As a Milwaukee-born guy, I love the jerseys. As a garbage D-League player, it's nice seeing the perspective from people who can skate and change direction so quickly. Really makes you appreciate how the game probably gets a little easier when you can do crazy stuff like stop and change direction easily. Must be nice!
U played D1 and cant stop and change direction properly?? Im from canada so never seen D1 olayers play but always assumed it would compare to triple A in canada but clearly not judging by this comment its not even compareable to single A hockey in canada cause its harder then this video right here for damn sure
@@adammckenzie6074 D League. Not college (DI, DII, DII) hockey in the US. The scales aren't an across the board thing, but generally D league hockey is for beginners and people who never really played competitively. People who played high level competitive hockey like college or major junior hockey would probably play in a beer league that's got a B level or high C level, depending on where you're playing. Beer leagues in somewhere like Kentucky are going to be really different from ones in a place like Minnesota.
Relax dude. btw college D1 hockey is way better than Canadian aaa… mostly because D1 is not youth hockey anymore, it’s for 18-22 year olds. It’s better than the CHL also (by a wide margin.)
@@kaymatthew6812 Uh, yeah. I'd say if you're paid to play a sport, which someone who signed an NHL contract with a team is paid to do, they can and should call themselves a professional athlete.
@ImYourBigDaddY. No. Being paid to play hockey makes you, by definition, a professional. Not sure why so many of you guys insist on pissing away time to try and be pedantic about it.
Y’all arguing if the guys a pro or not. He’s still better than you. Even if he “ never touched NHL or AHL ice” neither have you. You barely touch beer league ice.😂