Author Topic: Quality in youth hockey  (Read 820 times)

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Quality in youth hockey
Topic: October 22, 2024, 06:57:51 PM
There is a lot of program bashing on this platform. But I am curious, are there any programs where development and love of the game come before profit and politics? I’m not looking for the generic “BlackBear” bashing because those rinks are all ran by different hockey directors. I am more locking for any resource to make a kid better at hockey is provided with in reason and not based on the bottom line.
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Reply #1:
 October 23, 2024, 04:55:19 PM
Hate to break it to you but, its a business. Black bear or county/town rink. its a business. They are not doing this to lose money.  Yeah there are some "extras" that are used to push you over the top, but no one is doing this for charity. There is a formula most rinks and orgs follow it. Development comes naturally from this. 
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Reply #2:
 October 23, 2024, 10:43:40 PM
Look for programs that run as a non profit. Especially those that are in rinks they dont own
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Reply #3:
 October 24, 2024, 11:59:56 AM
This is actually horrible advice. Non profit clubs that rent ice are at a distinct disadvantage. They don’t control the ice and pay premium for all rentals. You’re going to get less for your money because there’s an expensive associated with every ice touch. Rink owned clubs can offer more ice, better slots for less money per touch. Again, this isn’t saying the tuition is more or less but your price per ice touch will be more at a non profit club. You end up sharing more ice than less.

Btw - these friendly not for profit clubs still pay board members, president, director etc. Nothing is free.
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Reply #4:
 October 24, 2024, 09:37:47 PM
Do not follow a program based on wins or the flashy team that has success at older levels. Find a coach that is at your child’s level who cares about making kids better. Wins and losses mean nothing if it’s at the sacrifice of your child’s opportunity to get better. Real progress in youth hockey happens in practice not games. Find a coach that people rave about their practices.
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Reply #5:
 October 25, 2024, 10:16:55 AM
Great point on nonprofit clubs. We are a nonprofit club and pay as much as bb clubs and get no tournaments included.
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Reply #6:
 October 25, 2024, 01:11:04 PM
This is actually horrible advice. Non profit clubs that rent ice are at a distinct disadvantage. They don’t control the ice and pay premium for all rentals. You’re going to get less for your money because there’s an expensive associated with every ice touch. Rink owned clubs can offer more ice, better slots for less money per touch. Again, this isn’t saying the tuition is more or less but your price per ice touch will be more at a non profit club. You end up sharing more ice than less.

Btw - these friendly not for profit clubs still pay board members, president, director etc. Nothing is free.

I don't think that you can paint all non-profits with the same brush. In my area, there are some very high functioning non profits, and there are some that are run like a hot dog stand. What it really comes down to is who the board members are, how much time they have to donate, and how passionate they are to learn and implement "best practices" into the organization.

What gets lost in a lot of this is what the organization prioritizes; is it winning or development? It's very tricky to deliver both alot of the time. Winning is a byproduct of development; not so true the other was around.

FWIW, I was on the board at our local non-profit and as the treasurer, I can confirm there weren't any non-coaching salary expenses. So that is not true for every non-profit either.

Where you can draw a line of distinction between profit and non-profit, is that the non-profit is simply looking to break even so that plays as an important factor in the final tuition. As another poster pointed out, prioritize good coaching for your child's age bracket and quality of organization second.   
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Reply #7:
 October 25, 2024, 03:23:04 PM
Find a coach that you and your kid both like. That's the best advice in youth hockey. Teams change every year, you can't predict game outcomes. But if you like the coach, that is what matters.
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Reply #8:
 October 27, 2024, 08:07:48 PM
Great advice! We’ve just begun our journey and have found an incredible home with the half ice pilots- coach is incredible, kids and families great, cost is good, ice time ample, and rink feels like a family. Kids are developing really nicely, having fun, and gaining confidence. Couldn’t ask for a better start!
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Reply #9:
 October 27, 2024, 11:37:25 PM
LOL
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BLAZERS 18AA LOOKING FOR A QUALITY FORWARD

Started by GuestBoard General Youth Hockey Info

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Last post October 20, 2019, 08:49:34 PM
by Guest