We live near you and did the learn to play hockey, House, travel progression at Gardens Ice House in Laurel (Tri City Eagles) for our daughter. It will be the easiest commute to a good program for you, I believe.
If she stays interested, then you can tryout for a couple programs maybe at 10u to see what makes sense. I agree the Rockville girls program is the strongest, but the head of the program doesn't coach all the girls teams. Also, there are benefits to playing co Ed at a younger age. That being said, if your daughter gets hooked, it probably does make sense to head to Rockville - tons of girls who are really good. While the 8u program is co Ed, they do girls only tournaments. 7 of course isn't too late to start hockey, but you'll want to get her on the ice, in clinics, etc as much as possible if she's serious about it. |
This is true for maybe 10 percent of the boys and the same proportion of girls. It’s a hard sport with a steep learning curve but kids can start start at 7 and have a lot of fun playing through at least age 12. The average NHL player started after age 4. Hockey people do participation a great disservice by claiming kids can’t enjoy the sport unless they start skating while they’re in diapers. Similarly, kids don’t need to be on spring or summer teams at that age, though it is good to be skating throughout the year. Laurel has a strong LTP but Tri-City’s 8U program has gotten really small. I don’t know what happened there. |