Anonymous wrote:When does recruiting start for D3? Junior year? Or earlier?
Anonymous wrote:When does recruiting start for D3? Junior year? Or earlier?
Anonymous wrote:Agree play because they love it and you can learn about hard work, teamwork, and perseverance. Those are life skills my kid is getting while doing something he loves. He is also busy and getting exercise. Is it a pain to drive and expensive? Yes. But it's worth it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dream on if you think your kid gonna play college
My oldest is playing D1 hockey, started out at MYHA. I think 7 kids he played with locally are now playing D1 hockey. And it started as a dream, his dream as a little kid.
What was his path? Where is he playing D1?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dream on if you think your kid gonna play college
My oldest is playing D1 hockey, started out at MYHA. I think 7 kids he played with locally are now playing D1 hockey. And it started as a dream, his dream as a little kid.
Anonymous wrote:Dream on if you think your kid gonna play college
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hockey is the absolute pits
Why? Please elaborate.
Anonymous wrote:No, your AA kid from the DMV that gets into an Ivy is not walking on to the NCAA team. Full stop, not going to happen.
For girls, it is a little easier, but still not easy. There aren't junior leagues for girls like there are for boys. But there's a lot of international players recruited to to NCAA teams. The top US and Canadian recruits have been part of their respective country's development programs. Like the boys, they were identified at a young age and put on the elite development track. They leave home to go to places like Shattuck St. Mary's.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How has youth hockey experience been for those who started young. Started club/travel at the age of 9/10. Did your DC burnout? Competition increases at each level, travel increases etc.. did they get to play in college? Did it help them get into top 20 colleges? Any input is appreciated.
There are plenty of top 20 schools which have hockey teams (Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Brown, Michigan, Army plus a bunch of other Big10 Flagship schools all play D1 hockey, and Williams, amHerst, Middlebury, Tufts, and other NESCAC schools play D3 hockey). The problem is that the level of play at the D1 schools is so high, that it is very, very unlikely that you kid will be good enough so that it helps them get in there. But not impossible. On the boys/mens side right now, we have local kids playing at Cornell, Brown, and one going to Army next year. But all except the kid going to Army had to leave the area as 13-15 years old to be able to continue to develop the point of being good enough for the level. Even the D3 teams are insanely competitive, drawing most of their players from New England prep schools.
And even then they usually have to play juniors first. The top club hockey teams are insanely competitive, littered with kids from top prep programs who just didn't want to take more time away from school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How has youth hockey experience been for those who started young. Started club/travel at the age of 9/10. Did your DC burnout? Competition increases at each level, travel increases etc.. did they get to play in college? Did it help them get into top 20 colleges? Any input is appreciated.
There are plenty of top 20 schools which have hockey teams (Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, Cornell, Brown, Michigan, Army plus a bunch of other Big10 Flagship schools all play D1 hockey, and Williams, amHerst, Middlebury, Tufts, and other NESCAC schools play D3 hockey). The problem is that the level of play at the D1 schools is so high, that it is very, very unlikely that you kid will be good enough so that it helps them get in there. But not impossible. On the boys/mens side right now, we have local kids playing at Cornell, Brown, and one going to Army next year. But all except the kid going to Army had to leave the area as 13-15 years old to be able to continue to develop the point of being good enough for the level. Even the D3 teams are insanely competitive, drawing most of their players from New England prep schools.
Anonymous wrote:College hockey on the boys side is going to get even harder now that players from juniors will be eligible. Only a very small percentage go straight from hs to college.
I have two that started travel hockey at 9. Both still play and love it. It is a huge time and money commitment. I would not go into with expectation of playing in college or improving college admissions.