The rule prohibiting players with major junior experience only originated in
1981. Prior to that, a number of players who had played a year or two of
major junior (All-Americans Ron Scott, Cornwall/Mich. St., Gary Haight,
Seattle/Mich.St., and Gates Orlando, Montreal/Providence to name a few) were
allowed to play under NCAA rules. What precipitated the change appears to
have been the NHL practice of drafting under-age junior players, which began
in 1979. With that practice, teams would draft and sign players, but return
them back to junior. I guess the NCAA thought that this "contaminated" the
other players on the teams. I fail to see how, but thats what they ruled.
Its sad, because players who realize after a year or two of major junior
that they (1) won't be "sure" pros, or (2) that they want a real education,
and don't want to ride the bus through the ends of the earth, are left with
no option but to go to Canadian Universities, which, I believe, do not offer
scholarships. I say, drop the NCAA ban.
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