1. Let us know how that works out. If you really expect the WCHA teams to leave USHL players alone until they age out of Juniors you should share what you're smoking.packerboy wrote:1. I think that the organizations should show some control and try to respect the structure of one anothers programs.
2. These discussion are always so apples and oranges because somebody will say" It hurts the program" and the response is always" yah, but look how it helps the kid".
3. I am a program guy. I think if we keep HS hockey strong it helps everybody, even Fred who doesnt think he gets much out of it. Is it the ideal situation for him? Maybe not but he will be fine if he stays with it and if he is good enough.
4. BTW, people who diss the current HS hockey experience crack me up.
5. From Doug Woog to Phil Housley to CDH's Ryan McDonaugh, high school hockey has propelled kids to great heights.
6. O-clown, the 20 year olds from BC last year were all Jrs and Srs. They get older after 2-3 years in college.
7. BTW, you keep bringing up the NBA and college basketball. They passed a one year/19 year old rule and the word was that they wanted it to be 2 years. Why do you suppose they did that?
8. When Okposo left for NY last winter did you say"oh, it doesnt matter, not everybody does"? I assure you Gopher Blog's best buddy and hero didnt.
9. That's what I mean when I say we are stepping all over each other. My opinion is hardly singular. It seems Blog's pal Lucia is of a like mind.
2. I'm not sure who you've had discussions with in the past so I won't comment on that. However, I'm wondering how you can on one hand say you are alright with letting players make their own decisions and on the other say different levels of hockey should collude in order to limit that player's options.
3. Makes sense until you consider the feelings of kids that don't think the system is right for them. Seriously, you want to regulate how others feel. If the goalie from Roseau or International Falls wants to see more shots you can't say they'll be fine if they just stick with the program. They don't feel that way and they get to make their decision. And live with its consequences.
4. Great. No idea how to respond. I don't know people that diss the current HS hockey experience.
5. Has anyone ever said differently? I don't know how Doug Woog is relevant today. He coached a HS in the 70s and early 80s and moved to the WCHA. 25 years ago. Phil Housley played HS hockey almost 30 years ago. No way to know for sure, but it is possible he too would have played USHL in place of his jr. year of HS. He did play 16 games with the St. Paul Vulcans as it was, and I do remember seeing his older brother Larry in their locker room as well.
6. BC has lots of players from the USHL. Six players on this year's roster came from USHL teams and three more came from other Junior teams. I've never said colleges can't take kids that are 18. I've only said that when teams that do that - like the Gophers did through the 80s and most of the 90s - and then lose to teams that don't (Lake Superior State won three national championships) it isn't hard to see why coaches take older players. The WCHA has more kids from Minnesota that played a year after HS in the USHL than it has coming at age 18. And when kids do come at 18 they are probably the ones that left traditional MN HS hockey to play in the U.
7. The NBA moved draft age up from age 18 to 19 because their teams were often committing money and roster spots to players that were unproven. In Minnesota it was late 1st Round pick Ndi Ebi. To protect their teams they put a rule in place that encourages the very best players to play at least one season of NCAA basketball. The NCAA functions as the de facto minor league for the NBA. We can talk the NBA Draft all you want. There isn't much I don't know about it. This hardly seems like the forum. Not sure how to draw a parallel here to hockey, but the reason NBA teams prefer 19 year olds versus 18 year olds is pretty much the same as why WCHA coaches do.
8. I didn't say anything. I don't really care. It was interesting to hear the comments from some friends and how they differed from the one NHL scout I know. Did it bother you that Garth Snow doesn't care one bit whether the Gophers win or lose?
9. Lucia's of a like mind? Okay. Do you mean the same Lucia that had his son play USHL instead of in HS and regularly offers scholarships to players from that league? Seems like he advocates all the things you've posted against in this thread.(*EDIT - his son may have played as a sr but after the HS season...can't recall *)
Others have noted that your argument, if you can call it that, seems to move around. What I've learned is that when your son has the option to stay and play for his HS or join a USHL team you are going to want him to stay home. And that's fine.