Behind The Net: An SB Nation Community

Navigation: Jump to content areas:


Pro Quality. Fan Perspective.
Login-facebook
New Blog: Along The Olentangy for Ohio State Fans!

Checking Back in with the USHL


Two years ago, I looked at how the USHL had gone from producing an insignificant number of NHL players to accounting for almost 10% of the pros in less than a decade.  Forget the 'Miracle on Ice' - the growth of the USHL is the most significant success story in the history of American hockey.

 I thought I'd take another look at how the USHL is doing and whether it has continued to produce NHL players at such a high rate.  The pertinent plots are after the jump...

Star-divide

First, has the USHL continued its seemingly inexorably path to filling the entire NHL with its player?  Sure looks that way to me:

Ushl2_medium

What about the USHL's role as the primary feeder league for NCAA D-I college hockey?  Still on the same path - the percentage of USHL players making the jump to the NCAA has been increasing (the blip this season is because we're only 30% of the way through the NCAA season and not every player has made his debut).  The percentage of NCAA players who've played in the USHL has also continued to increase:

Ushl1_medium

None of this should be in any way surprising - the caliber of USHL players increased dramatically from 1990-2000, and now the sheer number of quality hockey players in the USHL continues to increase.

Ushl3_medium

We don't yet see players jumping directly from the USHL to the NHL like we do with Canadian junior leagues, but by age 21, it's difficult to argue with the results: on a per-team basis, the 12-team USHL produces as many NHL players as the 60-team CHL.  Canada has achieved hockey saturation, so the number of players going from AAA Midget or Tier II Junior to the CHL and on to the NHL is unlikely to increase in the near future.  The USHL, on the other hand, continues to expand its reach as previously-untapped areas of the country like California grow their youth hockey programs.

0 recs  |  Comment 5 comments |

Story-email Email Printer Print

Comments

Display:

I saw a couple USHL games in person last year and was impressed with the quality of play. There is a mix of players heading to the NCAA (already declared which schools they are headed to), some already NHL drafted players and some undrafted players. Overall, the skill-set is pretty high and the style seems to mirror the CHL style of play as opposed to the NCAA.

More players from places like California (as you mentioned) and even Canada (USHL doesn’t pay its players so they maintain NCAA eligibility unlike CHL) than some would think.

Where every team is the home team

by IllegalCurve on Dec 9, 2009 11:06 AM EST reply actions  

This rise in USHL prospects seems to be coming just in time, given the recent problems with the Russians.

SNN Sports - A theoretical Oilers blog (i.e. theoretically, I write stuff there). Link now 100% less broken.

by Doogie2K on Dec 9, 2009 1:07 PM EST reply actions  

They actually might be linked. The less Russians, the more USHL players.

In general, I think European proportion of NHL talent peaked around the year 2000, IIRC.

Considering the USHL is still considered a Tier II league, not a major junior league, it would likely take a very special player to make the jump directly from the USHL to the NHL.

Hockey blogging can't get any flatter.

by saskhab on Dec 9, 2009 3:02 PM EST up reply actions  

There are definitely players who can make the jump, but they tend to realize that at age 17 and spend a year in Tier I junior before the draft. If you go to the USHL, you have to want to play college hockey.

by Hawerchuk on Dec 9, 2009 4:10 PM EST up reply actions  

Who'd A Thunk It?!

Thanks for your work. I think this is the best kept secret in North American hockey!

Guy at HockeyBias dot com

by guy@hockeybias on Dec 16, 2009 10:23 PM EST reply actions  

Comments For This Post Are Closed


User Tools

Hockey Analysis and Statistics
Start posting on Behind The Net »

Join SB Nation and dive into communities focused on all your favorite teams.

Connect_with_facebook

FanPosts

Community blog posts and discussion.

Recent FanPosts

Pens_ring_small
Why The Kovalchuk Contract Is Unique
Ryan_small
Koivu's contract compared to Plekanec & Backstrom
Dsc_0572_small
Wimbledon Black Swan
Pens_ring_small
Individual PDO Numbers

+ New FanPost All FanPosts >

SBNation.com Recent Stories

PHILADELPHIA - MAY 16:  A fan of the Philadelphia Flyers holds up a sign reading "Next Goalie" behind goalie Carey Price #32 of the Montreal Canadiens in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals during the 2010 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs at Wachovia Center on May 16, 2010 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

Habs Finally Lock Up Carey Price, Sign Goalie To Two-Year Deal

National Hockey League commissioner Gary Bettman answers questions during a pre-game media availability before the Pittsburgh Penguins season opener against the New York Rangers in a NHL hockey game in Pittsburgh, Friday, Oct. 2, 2009. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar) +25 updates

Ultimatum? NHL Reportedly Threatens To Toss Out Kovalchuk, Luongo Deals Without NHLPA Concessions

Photo +1 updates

Report: Donald Fehr Hands NHLPA List Of Conditions On Becoming Union Leader

More from SBNation.com >


Managers

Hawerchuk_small Hawerchuk