Recruits 2026 and Beyond

Started by BearLover, June 05, 2025, 01:34:48 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

chimpfood

Quote from: BearLover on May 12, 2026, 12:32:46 PMNo surprise, but Alex Pelletier named USHL Player of the Year: https://ushl.com/news/2026/4/20/mens-ice-hockey-alex-pelletier-named-ushl-player-of-the-year.aspx

Some credit should go to the Cornell coaching staff, as Pelletier never could have won USHL PotY had the coaches brought him in last year.


this is kinda the exact reason you send him back to be fair. If we brought him in he would've been standing at the top of section D most games and now he gets to shoot 7 shots per game and put up 85 points in a season.

BearLover

Quote from: chimpfood on May 12, 2026, 05:57:34 PM
Quote from: BearLover on May 12, 2026, 12:32:46 PMNo surprise, but Alex Pelletier named USHL Player of the Year: https://ushl.com/news/2026/4/20/mens-ice-hockey-alex-pelletier-named-ushl-player-of-the-year.aspx

Some credit should go to the Cornell coaching staff, as Pelletier never could have won USHL PotY had the coaches brought him in last year.


this is kinda the exact reason you send him back to be fair. If we brought him in he would've been standing at the top of section D most games and now he gets to shoot 7 shots per game and put up 85 points in a season.
I find it very unlikely he would run away with the USHL goals and points lead but not be able to crack the Cornell lineup.

chimpfood

Quote from: BearLover on May 12, 2026, 06:17:14 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on May 12, 2026, 05:57:34 PM
Quote from: BearLover on May 12, 2026, 12:32:46 PMNo surprise, but Alex Pelletier named USHL Player of the Year: https://ushl.com/news/2026/4/20/mens-ice-hockey-alex-pelletier-named-ushl-player-of-the-year.aspx

Some credit should go to the Cornell coaching staff, as Pelletier never could have won USHL PotY had the coaches brought him in last year.


this is kinda the exact reason you send him back to be fair. If we brought him in he would've been standing at the top of section D most games and now he gets to shoot 7 shots per game and put up 85 points in a season.
I find it very unlikely he would run away with the USHL goals and points lead but not be able to crack the Cornell lineup.
Who knows man. Sean Donaldson lit the world on fire in juniors and never got much playing time. I still wouldn't be surprised if Pelletier never becomes very close to a point per game player in college. His production was really impressive this year but he takes a ridiculous amount of shots that he's not gonna get now that he's on a team with Letourneau, Hemming, etc.

pfibiger

Quote from: pfibiger on April 20, 2026, 10:29:12 AM
Quote from: ursusminor on April 20, 2026, 01:13:13 AM
Quote from: BearLover on April 19, 2026, 09:58:29 PM
Quote from: adamw on April 19, 2026, 09:21:28 PM
Quote from: ursusminor on April 19, 2026, 12:32:46 PMI wonder now if it is true because it has been a while. It might have been that we lost him to Cornell, but Cornell didn't get him either. It could however be that it takes a while for him to get through Cornell admissions. He has not appeared on anyone else's list either. Since he was born in 2005, if he is an actual recruit he would be going to Ithaca this fall.

What could all the possible reasons be why this has not come out yet?
The kid doesn't have an instagram
He does have one.
Looking at OHL '05s that have good numbers and a family connection that would make ursusminor think they're unlikely to commit to RPI I was wondering if it's Brad Gardiner (Barrie) -- drafted in the 3rd by Dallas, father Bruce was a captain at Colgate.

Nailed it.

Phil Fibiger '01
http://www.fibiger.org

chimpfood

21 year old 2023 third round draft pick. 65 points in 67 games, 56% on faceoffs. Big pickup, especially with him being a center

BearLover

Quote from: chimpfood on May 13, 2026, 12:05:17 AM
Quote from: BearLover on May 12, 2026, 06:17:14 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on May 12, 2026, 05:57:34 PM
Quote from: BearLover on May 12, 2026, 12:32:46 PMNo surprise, but Alex Pelletier named USHL Player of the Year: https://ushl.com/news/2026/4/20/mens-ice-hockey-alex-pelletier-named-ushl-player-of-the-year.aspx

Some credit should go to the Cornell coaching staff, as Pelletier never could have won USHL PotY had the coaches brought him in last year.


this is kinda the exact reason you send him back to be fair. If we brought him in he would've been standing at the top of section D most games and now he gets to shoot 7 shots per game and put up 85 points in a season.
I find it very unlikely he would run away with the USHL goals and points lead but not be able to crack the Cornell lineup.
Who knows man. Sean Donaldson lit the world on fire in juniors and never got much playing time. I still wouldn't be surprised if Pelletier never becomes very close to a point per game player in college. His production was really impressive this year but he takes a ridiculous amount of shots that he's not gonna get now that he's on a team with Letourneau, Hemming, etc.
I certainly don't expect Pelletier to win the Hobey. But I think it's also highly likely the coaching staff didn't realize what they had in Pelletier. Running away with the USHL lead in points and goals is extremely hard to do. For reference, this fall we're bringing in multiple players who are the same age as Pelletier but produced about half as many points.

BearLover

Quote from: chimpfood on May 14, 2026, 10:16:06 AM21 year old 2023 third round draft pick. 65 points in 67 games, 56% on faceoffs. Big pickup, especially with him being a center
Aren't there now like 33 players and 20 forwards on the roster next year?

Interesting pickup though, he didn't really pan out after he was taken in the third round but seems to have followed in (long ago third round pick) Fisher's footsteps and gone the route of good education + good hockey. Projects to be a solid contributor. Teammate of Cole Emerton.

ursusminor

Close to a month since I hinted about Gardiner who was also being recruited by RPI, but lost him to Cornell. Almost certainly the reason it took so long to make the annoucement was that his team was still playing until two days ago. I don't see why announcing where a player will be the next season, especially an overager, is a distraction during the playoffs, but he isn't the only one who waited until after his team was eliminated.

Gardiner assisted on both Barrie goals in their final game. See the embedded video in the boxscore. https://chl.ca/ohl/gamecentre/28988/

stereax

Question: post-secondary school implies college.

Will he come in as a sophomore? Or, what I consider to be way more likely, will they not transfer his credits in to preserve eligibility?

Fun fact: when I was looking up Gardiner, I pulled up some of the '23 combine results. Among them, Castagna. So that gives you a little bit of perspective.
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

chimpfood

Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 01:55:19 PMQuestion: post-secondary school implies college.

Will he come in as a sophomore? Or, what I consider to be way more likely, will they not transfer his credits in to preserve eligibility?

Fun fact: when I was looking up Gardiner, I pulled up some of the '23 combine results. Among them, Castagna. So that gives you a little bit of perspective.

"Throughout the season, Gardiner posted a 90% academic average through American Public University"

Good catch. Coming in as a 21 year old probably just makes sense to start him as a sophomore if they can, seems unlikely he stays all 4 if things go well.

stereax

Quote from: chimpfood on May 14, 2026, 02:00:34 PM
Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 01:55:19 PMQuestion: post-secondary school implies college.

Will he come in as a sophomore? Or, what I consider to be way more likely, will they not transfer his credits in to preserve eligibility?

Fun fact: when I was looking up Gardiner, I pulled up some of the '23 combine results. Among them, Castagna. So that gives you a little bit of perspective.

"Throughout the season, Gardiner posted a 90% academic average through American Public University"

Good catch. Coming in as a 21 year old probably just makes sense to start him as a sophomore if they can, seems unlikely he stays all 4 if things go well.
I have literally never heard of that before.

It's an online education thing - looks like their billing is affordable, flexible degrees. Not sure if Cornell would even accept that transfer credit tbh...
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

BearLover

Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 02:05:46 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on May 14, 2026, 02:00:34 PM
Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 01:55:19 PMQuestion: post-secondary school implies college.

Will he come in as a sophomore? Or, what I consider to be way more likely, will they not transfer his credits in to preserve eligibility?

Fun fact: when I was looking up Gardiner, I pulled up some of the '23 combine results. Among them, Castagna. So that gives you a little bit of perspective.

"Throughout the season, Gardiner posted a 90% academic average through American Public University"

Good catch. Coming in as a 21 year old probably just makes sense to start him as a sophomore if they can, seems unlikely he stays all 4 if things go well.
I have literally never heard of that before.

It's an online education thing - looks like their billing is affordable, flexible degrees. Not sure if Cornell would even accept that transfer credit tbh...
I have never heard of it either. Maybe he did it to become college eligible or something? I doubt he comes in as a sophomore, or that he doesn't plan to stay 4 years. I mean, sure, if he blows up and has pro teams after him, then he might leave early, but given he was drafted 3 years ago and the Stars didn't offer him a contract, I think he is making the smart decision to get a great degree and play high level college hockey.

tretiak

Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 02:05:46 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on May 14, 2026, 02:00:34 PM
Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 01:55:19 PMQuestion: post-secondary school implies college.

Will he come in as a sophomore? Or, what I consider to be way more likely, will they not transfer his credits in to preserve eligibility?

Fun fact: when I was looking up Gardiner, I pulled up some of the '23 combine results. Among them, Castagna. So that gives you a little bit of perspective.

"Throughout the season, Gardiner posted a 90% academic average through American Public University"

Good catch. Coming in as a 21 year old probably just makes sense to start him as a sophomore if they can, seems unlikely he stays all 4 if things go well.
I have literally never heard of that before.

It's an online education thing - looks like their billing is affordable, flexible degrees. Not sure if Cornell would even accept that transfer credit tbh...

этот самый лучший университет в мире

stereax

Quote from: BearLover on May 14, 2026, 03:32:02 PM
Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 02:05:46 PM
Quote from: chimpfood on May 14, 2026, 02:00:34 PM
Quote from: stereax on May 14, 2026, 01:55:19 PMQuestion: post-secondary school implies college.

Will he come in as a sophomore? Or, what I consider to be way more likely, will they not transfer his credits in to preserve eligibility?

Fun fact: when I was looking up Gardiner, I pulled up some of the '23 combine results. Among them, Castagna. So that gives you a little bit of perspective.

"Throughout the season, Gardiner posted a 90% academic average through American Public University"

Good catch. Coming in as a 21 year old probably just makes sense to start him as a sophomore if they can, seems unlikely he stays all 4 if things go well.
I have literally never heard of that before.

It's an online education thing - looks like their billing is affordable, flexible degrees. Not sure if Cornell would even accept that transfer credit tbh...
I have never heard of it either. Maybe he did it to become college eligible or something? I doubt he comes in as a sophomore, or that he doesn't plan to stay 4 years. I mean, sure, if he blows up and has pro teams after him, then he might leave early, but given he was drafted 3 years ago and the Stars didn't offer him a contract, I think he is making the smart decision to get a great degree and play high level college hockey.
Yeah, agreed upon poking around a little. (If it were somewhere "more reputable" like, say, Zayne Parekh taking classes at U of Toronto, that's one thing, but this is probably more "preparing him for Cornell", lol.) Theoretically, though, if 5 in 5 passes the way we think it will, if Gardiner came in as a sophomore, could he play a grad year somewhere else? Or is my math messed up?
Law '27, Section C denizen, liveblogging from Lynah!

pjd8

American Public University is accredited, so he can probably transfer credits in. My employer offers free tuition through APU, and a coworker of mine got her masters in analytics. It was a legitimate program, not one of those diploma mills where you can get a bachelor's degree in as little as eight weeks (yes, that has happened).