| Season | Team | League | GP | G | A | Pts | PPG | NCAAe-PPG | Age-Adj | D3e-PPG | Age-Adj |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012-13 | Tri-City Storm | USHL | 46 | 8 | 10 | 18 | 0.391 | 0.2492 | 0.2585 | 1.1726 | 1.2163 |
| 2013-14 | Tri-City Storm | USHL | 57 | 6 | 28 | 34 | 0.597 | 0.3799 | 0.3763 | 1.7875 | 1.7705 |
| 2014-15 | Tri-City Storm | USHL | 44 | 15 | 29 | 44 | 1.000 | 0.6368 | 0.5995 | 2.9967 | 2.8210 |
| Season | School | Div | Conference | Year | GP | G | A | Pts | PPG |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016-17 | Providence | D1 | HockeyEast | SO | 29 | 4 | 5 | 9 | 0.310 |
| 2015-16 | Providence | D1 | HockeyEast | FR | 28 | 4 | 3 | 7 | 0.250 |
How to read this: NCAAe and D3e factors convert a player's junior PPG into expected NCAA scoring at the D1 or D3 level. Harder conferences → lower projected PPG for the same player. A strong junior player (e.g. USHL 0.90 PPG) will project much higher in NESCAC than Big Ten because the D3 scoring environment is lower-difficulty.
Strength factor: conferences above 1.0 are harder than average; below 1.0 are easier. The formula is: Base NCAAe PPG ÷ Conference Strength = Projected PPG.