The criteria that was used in rating these eight leagues, was how do teams within the leagues compare when developing players who move on to the NHL, NCAA, USHL, NAHL, NCDC, and Canada Junior A hockey programs. The size of the league as in number of teams was also taken into account for depth of player talent throughout the league. The level of promotion of commitments was also taken into account for this particular rating.
1 A. Eastern Hockey League
The EHL, is the leader in direct to NCAA D-3 hockey commitments at the Tier III level. No other Tier III league does the volume of NCAA commitments that the EHL does. It is their focus, and it is why they exist. They claim this as their badge of honor and rightly so. Once again the EHL not only lead Tier III but beat all of Canadian Tier II D3 commitments combined.
1 B. USPHL Premier
The USPHL, is the benchmark in North America for moving players to Tier II. This is the only league that actually promotes players to Tier II as they say they will. The NCDC shows year after year that its use of the USPHL Premier as its development pool that it is a proven recipe for successful development of players. The number of Tier II players coming out of the USPHL Premier increases every year and is a testament to great coaching. On top of this the USPHL Premier produces well over one hundred NCAA commitments every year, making it the dual development option chosen most by players.
**Publishers note. The USPHL Premier and the EHL are two very different leagues with very different goals. Both are head and shoulders above every other Tier III league. Either league could have been 1A or 1B, they are interchangeable depending on each individual players goals.
3. NA3HL
The NA3HL still remains far behind the EHL and USPHL Premier. It is a league for older players who are not ready for Tier II. A good league for entertainment value, though not nearly as skilled as the EHL or USPHL Premier. Largely a league for ACHA level players.
4. USPHL – Elite
The USPHL Elite is a solid development platform for the USPHL Premier, and NCDC. Not by design but by necessity it is younger than the Premier division. For those younger players or those who want junior hockey but are not satisfied with their AAA options, the USPHL Elite has become a destination.
5. EHLP
The EHLP, the second division under the EHL is an option for players who may not have local AAA programs, or for those looking for a more inexpensive option to AAA. Younger and less experienced, EHLP players are seeing some players moved up to the EHL.
6. NJHL
The NJHL makes the list simply by its existance. There are no NCAA commitments, but it is better than not playing if you have no other options. The league does move some players up to USPHL Premier.
Next week we will publish our top Canadian Junior B ranking.