OH .... OK I see now. My bad! Thanks Tom. LOL
I have decided to move back to boy's hockey and will be coaching a Bantam AA team next year in the Calgary Royals Association.
The team will be mostly first year Bantams; so 13 and 14 year old players. Lots of emphasis on skill development.
The first talent id camp is May 2-4 and tryouts are in late August.
Tom,
Congratulations....welcome back to the darkside.
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Iceman, I am leaving the Dark Side and returning to the Light.
Great age group to coach . They will eat up your knowledge . I'm currently coaching Minor Midget AAA . Fantastic league . You should check it out next season . Good Luck
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I gave that level as my first preference but I haven't coached in this organization since I had Chuck Fletcher (Minn. GM) as one of my Midget AA players. Since that season I coached men's ACAC college 4 years, CIS men 8 years, Female ACAC college 5, WWHL 2, U18G 3 and Red Bulls skill coach for 2 pro a U20 and U17 team (head coach of U17) one season. So it has been a long time. I have been doing skill classes for the school district with the Bantam aged kid's since I returned from Austria 5 years ago. Also lots of the spring and summer things I do are with the same age group. I coached my son's team from 97-2003 through Pee Wee, Bantam, Midget. (11-16 years) and paid for his year at a sports school by doing skill classes with U16 boy's 3 times a week for two years. So I have been all over the place with boy's, men, girl's, Women and then the Korean high school, college and pro teams for 9 summers, hockey schools and camps in Norway, Finland, Czech Republic, USA, Mexico, Canada.
It is always the same game with the same skills. Just different starting points with each group.
The Bantams U15 should be a strong group of players because the Pee Wee U13 teams that supply the new players have been very good the last few seasons. I am looking forward to it. The organization asked me to take on an assistant who played quite a lot and wants to get into coaching. He seems like a good fit. Yesterday my son got his acceptance letter to Law school in Calgary and it sounds like he wants to choose here and if he does he wants to help coach as well. So one old guy and two assistants in their 20's should work well.
A girl I have been doing private sessions with the last 3 years recently signed a 'letter of intent' to go to the current NCAA Div. 1 Champs in 2015. I did two sessions with her Easter weekend. They are giving her a Full Ride, which means they really want her. That is what putting in the extra time and effort means.
SMAC
Quote by: TomMI have decided to move back to boy's hockey and will be coaching a Bantam AA team next year in the Calgary Royals Association.
The team will be mostly first year Bantams; so 13 and 14 year old players. Lots of emphasis on skill development.
The first talent id camp is May 2-4 and tryouts are in late August.
Congrats, Tom - they are lucky to have you!
This is the age range (2000-2001) that I'll be coaching this year, so would you mind posting your practice plans a little earlier in the week? ;-)
One wrinkle that we're seeing in spring hockey is the 2001 cohort have played with bodychecking 2 years ago then none last year and now again... with growth and testosterone affecting about half the group, it's quite a different mix of player roles and effectiveness. Injuries are up again, too. As always, your approach of 'thinking the game' first allows skill and team play to determine success.
Let me know if you plan any west coast road trips!
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Ice Sage
I won't know anything about the kind or tournaments they want to attend until we pick the team and the parents decide how much money they want to kick in for travelling. The 85 born group I had for two springs went to Vancouver at the start of July to play in eh Snepts tournament and other teams went to bantam and midget tourney's. So who knows.
Sounds like a fun year . I had a 25 year old helping me this year ( I'm 55 ) Fantastic coach, worked incredibly well together . So well we won Provincials ( Alberta ) . These young men will be in for an incredible season with you - good luck !!!!
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SMAC, sound like you had a great season and a fantastic experience.
I let them know I want Jim as an asst. and it sounds like it is a go. He can do the F and Alex the D and I will organize the practices.
SMAC
This link allows access to the drills and games that are in the booklets but you can see the titles and view them one at a time.
http://1drv.ms/1huk1bu
This weekend there is a talent ID camp for the Bantam U15 Royals. There are 4 teams with 36 skaters and 12 goalies divided equally. They will have one practice with two teams on the ice at once and then play 3 games.
Niklas Westerlund wrote a Thesis for his degree in Finland. He talks about the Finnish view of 'Our Game' and he quotes from Juhani and my book quite a few times. I have attached his Thesis for anyone who is interested in the Finns view of how the game should be practiced.
Ice Sage, I was just looking at your earlier posting about the 2001 having body checking their fiirst year in U13 and then none their second year. Now they are going into U15 Bantam hockey which has full contact.
The posting I made with the Swedish and Finnish material on body checking as well as some clips from when I was with the Red Bulls has some good ideas about teaching body checking.
I will be using a lot of these drills next season.
Quote by: TomMThe 2013 part of the season has been very challenging. I thought we would have an offensive powerhouse this year but the top 3 forwards and top 2 defense who I thought were coming back went to sport schools. The conventional wisdom seems to be that if you spend a lot of money on tuition and hockey fees to a sports school (between 30-45 000) it translates into you being offered a scholarship to university. It isn't true as almost every graduating player from my first two seasons with the team is playing at a university or college. Two of my 96 born who are still with our team have already signed 'letters of intent' to CIS schools and another is talking to an eastern university. Last year we had two graduate Flyer defense playing in the CIS National Championship tournament.
But as the standard hockey saying goes, 'It is what it is."
So we were almost starting over when the season began with ten new players. My plan has been to help them get better at every skill and improve their fitness level. An the average week is: Monday - spin class on exercise bikes. Tuesday and Wednesday both are 90 minute on ice practices with lots of emphasis on skills and game sense. Thursday - off. Friday a 75 minute practice practice with about 30 minutes of skill at high tempo and 45 minutes of team play. Sat - Sunday games.
We have played 21 league games so far. The first 10 games we were 2-6-2 and the last 11 games we are 4-4-3. This weekend we played the top two teams in our division and tied 3-3 vs. the second place team and beat the top team 2-1.
I have tried to find a forecheck that fits this group of players. I don't have many high energy players who want to be on the puck and cause turn-overs and my D have scored only 1 goal. So really aggressive forechecks haven't worked. The 2-1-2 with F3 high and a strong side pinch when the D is sure and weak side pinch on a rim works for this group better than the aggressive forechecks we tried or the 1-2-2. I also changed the penalty kill to be more contain than pressure for the same reasons.
Take away a 7-7 tie and we only average 1.3 GF a game, so our margin of error is very small. Most of our games are 2-1, 1-2, 2-3, 3-2. This weekend we scored 5 goals and if we can keep this up we will do well. Our defensive play is good but of course it can get better.
I have basically rolled lines all season. You are only as strong as your weakest link and we have some players who have never played AAA before and the league is 96-97-98 born players. The ones with lots of potential are the 98 born and they have to get used to playing vs. players two years older than them. 4 of our 5 goals this weekend were scored by first year players. So they are coming on.
17 skaters is such a clumsy number to work into games. I don't know why HC has that number. 18 skaters like in the NHL and college gives you 4 lines and 3 sets of D. We have 10 F and 7 D. We now go with 3 lines and two wingers and a different centre double shifts each period to make 4 lines. That centre doesn't kill penalties when double shifting. I know we could have a few more wins and ties if I put on the best players as much as possible like the other teams in the league do but the most important thing is how good we are in the Mac's tournament which starts Dec. 26 and then the play-offs.
The players all come to every practice and fitness session (except when sick or injured) and I think it is important to reward them by allowing them to play and give them a reason to work at getting better. This philosophy isn't popular with all of the parents, especially some of the third year parents who have told me that in their opinion the 96 born should play more because they are in their last year and they have earned the right to more ice time, power play time, etc.
Maybe some people are 'entitled' but my view is that the whole team has to improve and be given opportunity. We do put on the players who are having a good game if we need a goal or need to hold a lead in the last few minutes and one player does get to double shift because of the 17 skaters but it is based on merit and right now two of the three C's who do this are first years.
The Mac's Tournament is really big in Calgary. The press supports it and lots of people come to every game. My captains are going to a press conference this week where they announce the teams. There is a boy's and girl's tournament going on at the same time. One of my Finnish friends is coaching the Finland U17 team that is playing on the boy's side. So the first 4 months has been to prepare for this tournament and the way we are playing now I think we have as good a chance as anyone. Three of our 4 wins in the last 11 games have been vs. the top team in the north and south divisions.
So the season has been a real challenge but it has been fun because this group of players wants to get better. They come to practice and work hard. A coach can't ask for more than that. I can see them improving all of the time and I hope they get rewarded with more W's and team success.
As far as coaching goes, we will keep working on skills and good habits until they become automatic.
Dave, I checked it and everything is there. It starts with DWC 10-11 then 11-12 then DWC 13-14. I wasn't a member in 12-13.
I have to fix the pdf in the files section. It is too big at 102 mb and doesn't load on my devices. The whole thing is over 500 pages. I will have to put it in smaller sections.
Tom
'Enjoy the Game'