BlueLineSpecial wrote:
Love these discussions. How exactly does the scholarship thing work with the WHL? I'm interested and I've heard a lot of different things, not all of which can be true...
It's really not very complicated. (cut and paste) For every season a player plays in the WHL, they receive a full year guaranteed Scholarship, including tuition, textbooks and compulsory fees, to a post-secondary institution of their choice. For example, players graduating from a four-year WHL career are eligible to receive four years of scholarship funding. (end cut and paste) Additionally, players can recieve an additional year for signing. This isn't standard, but it's not hard to get. In total, players can recieve a maximum of 5 years tuition/books and compulsary fees.
If they sign an NHL contract before they are 22 then they forfeit the scholarship, which is the same thing that would happen to a D1 player who signed an NHL contract.
Players must begin University within 18 months after their final year in the WHL. 18 months later, (most players would be 22) if they have not yet started University then they forfeit the scholarship. I suppose if you were 22 and hadn't yet began at a D1 school there is likely no scholarship coming either. This gives the player one full season to try pro hockey.
The reality is, a good percentage of WHL players have their NHL contracts in hand before they are 22 and most that don't probably weren't getting D1 offers anyways, so the WHL scholarship is an amazing bonus for those players after a WHL career, which has it's own rewards of course.
WHL detractors often try and find some devil in those details, but it's really pretty simple.
Here's a real life look at a real WHL team on which every single player has now passed the deadline for using a scholarship. The 2007-08 Brandon Wheat Kings were an average team who lost in the first round of the playoffs. The youngest players on that team will turn 23 this year. There were 22 players on their playoff roster that season - here's how they turned out ... so far ...
WENT FROM WHL TO PRO - NO UNIVERSITY
Brayden Schenn C 5 year pro AHL/NHL - current team Philadelphia Flyers (NHL)
Keith Aulie D 5 yr pro AHL/NHL - current team Tampa Bay Lightning (NHL)
Matt Calvert LW 4 yr pro AHL/NHL - current team Columbus Blue Jackets (NHL)
Colby Robak D 4 yr pro AHL/NHL - current team Florida Panthers (NHL)
Scott Glennie C 4 yr pro AHL/NHL - current team Texas Stars (AHL)
Daryl Boyle D 7 yr pro AHL/DEL - current team Augsburg Panthers (DEL)
Obviously these 6 forfeited their scholarships. Not sure what the average salary of these high school graduates is, but I'm pretty sure it's a lot more than the average salary of an average guy with a bachelor degree.
UNIVERSITY GRADS - AND PLAYED SOME PRO
Daniel Bartek C 4 yr Dalhousie University + hockey - GRADUATED
Theran Yeo D 3 yr U of BC / U of Regina - GRADUATED
Chad Erb D 3 yr U of Manitoba - GRADUATED
Andrew Clark LW 4 yr degree and hockey at Acadia U and then 2 yr pro ECHL/AHL - current team Bridgeport Sound Tigers
Matt Lowry C 1 yr AHL then completed his degree at U of Manitoba (2 1/2 years) and now back in the ECHL - current team Evansville Icemen
These 5 have all graduated from University through the WHL scholarship. Lowry even played a year of AHL before finishing his University degree. Also worth noting that neither Lowry or Clark "abandoned the dream" just because they graduated University. Both are still playing professional hockey with a degree in pocket. Lowry in the ECHL and Clark in the AHL.
CURRENTLY IN UNIVERSITY
Tyler Dittmer LW 1 yr pro in German League then 5 yr degree at U of Manitoba - current team U of Manitoba
Cale Jefferies LW 5 yr U. of Guelph - current team U. of Guelph
Del Cowan LW 4 yr U of Manitoba - current team U of Manitoba
Joe Caligiuri G 3 yr U of Manitoba - current team U of Manitoba
Sanfred King RW 3 yr U of Regina - current team U of Regina
Andrew Hayes G 3 yr U of Regina - current team U of Regina
Nathan Green C 2 yr U of Manitoba - current team U of Manitoba
Brodie Melnychuk D 2 yr U of Manitoba - current team U of Manitoba
These 8, bring to 13 the number of players on that 22 man roster that attended University through the WHL scholarship. Three of these guys graduate this year while the other 5 continue on. All 13 players played college hockey while getting their degrees.
??????
Jay Fehr C 1 yr pro in Germany - 1 yr at Acadia U
Matthew McCue D 2 yr pro ECHL/CHL/AHL since 2011 ???
Jordan Hale LW ??? life after the WHL ???
Jay Fehr was a good junior hockey player. Cousin of Eric Fehr of the Washington Capitals. He attended 1 year of University and decided to try his hand in Europe. He returned home to play senior hockey for his hometown, where he still plays. McCue was a fighter who played 2 years of minor pro and packed er in. Jordan Hale was a serviceable scrapper for 3 years in junior but didn't develop enough to get a roster spot as an older player and was sent back to junior A. He was eligible for 3 years of university but never cashed it in.
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