Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 11:20     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Ant parent who would consider sending their kid to “ school” at a dilapidated ice center for mediocre DMV hockey really needs to have their head checked.


Let's be brutally honest, the entire kiddie club sports/clinics industrial complex is a massive scam. If your kid is not a natural born athlete, all the tens of thousands of dollars spent on sports over the years is as good as lit on fire.


Translation: I can’t afford it and my nebbish meek kids don’t have an athletic bone in their body — if you even have kids


And you’ll be the first one to pull your kid out of school so he can sit all day in an ice rink instead of socializing and being in school because little Johnny from Reston really is THAT good. Lol. TPH spots you from a mile away and they are literally banking on you.


+1 All you can do is laugh at these delulu, hyperdefensive kiddie sports scam victims.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 11:11     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ pride is a disgrace too. Girls good enough to play ncaa d1 have to leave after their freshman year and go to boarding school, commute to Philly for practice, or homeschool and find another tier 1 team with a weeknd model. It’s a nightmare. I wish USA hockey would step in and allow other assns to start aaa, or at least hold these guys accountable. They shouldn’t be protected like nfl franchises.


As a mother of a female player I desperately want a Virginia AAA girls program. I've heard nothing but bad things about Pride so even if it was closer I don't think we'd play there.


As a parent with multiple kids in this program, I would say that it's like any other program, there are good things and bad things. If you're expecting any kid in this are, girl or boy, to go from AAA to D1 it is a stretch. Not impossible, but clearly a stretch. At the end of the day. One of the big benefits with Pride is that they will get you seen. They go to the right tournaments, and the Director has the connections to get your kid exposure. We heard from multiple coaches in the recruiting process how much they like/appreciate the JWHL model (league run by the Pride director). This is not like some sports, for example lacrosse, where the recruiting process is pretty prescribed and there is a recruiting director. Your kid will have to take the initiative to reach out to people. The director will help advise and talk to coaches when they reach out, but it is incumbent on your child to do the footwork.

That said, at the end of the day, your kid is either a D1 player or not. Probably not. For perspective, a quick review of the eight birth-year girls who started with one of my kids:
- Four went to boarding school, of those three re-classed, of those one is not playing hockey in college, one is likely to play lacrosse, too early to tell on a third. The girl who did not reclass is playing D3.
- For those going to prep school,if you are want to play in college, you have to pay for the cost of prep school as well as Tier 1 hockey, the teams in the northeast play a shoulder season, so very light during the prep season, but you are then having to manage/coordinate logistics for getting your kid from prep school to Tier 1 practices as well as to tournaments/events.
- Prep schools are generally better academically than public if that is where your kids are now, not necessarily better than a private school in this area.
- If your kid is a multi-sport athlete, prep school will allow for them to play multiple sports vs having to drop everything else to participate in Tier 1 in this area
- The other option that is gaining traction is a hockey academy, which functions more like a regular Tier 1 program, playing August - March, like Shattuck/BK/Lovell. These are harder to get into and focused on hockey vs academics. Some are just online school, others regular classrooms, although my understanding is that the education itself is not great.
- Of the four girls my daughter played with who did not go to prep, three are playing D1. The remaining girl ended up dropping hockey to focus on lacrosse Jr year, and is playing D1 lacrosse.

Moral of the story, prep is definitely a pathway, but unless your kid is a D1 player to begin with, prep will not make your kid a D1 player. (With only 40 some D1 women's hockey teams, and 40% of the players coming from Canada/outside the US the bar is very high.) There are certainly advantages in terms of education and exposure, but at significant financial and family time cost. At the end of the day you do what is best for your kid and family in your circumstances, but nothing is a guarantee, and the things that people hate about hockey in he DMV (politics, travel, etc.) are not absent of avoided if you go the prep route. You might be shielded from it a little bit more because of distance, but it's still there.


I would say there is a 0.002% chance of a boy going from AAA to NCAAA hockey. They all play juniors. The ones who play NCAA D1 hockey at 18 come from USNTDP adn they are draft picks. Even prep school kids who play D3 hockey start as juniors.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 11:07     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Where is it?

Considering the state of many of our public schools, it may not be a bad option. 😆


True! The online education might be fine. I don’t like when kids make a sport their whole identify, though. So few make it to a professional level, which means the rest need friends, school and hobbies unrelated to their sport to fall back on when things don’t work out.


I assume they’d make friends with the other hockey students? All the public school kids play Roblox instead of pursuing other hobbies. It’s not hard to keep pace with that.


That's the issue, though. Their whole world is hockey, including their friends and school. They need other interests and outside friends. They need to understand that they are more than a hockey player and when they are having a bad season, life goes on and they have other things to anticipate and enjoy.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 11:07     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Ant parent who would consider sending their kid to “ school” at a dilapidated ice center for mediocre DMV hockey really needs to have their head checked.


Let's be brutally honest, the entire kiddie club sports/clinics industrial complex is a massive scam. If your kid is not a natural born athlete, all the tens of thousands of dollars spent on sports over the years is as good as lit on fire.


Translation: I can’t afford it and my nebbish meek kids don’t have an athletic bone in their body — if you even have kids


And you’ll be the first one to pull your kid out of school so he can sit all day in an ice rink instead of socializing and being in school because little Johnny from Reston really is THAT good. Lol. TPH spots you from a mile away and they are literally banking on you.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 11:03     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ pride is a disgrace too. Girls good enough to play ncaa d1 have to leave after their freshman year and go to boarding school, commute to Philly for practice, or homeschool and find another tier 1 team with a weeknd model. It’s a nightmare. I wish USA hockey would step in and allow other assns to start aaa, or at least hold these guys accountable. They shouldn’t be protected like nfl franchises.


As a mother of a female player I desperately want a Virginia AAA girls program. I've heard nothing but bad things about Pride so even if it was closer I don't think we'd play there.


As a parent with multiple kids in this program, I would say that it's like any other program, there are good things and bad things. If you're expecting any kid in this are, girl or boy, to go from AAA to D1 it is a stretch. Not impossible, but clearly a stretch. At the end of the day. One of the big benefits with Pride is that they will get you seen. They go to the right tournaments, and the Director has the connections to get your kid exposure. We heard from multiple coaches in the recruiting process how much they like/appreciate the JWHL model (league run by the Pride director). This is not like some sports, for example lacrosse, where the recruiting process is pretty prescribed and there is a recruiting director. Your kid will have to take the initiative to reach out to people. The director will help advise and talk to coaches when they reach out, but it is incumbent on your child to do the footwork.

That said, at the end of the day, your kid is either a D1 player or not. Probably not. For perspective, a quick review of the eight birth-year girls who started with one of my kids:
- Four went to boarding school, of those three re-classed, of those one is not playing hockey in college, one is likely to play lacrosse, too early to tell on a third. The girl who did not reclass is playing D3.
- For those going to prep school,if you are want to play in college, you have to pay for the cost of prep school as well as Tier 1 hockey, the teams in the northeast play a shoulder season, so very light during the prep season, but you are then having to manage/coordinate logistics for getting your kid from prep school to Tier 1 practices as well as to tournaments/events.
- Prep schools are generally better academically than public if that is where your kids are now, not necessarily better than a private school in this area.
- If your kid is a multi-sport athlete, prep school will allow for them to play multiple sports vs having to drop everything else to participate in Tier 1 in this area
- The other option that is gaining traction is a hockey academy, which functions more like a regular Tier 1 program, playing August - March, like Shattuck/BK/Lovell. These are harder to get into and focused on hockey vs academics. Some are just online school, others regular classrooms, although my understanding is that the education itself is not great.
- Of the four girls my daughter played with who did not go to prep, three are playing D1. The remaining girl ended up dropping hockey to focus on lacrosse Jr year, and is playing D1 lacrosse.

Moral of the story, prep is definitely a pathway, but unless your kid is a D1 player to begin with, prep will not make your kid a D1 player. (With only 40 some D1 women's hockey teams, and 40% of the players coming from Canada/outside the US the bar is very high.) There are certainly advantages in terms of education and exposure, but at significant financial and family time cost. At the end of the day you do what is best for your kid and family in your circumstances, but nothing is a guarantee, and the things that people hate about hockey in he DMV (politics, travel, etc.) are not absent of avoided if you go the prep route. You might be shielded from it a little bit more because of distance, but it's still there.


Nice way to hijack a thread.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 10:58     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Ant parent who would consider sending their kid to “ school” at a dilapidated ice center for mediocre DMV hockey really needs to have their head checked.


Let's be brutally honest, the entire kiddie club sports/clinics industrial complex is a massive scam. If your kid is not a natural born athlete, all the tens of thousands of dollars spent on sports over the years is as good as lit on fire.


Translation: I can’t afford it and my nebbish meek kids don’t have an athletic bone in their body — if you even have kids


Tanslation: I spent more than I could afford on kiddie sports and my kids grew up to be middle managers instead of pro athletes.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 10:27     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

I wish it wasn't that way either, but those other cities aren't immune either. Things are changing, mostly because of the emergence of those hockey academies. The majority of prep kids go D3. Almost all girls playing at hockey academies go D1. There is a huge amount of turnover at both JRF and Pens Elite at the 14 level. A lot of families are using those teams to get recruited for academies/prep. They go play one year, then reclass at prep/academy. While it's most prevalent at 14, there are a lot of kids punching out at upper levels also.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 10:15     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ pride is a disgrace too. Girls good enough to play ncaa d1 have to leave after their freshman year and go to boarding school, commute to Philly for practice, or homeschool and find another tier 1 team with a weeknd model. It’s a nightmare. I wish USA hockey would step in and allow other assns to start aaa, or at least hold these guys accountable. They shouldn’t be protected like nfl franchises.


As a mother of a female player I desperately want a Virginia AAA girls program. I've heard nothing but bad things about Pride so even if it was closer I don't think we'd play there.


As a parent with multiple kids in this program, I would say that it's like any other program, there are good things and bad things. If you're expecting any kid in this are, girl or boy, to go from AAA to D1 it is a stretch. Not impossible, but clearly a stretch. At the end of the day. One of the big benefits with Pride is that they will get you seen. They go to the right tournaments, and the Director has the connections to get your kid exposure. We heard from multiple coaches in the recruiting process how much they like/appreciate the JWHL model (league run by the Pride director). This is not like some sports, for example lacrosse, where the recruiting process is pretty prescribed and there is a recruiting director. Your kid will have to take the initiative to reach out to people. The director will help advise and talk to coaches when they reach out, but it is incumbent on your child to do the footwork.

That said, at the end of the day, your kid is either a D1 player or not. Probably not. For perspective, a quick review of the eight birth-year girls who started with one of my kids:
- Four went to boarding school, of those three re-classed, of those one is not playing hockey in college, one is likely to play lacrosse, too early to tell on a third. The girl who did not reclass is playing D3.
- For those going to prep school,if you are want to play in college, you have to pay for the cost of prep school as well as Tier 1 hockey, the teams in the northeast play a shoulder season, so very light during the prep season, but you are then having to manage/coordinate logistics for getting your kid from prep school to Tier 1 practices as well as to tournaments/events.
- Prep schools are generally better academically than public if that is where your kids are now, not necessarily better than a private school in this area.
- If your kid is a multi-sport athlete, prep school will allow for them to play multiple sports vs having to drop everything else to participate in Tier 1 in this area
- The other option that is gaining traction is a hockey academy, which functions more like a regular Tier 1 program, playing August - March, like Shattuck/BK/Lovell. These are harder to get into and focused on hockey vs academics. Some are just online school, others regular classrooms, although my understanding is that the education itself is not great.
- Of the four girls my daughter played with who did not go to prep, three are playing D1. The remaining girl ended up dropping hockey to focus on lacrosse Jr year, and is playing D1 lacrosse.

Moral of the story, prep is definitely a pathway, but unless your kid is a D1 player to begin with, prep will not make your kid a D1 player. (With only 40 some D1 women's hockey teams, and 40% of the players coming from Canada/outside the US the bar is very high.) There are certainly advantages in terms of education and exposure, but at significant financial and family time cost. At the end of the day you do what is best for your kid and family in your circumstances, but nothing is a guarantee, and the things that people hate about hockey in he DMV (politics, travel, etc.) are not absent of avoided if you go the prep route. You might be shielded from it a little bit more because of distance, but it's still there.


You’re right, but the girls that are future d1 players shouldn’t feel like they have to leave to make it. They don’t in the other cities near us.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 10:10     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:this area is a joke for hockey


No it’s not. It’s just a joke for 16 & 18/19u aaa. There are plenty of kids that leave during high school for northeast boarding schools. Lots of post aaa boys play juniors. The top 14-18/19u aa teams in the dmv are actually pretty good.


I’m sorry but no - the top 14-18/19 AA teams in the dmv are not good at all. The AAA teams are almost as bad. I don’t mean to be snarky but come on. And any kid going into juniors from any of these teams is heading to pay to play juniors team so they can continue to burn money.


The second part is true, but ashburn won a few natties, myha boys and stj girls won one last year. The myha boys, ashburn/reston (where ever the kids decide to play this year) and stj/myha girls are consistently ranked high nationally. Aa hockey is what it is, but as a region we hold our weight.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 08:53     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

I will also add that yes, you can play D3 women's from Tier 2. There are 80 some women's teams now, and they are adding them at a rate of 1-2 a year at this point. There are a couple girls from St. James who are playing now or will be next year.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 08:50     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:^ pride is a disgrace too. Girls good enough to play ncaa d1 have to leave after their freshman year and go to boarding school, commute to Philly for practice, or homeschool and find another tier 1 team with a weeknd model. It’s a nightmare. I wish USA hockey would step in and allow other assns to start aaa, or at least hold these guys accountable. They shouldn’t be protected like nfl franchises.


As a mother of a female player I desperately want a Virginia AAA girls program. I've heard nothing but bad things about Pride so even if it was closer I don't think we'd play there.


As a parent with multiple kids in this program, I would say that it's like any other program, there are good things and bad things. If you're expecting any kid in this are, girl or boy, to go from AAA to D1 it is a stretch. Not impossible, but clearly a stretch. At the end of the day. One of the big benefits with Pride is that they will get you seen. They go to the right tournaments, and the Director has the connections to get your kid exposure. We heard from multiple coaches in the recruiting process how much they like/appreciate the JWHL model (league run by the Pride director). This is not like some sports, for example lacrosse, where the recruiting process is pretty prescribed and there is a recruiting director. Your kid will have to take the initiative to reach out to people. The director will help advise and talk to coaches when they reach out, but it is incumbent on your child to do the footwork.

That said, at the end of the day, your kid is either a D1 player or not. Probably not. For perspective, a quick review of the eight birth-year girls who started with one of my kids:
- Four went to boarding school, of those three re-classed, of those one is not playing hockey in college, one is likely to play lacrosse, too early to tell on a third. The girl who did not reclass is playing D3.
- For those going to prep school,if you are want to play in college, you have to pay for the cost of prep school as well as Tier 1 hockey, the teams in the northeast play a shoulder season, so very light during the prep season, but you are then having to manage/coordinate logistics for getting your kid from prep school to Tier 1 practices as well as to tournaments/events.
- Prep schools are generally better academically than public if that is where your kids are now, not necessarily better than a private school in this area.
- If your kid is a multi-sport athlete, prep school will allow for them to play multiple sports vs having to drop everything else to participate in Tier 1 in this area
- The other option that is gaining traction is a hockey academy, which functions more like a regular Tier 1 program, playing August - March, like Shattuck/BK/Lovell. These are harder to get into and focused on hockey vs academics. Some are just online school, others regular classrooms, although my understanding is that the education itself is not great.
- Of the four girls my daughter played with who did not go to prep, three are playing D1. The remaining girl ended up dropping hockey to focus on lacrosse Jr year, and is playing D1 lacrosse.

Moral of the story, prep is definitely a pathway, but unless your kid is a D1 player to begin with, prep will not make your kid a D1 player. (With only 40 some D1 women's hockey teams, and 40% of the players coming from Canada/outside the US the bar is very high.) There are certainly advantages in terms of education and exposure, but at significant financial and family time cost. At the end of the day you do what is best for your kid and family in your circumstances, but nothing is a guarantee, and the things that people hate about hockey in he DMV (politics, travel, etc.) are not absent of avoided if you go the prep route. You might be shielded from it a little bit more because of distance, but it's still there.
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 08:48     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don’t know anything about travel hockey or this school, but I really don’t see what’s so bad about this model for the right kid.


I feel like this was designed to prey on overeager parents who have kids that play for Little Caps. If your kid is actually good enough for hockey they shouldn't be playing in this area. Take the money and send them somewhere up north. I don't think the St James academy is a great idea either but at least it's at a nice facility.


Kinda weird that this bothers you so much.


I think we found the burner for the TPH people


Just one page back, I didn’t know what school you were talking about. Still, you seem a little obsessed…

This wouldn’t be a good fit for my kid, but may not be a terrible option for some.


You do realize that not all of these replies are from OP and you are likely confusing the feelings of multiple people with one obsessed person, right?


You all sound like the same people who diss people who send their kids to DC private schools, claiming your mediocre public schools (aka the only thing you can afford) are soooo good. Mmm hmm.


They are the same people. Seething misanthropic proles who spam this website all day
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 08:45     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Ant parent who would consider sending their kid to “ school” at a dilapidated ice center for mediocre DMV hockey really needs to have their head checked.


Let's be brutally honest, the entire kiddie club sports/clinics industrial complex is a massive scam. If your kid is not a natural born athlete, all the tens of thousands of dollars spent on sports over the years is as good as lit on fire.


Translation: I can’t afford it and my nebbish meek kids don’t have an athletic bone in their body — if you even have kids
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 07:48     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Didn't MYHA 18UAA win nationals last year? Doesn't that make them pretty good as for as AA teams go? AA isn't a path to juniors/D3/D1 95% of the time, but its good AA hockey which can make you a competent club player and lead to a really full, fun college experience where you get in for the academics and have a built in group of friends in your club hockey team - no?
Anonymous
Post 02/03/2026 05:01     Subject: The hockey sports industrial complex strikes again

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:this area is a joke for hockey


No it’s not. It’s just a joke for 16 & 18/19u aaa. There are plenty of kids that leave during high school for northeast boarding schools. Lots of post aaa boys play juniors. The top 14-18/19u aa teams in the dmv are actually pretty good.


I’m sorry but no - the top 14-18/19 AA teams in the dmv are not good at all. The AAA teams are almost as bad. I don’t mean to be snarky but come on. And any kid going into juniors from any of these teams is heading to pay to play juniors team so they can continue to burn money.