Recruits 2023 and beyond
scoop85
Charlie Major, a 17-year-old forward from up the road in Skaneateles, committed to the Big Red today.
He was born in Skaneateles, but apparently attends Bishop Kearny HS in Irondequoit, north of Rochester.
.
"Asshole!" (points to opponent)
Al DeFlorio
Here's one well "beyond:" [youtu.be]
It's amazing how many who have commented on that video in the last few weeks obviously did not bother to check on where Wahlstrom is now. He probably won't become a superstar in the NHL, but he should stick around for a decade or so. He might have have become an All American in the NCAA had he not been one-and-done at BC.
CAS
Some of our recruits are putting up big numbers in junior hockey. Dalton Bancroft is leading the OJHL in points/game. Sean Donaldson is leading the BCHL in goals scored. Nick DeSantis is averaging a pt/game in the USHL. Think all 3 of these recruits are coming in the fall.
They’ll all be 20 or 21 when they arrive in Ithaca, so they should be able to contribute right away at the college level.
Liam Steele — 83
George Fegaras — 91
Marian Mosko — 164
Luke Devlin —- 202
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ugarte
i love our current frosh class tbh so if we really build back after The Lost Team so quickly I will be so goddamn happy
The four scoop85 mentions are slated for 2023; the three CAS mentions, 2022. Although Heisenberg says Devlin may enroll for 2022. So, we may have to wait a bit longer.
Swampy
ugarte
i love our current frosh class tbh so if we really build back after The Lost Team so quickly I will be so goddamn happy
The four scoop85 mentions are slated for 2023; the three CAS mentions, 2022. Although Heisenberg says Devlin may enroll for 2022. So, we may have to wait a bit longer.
Three of the 2023 commits who are on the NHL mid-season rankings are defensemen, so our future on the blueline looks strong. And while the 3 forwards CAS mentioned who are coming next fall are unlikely to be drafted based on their age, their stellar production at the Junior A level indicates that all have the makings to be highly productive college forwards.
[www.collegehockeynews.com]Coach Schafer, quoted by Adam Woden, talking about Ian Shane but clearly applicable in general
True hockey sense in all situations is the hardest thing to know about a player. You don't really know what you have until you see him (in college games). I didn't know the true extent. You try to understand it by watching video, but in recruiting you get fooled — some kids show more hockey sense, or some have a lot less than you thought.
David Harding
[www.collegehockeynews.com]Coach Schafer, quoted by Adam Woden, talking about Ian Shane but clearly applicable in general
True hockey sense in all situations is the hardest thing to know about a player. You don't really know what you have until you see him (in college games). I didn't know the true extent. You try to understand it by watching video, but in recruiting you get fooled — some kids show more hockey sense, or some have a lot less than you thought.
I think the above quote is actually referring to Psenicka. Schafer did have something similar to say about Shane, though:
CHN article
"The other guys looked more consistent in practice (to start the season), but practice is a weird animal," Schafer said. "His game was getting sharper, but we were winning with those other guys. ... But when we went down 3-0 at Arizona State, I'd seen the other guys and hadn't seen (Shane) in a game situation. We threw him in there and just like any other athlete, he capitalized. We're fortunate in facing adveristy that we found out somehting about him.
You're right.Weder
I think the above quote is actually referring to Psenicka. Schafer did have something similar to say about Shane, though:
Are we sure those guys are really here yet, or have they been pushed back a year?
Trotsky
I was surprised by this last night: Cornell skated one player short despite being at home and having two unused freshmen listed on the roster: Jimmy Rayhill (D) and Dan McIntyre (F).
Are we sure those guys are really here yet, or have they been pushed back a year?
They’re both on the roster
Trotsky
I was surprised by this last night: Cornell skated one player short despite being at home and having two unused freshmen listed on the roster: Jimmy Rayhill (D) and Dan McIntyre (F).
Are we sure those guys are really here yet, or have they been pushed back a year?
How is 12 forwards, 7 defensemen and 3 goalies "one player short"?
ACM
Trotsky
I was surprised by this last night: Cornell skated one player short despite being at home and having two unused freshmen listed on the roster: Jimmy Rayhill (D) and Dan McIntyre (F).
Are we sure those guys are really here yet, or have they been pushed back a year?
How is 12 forwards, 7 defensemen and 3 goalies "one player short"?
It's not. Saturday lines I saw had 18, not 19.
We lost Ertel and Lagerstrom and gained Muzyka and... who?
Edit: Motley. Huh.
OK, good. (I mean, maybe not good if our two frosh were not good enough to jump over Muzyka who seemed to be given a nice reward for his years of blooming in the desert and wasting his sweetness on the desert air.)
arugula
Don’t know about Rayhill but can report that McIntyre is alive and well on north campus. My first year daughter met him. Aside from ability issues, the fact that he’s in AAP may be an issue preventing him from getting in the lineup. In my day, the one architect on the team supposedly missed too many practices to get in games, though he was good when given a chance. More importantly, now a successful architect.
I once ran into an architecture student around midnight freshman year who was getting lunch somewhere. Lunch.
don't know if they still do it but they used to have "going away" parties for frosh architects on the last day of orientation week.Dafatone
arugula
Don’t know about Rayhill but can report that McIntyre is alive and well on north campus. My first year daughter met him. Aside from ability issues, the fact that he’s in AAP may be an issue preventing him from getting in the lineup. In my day, the one architect on the team supposedly missed too many practices to get in games, though he was good when given a chance. More importantly, now a successful architect.
I once ran into an architecture student around midnight freshman year who was getting lunch somewhere. Lunch.
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ugarte
don't know if they still do it but they used to have "going away" parties for frosh architects on the last day of orientation week.Dafatone
I once ran into an architecture student around midnight freshman year who was getting lunch somewhere. Lunch.arugula
Don’t know about Rayhill but can report that McIntyre is alive and well on north campus. My first year daughter met him. Aside from ability issues, the fact that he’s in AAP may be an issue preventing him from getting in the lineup. In my day, the one architect on the team supposedly missed too many practices to get in games, though he was good when given a chance. More importantly, now a successful architect.
Frank Lloyd Wright
'A doctor can bury his mistakes, but an architect can only advise his clients to plant vines.'
Also Webb Nichols, 60 years ago...a different era of Cornell hockey.ACM
Mitch Gillam was in AA&P, and he didn't have any trouble breaking into the lineup.
Al DeFlorio '65
Was pretty sure I knew what this was going to be before looking.
Thanks!
Iceberg
IIRC Gillam was in Urban and Regional Studies. I would imagine it's a bit harder for an Architecture student to do any athletics given the academic demands and emphasis on studio time (not to mention other things such as the semester in Rome). For whatever reason, McIntyre's player profile only shows the college (AAP) and not the major, but I'd be surprised if he were in Architecture given what I know about the program and having known quite a few of those students when I was at Cornell.
When Webb Nichols ‘63, played, there were only two UG programs, Architecture and Fine Arts, in what was then the College of Architecture. In the late 60s, the college was renamed Architecture, Art and Planning, to reflect the growing prominence of the graduate planning program and fine arts. I started out in Architecture before transferring to Arts and Sciences, so I can attest to how time consuming the program was and, I assume, still is. UG programs in Urban and Regional Studies and Real Estate were added much, much later.
BTW, basketball star, the late Steve Cram ‘66, was an architecture major.
.
Brings back many memories including: All those years the video guy was a little slow to pan with the puck.
Webb still working here in the Boston area.George64
Iceberg
IIRC Gillam was in Urban and Regional Studies. I would imagine it's a bit harder for an Architecture student to do any athletics given the academic demands and emphasis on studio time (not to mention other things such as the semester in Rome). For whatever reason, McIntyre's player profile only shows the college (AAP) and not the major, but I'd be surprised if he were in Architecture given what I know about the program and having known quite a few of those students when I was at Cornell.
When Webb Nichols ‘63, played, there were only two UG programs, Architecture and Fine Arts, in what was then the College of Architecture. In the late 60s, the college was renamed Architecture, Art and Planning, to reflect the growing prominence of the graduate planning program and fine arts. I started out in Architecture before transferring to Arts and Sciences, so I can attest to how time consuming the program was and, I assume, still is. UG programs in Urban and Regional Studies and Real Estate were added much, much later.
BTW, basketball star, the late Steve Cram ‘66, was an architecture major.
.
Al DeFlorio '65
CU2007
I didn’t meet a single architecture student my entire time at Cornell.
You apparently never wandered into Sibley Hall after midnight on the eve of a project submission. Back in 1960, the freshman architecture class had 60 students, out of, I think, about 1300 freshmen.
.
George64
CU2007
I didn’t meet a single architecture student my entire time at Cornell.
You apparently never wandered into Sibley Hall after midnight on the eve of a project submission. Back in 1960, the freshman architecture class had 60 students, out of, I think, about 1300 freshmen.
.
Rand Hall after midnight, 1980's before the rot set in. Quite a place.
Yes, per the alumni directory.Rockey
If memory serves Keith Howie class of 1987 was an architect.
insanely cool to be able to be an architect and stay in hockey his whole lifeACM
More on Keith Howie.
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My son plays on the same team. Charlie is a great player. Excellent hockey sense. Consistent scorer.George64
scoop85
Charlie Major, a 17-year-old forward from up the road in Skaneateles, committed to the Big Red today.
He was born in Skaneateles, but apparently attends Bishop Kearny HS in Irondequoit, north of Rochester.
.
CAS
Some of our recruits are putting up big numbers in junior hockey. Dalton Bancroft is leading the OJHL in points/game. Sean Donaldson is leading the BCHL in goals scored. Nick DeSantis is averaging a pt/game in the USHL. Think all 3 of these recruits are coming in the fall.
Update:
- Bancroft is #2 in the OJHL: 2 pts behind the leader, but he has played 3 fewer games.
- Donaldson is 4th in BCHL goals, but he’s played 5 & 6 fewer games than the #2 & #3. He’s 6th in points, but then again, all but the #1 (Matthew Wood, a UConn commit) have played many more games.
- DeSantis has cooled off a bit: down to 0,84 pts/game and ranking 32 among USHL scoring leaders.
Redpucks1!
New Cornell commit! Winter Wallace of the Youngstown Phantoms. Big right winger (6’3” 215) who was previously committed to Michigan State. I assume he is coming in this fall.
Huge, nice
Redpucks1!
New Cornell commit! Winter Wallace of the Youngstown Phantoms. Big right winger (6’3” 215) who was previously committed to Michigan State. I assume he is coming in this fall.
What a name.
Dafatone
Redpucks1!
New Cornell commit! Winter Wallace of the Youngstown Phantoms. Big right winger (6’3” 215) who was previously committed to Michigan State. I assume he is coming in this fall.
What a name.
FREEDOM!!!!!
Dafatone
Redpucks1!
New Cornell commit! Winter Wallace of the Youngstown Phantoms. Big right winger (6’3” 215) who was previously committed to Michigan State. I assume he is coming in this fall.
What a name.
At that size, I think it's safe to assume he's not a Snowflake......
Trotsky
Winter is coming.
+1
RatushnyFan
You've got the right team and the right kid. My son is a great hockey player. Ironically he is seeing some interest from two other ECAC teams but no commitments yet. He'll be playing juniors next year, not 100% sure yet. Cornell would definitely be on the wish list but we haven't heard from them. Dan Ratushny was my favorite player by far. My son has a similar game. Good offensive defenseman, big and hits hard.
I hope the Cornell coaches show some love for one of our own!
P.S. My wife/his mom is a Cornell grad too
RatushnyFan
It's all good. To be honest, it is so competitive, it's mostly about finding the right fit. All of these kids, including mine, have been skating since they were 2 and on the ice 200+ times a year since they were 7 or 8. Coaches are looking for specific needs. If Cornell already has a couple of 6'3" 200 pound defenseman already on the roster who they would rank ahead of my son, they move on and fill a different need. As a grad my heart tugs for Cornell but as a father I'd be elated for any ECAC outcome where he is happy and there's a good fit.
P.S. My wife/his mom is a Cornell grad too
I get you. Like Ethan Manderville, my son is at Colgate (not a D1 athlete), and frankly it's a better fit for him than Cornell would've been. My daughter is Cornell class of 2017, and Cornell was a perfect school for her. As you said, fit is the key thing.
RatushnyFan
You've got the right team and the right kid. My son is a great hockey player. Ironically he is seeing some interest from two other ECAC teams but no commitments yet. He'll be playing juniors next year, not 100% sure yet. Cornell would definitely be on the wish list but we haven't heard from them. Dan Ratushny was my favorite player by far. My son has a similar game. Good offensive defenseman, big and hits hard.
This may be a stupid question, but have you contacted Cornell's coaching staff? IIRC, a few years ago I was at a dinner where Mike S. was the guest speaker. Another alum asked about letting him know of good talent, and Mike said, "Sure, we're always looking."
Then again, my son went to BU. Cornell would not have been a good fit, and neither would general admission at BU most likely. But BU has a "College of General Studies," which is for kids who can succeed there but need more structure acclimating and getting through lower-division courses. My son could have gotten free tuition elsewhere, but BU's introduction to CGS convinced us that this was exactly what he needed. We're not sorry, even though we paid the big bucks. As scoop85 said, fit is everything.
RatushnyFan
Thank you all. Score update: BK 10, Midstate Syracuse 0 in the 3rd period of the NY state tourney.
"Midstate Syracuse is an embarrassment to Syracuse hockey, and Syracuse hockey sucks!"
BearLover
Cornell recruits looking promising. I’ll do a longer write-up when I have time. One thing that’s clear: next year’s freshman class will be headlined by 20- and 21-year-olds who put up good numbers in junior hockey. The following year’s class may instead be headlined by 18- and 19-year-old draft picks without as much junior hockey experience.
My vaguely hot take is that draft picks are overrated for college hockey.
a lot of cornell hockey draft picks from 14-20 certainly have been underwhelmingDafatone
BearLover
Cornell recruits looking promising. I’ll do a longer write-up when I have time. One thing that’s clear: next year’s freshman class will be headlined by 20- and 21-year-olds who put up good numbers in junior hockey. The following year’s class may instead be headlined by 18- and 19-year-old draft picks without as much junior hockey experience.
My vaguely hot take is that draft picks are overrated for college hockey.
Draft picks aren’t everything. But they aren’t nothing, either. Would you rather have stronger, more experienced 21-y/os, or leaner, more raw 18-y/os with a ton of talent and potential? It depends how well your program develops players and how long you can get the players to stay. Also, to secure the commitment of a draft pick, you need to recruit such a player at a very young age—which leaves more margin for error than recruiting an older player who has already developed. Despite this, draft picks remain a strong proxy for talent, both within the Cornell program (many of our best players over history were draft picks) and also when comparing programs against each other. Here are the number of drafts picks among the top 10 pairwise teams this season:Dafatone
BearLover
Cornell recruits looking promising. I’ll do a longer write-up when I have time. One thing that’s clear: next year’s freshman class will be headlined by 20- and 21-year-olds who put up good numbers in junior hockey. The following year’s class may instead be headlined by 18- and 19-year-old draft picks without as much junior hockey experience.
My vaguely hot take is that draft picks are overrated for college hockey.
Michigan—13 including 7 first rounders
Minnesota State—4
Western Michigan—2
Denver—12
Minnesota-Duluth—7
Minnesota—15
NoDak—9
Q—2
Notre Dame—9
St. Cloud—5
Average draft picks on top 10 teams: 7.8
We have some promising recruits in the pipeline. Disclaimer: Don’t quote me on their positions beyond F/D/G, as they are not always listed online consistently.
First up are the most enticing players who should be matriculating next fall (in order of how recently they committed). They are on the older side but have produced in their respective leagues.
Winter Wallace (C/RW)—turned 20 in January; 6’3, 214 lbs; 14-16-30 in 47 games this year in the USHL. Power forward who may help shore up our netfront issues.
Nick DeSantis (C)—will turn 20 in May; 5’9, 152 lbs; 14-26-40 in 51 games in the USHL. Small forward who has produced in the tight-checking USHL.
Sean Donaldson (LW)—will turn 21 this month; 5’11, 180lbs; 36-34-70 in 46 games in the BCHL. Blossomed into a dominant BCHL scorer after not putting up big numbers in the USHL last season.
Dalton Bahncroft (RW)—turned 21 in February; 6’2, 188; 33-53-86 in 48 games in the OJHL. While the OJHL is a weaker league than the USHL or BCHL, Bahncroft is first in the entire league in points per game.
Remington Koeppel (G)—turned 20 this month; 6’2, 188 lbs; .892 sv% in 30 games in the USHL this season; .900 in 25 games last season. While Koeppel’s numbers aren’t fantastic this season, they’re actually better than Shane’s and Howe’s numbers were in the USHL, the toughest junior league. The starting goalie competition next season should be anyone’s game.
Next are the most promising players likely to arrive in 2023-2024. They are basically the opposite of next year’s arrivals: rather than undrafted older recruits, these players are likely to matriculate at 18 or 19 years old and several of them will probably be drafted.
Rather than list their numbers (since most are not in junior hockey yet) or size (since they may still be growing), I will add other relevant notes (in reverse order of how recently they committed):
Marian Mosko (LD)—turns 18 in May; ranked #164 by NHL Central Scouting; drafted by the USHL. Possible late-round pick who will likely play a year in the USHL before matriculating.
George Fegaras (RD)—turns 18 in April; 13-33-46 in 51 games in the OJHL; ranked #91 by NHL Central Scouting; drafted by the USHL. Possible mid-round draft pick who, like Mosko, may play one year in the USHL before coming. The fact he has produced in junior hockey as a defenseman at such a young age bodes well.
Tyler Catalano (C/RW)—just turned 18 at the end of February but already 6’4 and 216 lbs. 1-9-10 in 45 USHL games but still very young. Very likely will spend one more year in the USHL before matriculating.
Ben Robertson (LD)—doesn’t turn 18 until September but already playing in the USHL, putting up 2-10-12 in 44 games as a defenseman. Nearly all of his points have come since his midseason trade to Waterloo.
Liam Steele (D)—turns 18 in April but already 6’4 216 lbs. Ranked #83 by NHL Central Scouting. Possible mid-round draft pick currently in Canadian prep school and committed to the BCHL for next season.
Tyler Wishart (C/RW)—turns 18 in April. Recruited by BU, UNH, and Quinnipiac, Wishart has put up big numbers in prep school at Kimball Union. Drafted by the USHL, he’ll probably play in Lincoln at least one year before matriculating.
Luke Devlin (C)—turned 18 this month; already 6’3 (and 187 lbs). Ranked #202 by NHL Central Scouting. Possible late-round draft pick and yet another St. Andrews product (Barron, Stienburg, Ertel). I would guess he will play one year of junior hockey next season before matriculating.
Other commits include Charlie Major, Jack O’Brien, Aiden Cobb, and Shaun Mahoney. These players either haven’t put up the same numbers or there isn’t much information available on them.
2023 Tampa 2024 St. Paul 2025 St. Louis 2026 Las Vegas
BearLover
(Here is a more in-depth post on our recruits.)
We have some promising recruits in the pipeline. Disclaimer: Don’t quote me on their positions beyond F/D/G, as they are not always listed online consistently.
First up are the most enticing players who should be matriculating next fall (in order of how recently they committed). They are on the older side but have produced in their respective leagues.
Winter Wallace (C/RW)—turned 20 in January; 6’3, 214 lbs; 14-16-30 in 47 games this year in the USHL. Power forward who may help shore up our netfront issues.
Nick DeSantis (C)—will turn 20 in May; 5’9, 152 lbs; 14-26-40 in 51 games in the USHL. Small forward who has produced in the tight-checking USHL.
Sean Donaldson (LW)—will turn 21 this month; 5’11, 180lbs; 36-34-70 in 46 games in the BCHL. Blossomed into a dominant BCHL scorer after not putting up big numbers in the USHL last season.
Dalton Bahncroft (RW)—turned 21 in February; 6’2, 188; 33-53-86 in 48 games in the OJHL. While the OJHL is a weaker league than the USHL or BCHL, Bahncroft is first in the entire league in points per game.
Remington Koeppel (G)—turned 20 this month; 6’2, 188 lbs; .892 sv% in 30 games in the USHL this season; .900 in 25 games last season. While Koeppel’s numbers aren’t fantastic this season, they’re actually better than Shane’s and Howe’s numbers were in the USHL, the toughest junior league. The starting goalie competition next season should be anyone’s game.
Next are the most promising players likely to arrive in 2023-2024. They are basically the opposite of next year’s arrivals: rather than undrafted older recruits, these players are likely to matriculate at 18 or 19 years old and several of them will probably be drafted.
Rather than list their numbers (since most are not in junior hockey yet) or size (since they may still be growing), I will add other relevant notes (in reverse order of how recently they committed):
Marian Mosko (LD)—turns 18 in May; ranked #164 by NHL Central Scouting; drafted by the USHL. Possible late-round pick who will likely play a year in the USHL before matriculating.
George Fegaras (RD)—turns 18 in April; 13-33-46 in 51 games in the OJHL; ranked #91 by NHL Central Scouting; drafted by the USHL. Possible mid-round draft pick who, like Mosko, may play one year in the USHL before coming. The fact he has produced in junior hockey as a defenseman at such a young age bodes well.
Tyler Catalano (C/RW)—just turned 18 at the end of February but already 6’4 and 216 lbs. 1-9-10 in 45 USHL games but still very young. Very likely will spend one more year in the USHL before matriculating.
Ben Robertson (LD)—doesn’t turn 18 until September but already playing in the USHL, putting up 2-10-12 in 44 games as a defenseman. Nearly all of his points have come since his midseason trade to Waterloo.
Liam Steele (D)—turns 18 in April but already 6’4 216 lbs. Ranked #83 by NHL Central Scouting. Possible mid-round draft pick currently in Canadian prep school and committed to the BCHL for next season.
Tyler Wishart (C/RW)—turns 18 in April. Recruited by BU, UNH, and Quinnipiac, Wishart has put up big numbers in prep school at Kimball Union. Drafted by the USHL, he’ll probably play in Lincoln at least one year before matriculating.
Luke Devlin (C)—turned 18 this month; already 6’3 (and 187 lbs). Ranked #202 by NHL Central Scouting. Possible late-round draft pick and yet another St. Andrews product (Barron, Stienburg, Ertel). I would guess he will play one year of junior hockey next season before matriculating.
Other commits include Charlie Major, Jack O’Brien, Aiden Cobb, and Shaun Mahoney. These players either haven’t put up the same numbers or there isn’t much information available on them.
Great stuff, thanks
CU2007
BearLover
(Here is a more in-depth post on our recruits.)
Remington Koeppel (G)—turned 20 this month; 6’2, 188 lbs; .892 sv% in 30 games in the USHL this season; .900 in 25 games last season. While Koeppel’s numbers aren’t fantastic this season, they’re actually better than Shane’s and Howe’s numbers were in the USHL, the toughest junior league. The starting goalie competition next season should be anyone’s game.
Great stuff, thanks
Agree, thanks.
I was hoping that we'd have a more definitive #1 goalie next year.
Nice to have competition, but have to hope that Shane and Howe improve. Both are okay, but I've been spoiled by the likes of Galajda, who became Notre Dame's #1.
What extra games might we have won if he was with us this year?
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005
?t=5kufAdj6Ogk7aWG8EIahtQ&s=19I’m extremely humble and excited to announce my commitment to play division 1 hockey and further my academics at Cornell University. Huge thanks to my teammates, my coaches and especially my family. Cant wait to get started! #gobigred pic.twitter.com/pBI4vx5ldN
— Chase Pirtle (@PirtleChase) April 6, 2022
ursusminor
Having read many reports on Pirtle on Neutral Zone, I don't look forward to seeing him play against RPI. That is, assuming RPI still has a team. Shirley still has almost three months to destroy it.
While I have no idea on his selection criteria, Heisenberg has Pirtle listed as his top Northeastern recruit in his age group.
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
I just hope he gets here in time for Grady and Jason to have to say variations on "Pirtle from Ertel." Sounds like something from Dr. Seuss.
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."
Chris '03
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
I just hope he gets here in time for Grady and Jason to have to say variations on "Pirtle from Ertel." Sounds like something from Dr. Seuss.
The Teenage Mutant Ninjas?
ACM
Chris '03
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
I just hope he gets here in time for Grady and Jason to have to say variations on "Pirtle from Ertel." Sounds like something from Dr. Seuss.
The Teenage Mutant Ninjas?
The Yertle Line.
At least their social posts don't allege LeMoyne Dolphins And Me, B.F.F. That was back when Facebook let teenage girls (well, everyone) choose to say In a Relationship and offer the option of It's Complicated. For girls of that age, I believe FB auto-filled the It's Complicated checkbox to save them the effort.upprdeck
so confusing with hockey kids committing so far out.. just turned 17 so i suppose this is for 2 yrs from now..
Be nice to have a thumbs-up emoticon (in among those smileys) for those 21st Century "Well-played, sir," responses.Chris '03
I just hope he gets here in time for Grady and Jason to have to say variations on "Pirtle from Ertel." Sounds like something from Dr. Seuss.Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
Based on what? I’m not disagreeing, I’m just clueless. Stat comps? Some sort of scouting rating service?
Yes.CU2007
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
Based on what? I’m not disagreeing, I’m just clueless. Stat comps? Some sort of scouting rating service?
Trotsky
Yes.CU2007
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
Based on what? I’m not disagreeing, I’m just clueless. Stat comps? Some sort of scouting rating service?
Useful. Thanks
De nada.CU2007
Trotsky
Yes.CU2007
Trotsky
It will be a few years and anything can happen, but he may be our highest-rated incoming F since Riley Nash.
Based on what? I’m not disagreeing, I’m just clueless. Stat comps? Some sort of scouting rating service?
Useful. Thanks
?s=20&t=axxc9pKFzl7XielRIlNjUw#Sticktaps to Class of 2023 Fwd Jonathan Castagna on his recent commitment to play hockey and attend school at @IvyLeague member Cornell University @CornellMHockey #whosnext pic.twitter.com/C8PJD1rfw4
— St. Andrew’s College Hockey (@sachockey1899) April 16, 2022
(age on 10/1/22)
Bancroft, F (21)
Cobb, F (20)
Devlin, F (18)
Donaldson, F (21)
Keoppel, G (20)
Mahoney, F (20)
O'Brien, D (19)
Steele, F (18)
Wallace, D (20)
CAS
Recruits Dalton Bancroft & George Fegaras were named to the OJHL First All-Star Team. Sean Donaldson was named to the BCHL Second All-Star Team.
Odd that Donaldson was only on the 2nd team considering he was one of 3 finalists for league MVP.
Trotsky
Based on the info I have read, we are projected to have 9 incoming guys next year. That can't be accurate, right?
(age on 10/1/22)
Bancroft, F (21)
Cobb, F (20)
Devlin, F (18)
Donaldson, F (21)
Keoppel, G (20)
Mahoney, F (20)
O'Brien, D (19)
Steele, F (18)
Wallace, D (20)
Steele is going to the BCHL and I believe Devlin to the USHL next season. And Wallace is a forward, so we appear to have just 1 defenseman coming in.
Thank you, that makes a lot more sense.scoop85
Steele is going to the BCHL and I believe Devlin to the USHL next season. And Wallace is a forward, so we appear to have just 1 defenseman coming in.
With Howe's decision an apparent surprise I think any G we pick up will be for GPA not GAA.upprdeck
might need another goalie as well.
scoop85
Trotsky
Based on the info I have read, we are projected to have 9 incoming guys next year. That can't be accurate, right?
(age on 10/1/22)
Bancroft, F (21)
Cobb, F (20)
Devlin, F (18)
Donaldson, F (21)
Keoppel, G (20)
Mahoney, F (20)
O'Brien, D (19)
Steele, F (18)
Wallace, D (20)
Steele is going to the BCHL and I believe Devlin to the USHL next season. And Wallace is a forward, so we appear to have just 1 defenseman coming in.
Where is Fegaras?
Fall 23 AFAIK.Swampy
scoop85
Trotsky
Based on the info I have read, we are projected to have 9 incoming guys next year. That can't be accurate, right?
(age on 10/1/22)
Bancroft, F (21)
Cobb, F (20)
Devlin, F (18)
Donaldson, F (21)
Keoppel, G (20)
Mahoney, F (20)
O'Brien, D (19)
Steele, F (18)
Wallace, D (20)
Steele is going to the BCHL and I believe Devlin to the USHL next season. And Wallace is a forward, so we appear to have just 1 defenseman coming in.
Where is Fegaras?
#OHLRangers ‘20 4th round pick George Fegaras wins OJHL’s Top Prospect Award ahead of #2022NHLDraft. 48 points in 52 games for the 2004-born rookie defenseman this season. Fegaras is currently committed to Cornell University. [t.co]
— East Ave Blue (@KRangersReport) April 22, 2022
pfibiger
George Fegaras wins OJHL "Top Prospect" award:
#OHLRangers ‘20 4th round pick George Fegaras wins OJHL’s Top Prospect Award ahead of #2022NHLDraft. 48 points in 52 games for the 2004-born rookie defenseman this season. Fegaras is currently committed to Cornell University. [t.co]
— East Ave Blue (@KRangersReport) April 22, 2022
“Currently committed to Cornell University…” hopefully isn’t meant to imply anything.
Yeah, I didn't like that shit one bit. But I guess it's accurate. And after a hundred years of schools fucking athletes, athletes fucking schools -- while not wonderful -- is certainly preferable.scoop85
“Currently committed to Cornell University…” hopefully isn’t meant to imply anything.