Anonymous wrote:He also tried to buy WLC but some other hockey parents bought it to stop that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/investigations/2026/05/07/lord-of-the-rinks-black-bear-youth-hockey/89503875007/
We are lucky that that Black Bear hasn’t made a bigger push in this area. A lot of our organizations play in their leagues but St. James dropped this year.
What are you talking about that they haven’t made a bigger push in this area?. He owns one of the only two AAA organizations in this area and the only juniors program in the DMV. We left Teem Maryland after 4 years because we couldn’t deal with the scumbaggery anymore.
Anonymous wrote:I had two kids go through MYHA, one into TM. MYHA was and is one of the best run programs any of my kids ever participated in and my oldest son ended up at one of the top Hockey programs in the country. Keegan was alway fair and unbiased in everything he ran. MYHA tryouts got team placement right almost all of the time. Of course some kids underperform or work hard in the off season and improve well enough to be on a higher level team, but that is life.
I never had issues with him or any other coaches running camps and clinics to make enough money to live and raise a family on. Of course there are bad actors that give favoritism, but Keegan never that I saw, not even close.
You can not fairly incorporate MYHA in and of itself into the basis of the article. I saw much of what the article covers first hand, from the start of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a little bit of a catch-22. There definitely ends up being some favoritism whether intentional or sub-conscious for kids who take the extra lessons with coaches. On the other hand, outside of the Director of a program, and even then, I'm not sure how much those folks are actually taking home, I'm sure that the coach of any particular youth team, even if paid, is not making a ton, and is often more of a stipend. Being able to make a little extra giving lessons is pretty normal across the DMV. I know a lot of folks who are cobbling together a living coaching, doing lessons in the morning, and then working a 9-5 if they have one, or another more 'normal' part-time gig. I don't begrudge them being able to earn a little extra, especially with the cost of living in this area.
It's not a mystery. You could just check to see how much the person in question (Keegan) is "taking home" from MYHA because it's posted on the tax filing I linked to earlier. I'll save you the effort--it's $80k.
But I'm not sure you're a hockey parent either, nor that you read the article at the top of this thread, because otherwise you'd realize that the scenario you describe is not what happens in youth hockey around here. You're correct that there are numerous modestly-paid coaches in the area (of high school teams, or clubs like Tri-City). But they are not running clinics at scale like Keegan is. Nor are they typically doing private lessons in their down-time. The ice is simply not available for these area coaches to use for that purpose. Plus Keegan is--if memory serves--at tryouts for all age groups and deciding the placement for teams he will not coach. But he still can, and apparently does, favor players of different ages who take his classes.
Keegan is not actually a paid coach. He's paid by MYHA to be Director of Hockey Operations and I suppose as part of that, he has taken on a team to coach, just like all the other (volunteer) coaches at MYHA. Because MYHA doesn't pay coaches--they rely on the free labor of parent volunteers. At Tri-City (and I don't know about the others), coaches are paid, typically non-parents. Tri-City fees are not higher for players IIRC, so it's not like MYHA uses volunteer parent coaches to save players money. Meanwhile, he also runs the fee-extra NBN hockey classes/clinics/camps.
The situation with Keegan is problematic in two ways. First is that it is somewhat of a monopoly serving the MYHA families; the second is that when it comes to team selection, the people who choose to pay for his company's services are (by the looks for things) favored for their patronage rather than skill, despite the fact that the club runs tryouts (that imply that he selects based on skill).
I assure you that I am a hockey parent, and I did read the article. We were a Medstar family, and have taken clinics and small group lessons from a myriad of coaches around the DMV in the off-season and during the season when there are breaks. NBN was highly recommended by some other (non-MYHA) families because it was good coaching and good ice time. So, from a non-MYHA perspective, there is a market. We know many coaches at Loudoun, Reston, Medstar, MYHA, St. James, Loudon Ice Center, Rockville, Haymarket, Laurel etc. who moonlight with morning sessions, and have skated with them from time to time. There are lots of coaches giving lessons in their downtime. (In fact, we were at Haymarket this past weekend, and there was a coach wearing a Little Caps jacket giving a lesson during stick and shoot.) If you go to a free skate at Medstar on any given day, there's usually at least one coach (might be a figure skating coach) working with a hockey player. Both of my kids took 'private' skating lessons with one of the Medstar hockey coaches during open skates when they were small. This was a paid coach who definitely had a say in who did and did not make the teams. FWIW, those lessons made them great skaters, but did not pay immediate rewards in getting them on a top travel team. That didn't happen until later. Not everything is a conspiracy. Again, I am not a MYHA parent, I don't know about the inner-workings of that organization or all the political pitfalls. It's a free market society and if you're not happy, there are other options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a little bit of a catch-22. There definitely ends up being some favoritism whether intentional or sub-conscious for kids who take the extra lessons with coaches. On the other hand, outside of the Director of a program, and even then, I'm not sure how much those folks are actually taking home, I'm sure that the coach of any particular youth team, even if paid, is not making a ton, and is often more of a stipend. Being able to make a little extra giving lessons is pretty normal across the DMV. I know a lot of folks who are cobbling together a living coaching, doing lessons in the morning, and then working a 9-5 if they have one, or another more 'normal' part-time gig. I don't begrudge them being able to earn a little extra, especially with the cost of living in this area.
It's not a mystery. You could just check to see how much the person in question (Keegan) is "taking home" from MYHA because it's posted on the tax filing I linked to earlier. I'll save you the effort--it's $80k.
But I'm not sure you're a hockey parent either, nor that you read the article at the top of this thread, because otherwise you'd realize that the scenario you describe is not what happens in youth hockey around here. You're correct that there are numerous modestly-paid coaches in the area (of high school teams, or clubs like Tri-City). But they are not running clinics at scale like Keegan is. Nor are they typically doing private lessons in their down-time. The ice is simply not available for these area coaches to use for that purpose. Plus Keegan is--if memory serves--at tryouts for all age groups and deciding the placement for teams he will not coach. But he still can, and apparently does, favor players of different ages who take his classes.
Keegan is not actually a paid coach. He's paid by MYHA to be Director of Hockey Operations and I suppose as part of that, he has taken on a team to coach, just like all the other (volunteer) coaches at MYHA. Because MYHA doesn't pay coaches--they rely on the free labor of parent volunteers. At Tri-City (and I don't know about the others), coaches are paid, typically non-parents. Tri-City fees are not higher for players IIRC, so it's not like MYHA uses volunteer parent coaches to save players money. Meanwhile, he also runs the fee-extra NBN hockey classes/clinics/camps.
The situation with Keegan is problematic in two ways. First is that it is somewhat of a monopoly serving the MYHA families; the second is that when it comes to team selection, the people who choose to pay for his company's services are (by the looks for things) favored for their patronage rather than skill, despite the fact that the club runs tryouts (that imply that he selects based on skill).
I assure you that I am a hockey parent, and I did read the article. We were a Medstar family, and have taken clinics and small group lessons from a myriad of coaches around the DMV in the off-season and during the season when there are breaks. NBN was highly recommended by some other (non-MYHA) families because it was good coaching and good ice time. So, from a non-MYHA perspective, there is a market. We know many coaches at Loudoun, Reston, Medstar, MYHA, St. James, Loudon Ice Center, Rockville, Haymarket, Laurel etc. who moonlight with morning sessions, and have skated with them from time to time. There are lots of coaches giving lessons in their downtime. (In fact, we were at Haymarket this past weekend, and there was a coach wearing a Little Caps jacket giving a lesson during stick and shoot.) If you go to a free skate at Medstar on any given day, there's usually at least one coach (might be a figure skating coach) working with a hockey player. Both of my kids took 'private' skating lessons with one of the Medstar hockey coaches during open skates when they were small. This was a paid coach who definitely had a say in who did and did not make the teams. FWIW, those lessons made them great skaters, but did not pay immediate rewards in getting them on a top travel team. That didn't happen until later. Not everything is a conspiracy. Again, I am not a MYHA parent, I don't know about the inner-workings of that organization or all the political pitfalls. It's a free market society and if you're not happy, there are other options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a little bit of a catch-22. There definitely ends up being some favoritism whether intentional or sub-conscious for kids who take the extra lessons with coaches. On the other hand, outside of the Director of a program, and even then, I'm not sure how much those folks are actually taking home, I'm sure that the coach of any particular youth team, even if paid, is not making a ton, and is often more of a stipend. Being able to make a little extra giving lessons is pretty normal across the DMV. I know a lot of folks who are cobbling together a living coaching, doing lessons in the morning, and then working a 9-5 if they have one, or another more 'normal' part-time gig. I don't begrudge them being able to earn a little extra, especially with the cost of living in this area.
It's not a mystery. You could just check to see how much the person in question (Keegan) is "taking home" from MYHA because it's posted on the tax filing I linked to earlier. I'll save you the effort--it's $80k.
But I'm not sure you're a hockey parent either, nor that you read the article at the top of this thread, because otherwise you'd realize that the scenario you describe is not what happens in youth hockey around here. You're correct that there are numerous modestly-paid coaches in the area (of high school teams, or clubs like Tri-City). But they are not running clinics at scale like Keegan is. Nor are they typically doing private lessons in their down-time. The ice is simply not available for these area coaches to use for that purpose. Plus Keegan is--if memory serves--at tryouts for all age groups and deciding the placement for teams he will not coach. But he still can, and apparently does, favor players of different ages who take his classes.
Keegan is not actually a paid coach. He's paid by MYHA to be Director of Hockey Operations and I suppose as part of that, he has taken on a team to coach, just like all the other (volunteer) coaches at MYHA. Because MYHA doesn't pay coaches--they rely on the free labor of parent volunteers. At Tri-City (and I don't know about the others), coaches are paid, typically non-parents. Tri-City fees are not higher for players IIRC, so it's not like MYHA uses volunteer parent coaches to save players money. Meanwhile, he also runs the fee-extra NBN hockey classes/clinics/camps.
The situation with Keegan is problematic in two ways. First is that it is somewhat of a monopoly serving the MYHA families; the second is that when it comes to team selection, the people who choose to pay for his company's services are (by the looks for things) favored for their patronage rather than skill, despite the fact that the club runs tryouts (that imply that he selects based on skill).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a little bit of a catch-22. There definitely ends up being some favoritism whether intentional or sub-conscious for kids who take the extra lessons with coaches. On the other hand, outside of the Director of a program, and even then, I'm not sure how much those folks are actually taking home, I'm sure that the coach of any particular youth team, even if paid, is not making a ton, and is often more of a stipend. Being able to make a little extra giving lessons is pretty normal across the DMV. I know a lot of folks who are cobbling together a living coaching, doing lessons in the morning, and then working a 9-5 if they have one, or another more 'normal' part-time gig. I don't begrudge them being able to earn a little extra, especially with the cost of living in this area.
It's not a mystery. You could just check to see how much the person in question (Keegan) is "taking home" from MYHA because it's posted on the tax filing I linked to earlier. I'll save you the effort--it's $80k.
But I'm not sure you're a hockey parent either, nor that you read the article at the top of this thread, because otherwise you'd realize that the scenario you describe is not what happens in youth hockey around here. You're correct that there are numerous modestly-paid coaches in the area (of high school teams, or clubs like Tri-City). But they are not running clinics at scale like Keegan is. Nor are they typically doing private lessons in their down-time. The ice is simply not available for these area coaches to use for that purpose. Plus Keegan is--if memory serves--at tryouts for all age groups and deciding the placement for teams he will not coach. But he still can, and apparently does, favor players of different ages who take his classes.
Keegan is not actually a paid coach. He's paid by MYHA to be Director of Hockey Operations and I suppose as part of that, he has taken on a team to coach, just like all the other (volunteer) coaches at MYHA. Because MYHA doesn't pay coaches--they rely on the free labor of parent volunteers. At Tri-City (and I don't know about the others), coaches are paid, typically non-parents. Tri-City fees are not higher for players IIRC, so it's not like MYHA uses volunteer parent coaches to save players money. Meanwhile, he also runs the fee-extra NBN hockey classes/clinics/camps.
The situation with Keegan is problematic in two ways. First is that it is somewhat of a monopoly serving the MYHA families; the second is that when it comes to team selection, the people who choose to pay for his company's services are (by the looks for things) favored for their patronage rather than skill, despite the fact that the club runs tryouts (that imply that he selects based on skill).
Anonymous wrote:This is a little bit of a catch-22. There definitely ends up being some favoritism whether intentional or sub-conscious for kids who take the extra lessons with coaches. On the other hand, outside of the Director of a program, and even then, I'm not sure how much those folks are actually taking home, I'm sure that the coach of any particular youth team, even if paid, is not making a ton, and is often more of a stipend. Being able to make a little extra giving lessons is pretty normal across the DMV. I know a lot of folks who are cobbling together a living coaching, doing lessons in the morning, and then working a 9-5 if they have one, or another more 'normal' part-time gig. I don't begrudge them being able to earn a little extra, especially with the cost of living in this area.