factor." You can't rail on me for having nothing better than circumstantial evidence and not have any direct evidence yourself. Your evidence being quotes does not mean they directly support your point or address your argument.
No, I will keep referring to it as a cash grab as the IIHF is doing what is easiest, but not necessarily what is best for competitive fairness, in order to increase the amount of money that it takes in. The organization is within its rights to do that so I don't see a big problem there. Your second point about scouting being a primary consideration is simply ridiculous. It's a factor in the tournament, but not even close to as significant as money is. I'm waiting for you to show even the remotest evidence that scouting is a huge factor for the IIHF. It's incredibly easy to find the IIHF fretting over money, but quite difficult to find anything about the IIHF caring about scouting.
When you try to argue a topicality you need a definition of your own that incorporates competitive fairness, then actually I think the harder part would be to prove that the way it is set up impedes competitive fairness given the poor record hosts bear in this tournament or any other IIHF sanctioned tournament. This was actually my original point so I'm going to hit this a little harder than others. People love to throw around the word "cash grab", it's a quick and easy way to slander a product or a business decision without any evidence because there are ignorant people like you who think "well it only makes sense, money makes the world go round, no evidence needed here." When you call something a cash grab you are implying that money as gained in an undignified or unprincipled manner. Even if you go the competitive fairness route you are accusing them of nothing short of actually fixing the tournament by rendering location, which is A. ridiculous given that the tournament has been won by the host a mere 20% of the time and B. the benefits of hosting are so intangible in nature where competitive fairness concerned that your accusation is ground and baseless from the moment it is put forth. Even if they did, as you think, award location to highest bidder as in the Olympics or the World Cup there is no evidence to support that this has impeded competitive fairness in either this event or events prior in the IIHF tree of events. Even if competitive fairness were blatantly downplayed in a tangible way you would have to prove that the product promised in principle was a free and fair competition between the best youth of different nation states for the pride of nation states in which there are other inhibiting factors that would bear greater influence to these free and fair "representative" competitions. When you argue competitive fairness the burden of proof is on you to prove obstructionism, which neither you nor any poster here has bothered to do despite making loud and rabid claims of an ongoing cash grab. Then there's the idea of ease and relative ease. Part of both your informal and my formal definition of a cash grab was ease, but while there is relative ease attained the actual product is not produced with objective ease, but rather work meriting the funds brought in. You could try to argue both competitive fairness is obstructed, and that absolute ease was involved in the production of the product, or you can face the obvious. You, with a bunch of other enthusiastically derisive posters slandered the tournament as a cash grab with zero basis to prove that anything was done within the jurisdiction of the term "cash grab" and now you're forced to defend a topicality you couldn't begin to defend.
Once again I highly doubt that you're being serious given these posts. This stream of discussion within the thread began only because of how ridiculous your original claims about the tournament - essentially that money was not a big factor but scouting was - are. These players can just as easily be monitored in the junior or professional leagues in which they play. In some cases, like with released NHL or European professionals, the level of competition that the players face in the WJC is lower than what they are accustomed to. A player like Dubois was a third overall pick. He's going to have every chance to be a significant contributor to Columbus soon based on his draft position, and whatever he does at the WJC isn't going to affect that very much. Joseph is already signed by Tampa Bay and will get a shot to make the team as soon as next year. His performance in that camp and during this whole season will decide his fate next year, not how he performed in a handful of games at the WJC.
You write a lot of words but don't make many points here. I already addressed why monitoring a preference for monitoring at a more sophisticated stage would exist, you just restated that the less sophisticated stage could still be monitored. I already mentioned that in certain scenarios as a club may see fit a player in a european professional league may forgo, and there are many examples of this even this tournament. You baselessly assume in theory that because of PLD's draft position he will get a chance "soon" but never preface how they would know when "soon" had arrived other than your previous supposition which I had addressed and then you dropped for a round because it was a better argument. With Joseph's case you vastly underestimate the number of options that a club can choose in investment in a player. To you this, and seemingly many other things, is binary in nature, he gets a shot at making the team or he doesn't. In real life that isn't at all the case. NHL teams engage in many transactions even more the original promotion to a team in order to place players in different settings such as the AHL when they are ready, and things like call-ups to and from the NHL, AHL or CHL are extremely common. You've built a strawman and have knocked him down. I've never tried to argue or even imply your binary train of through. Monitoring, preparations and investment takes on many stages and I've never argued otherwise.
This honestly seems like a big waste of time though. You've taken a frankly bizarre stance, and then (disingenuously?) claim that evidence to the contrary supports you while providing no evidence of your own. If you cannot see that money is a huge consideration for the WJC, but somehow think that scouting is, then I doubt that actual evidence or even common sense are going to convince you.
Perhaps this isn't in your book of "common sense" but dropping a topicality (even as the neg) and thereby conceding half my argument would in any sanctioned setting cost you the entire competitive deliberation. You're arrogant because you think you're right, and perhaps you are, but from the initial point your continued appeal to common sense is ludicrous. Nothing is right that cannot be proven and if I'm to be expected to produce more than circumstantial evidence then so would you and then your quotes from Fasel about money or the mere signing of big money deals would all be circumstantial. On topicality, you're going to have a hard time touching that one. On the money vs. scouting aspect you have one quote that has potential to not be circumstantial but the others have no potential and your other arguments (redundant as they are) don't either so if we are just going to trade circumstantial evidence on this second half of the original discussion then yeah, you're wasting your time.