YOUNG COACHES??

Discussion of Minnesota Youth Hockey

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youngcoach
Posts: 9
Joined: Sat Mar 01, 2008 3:18 pm

YOUNG COACHES??

Post by youngcoach »

I'm 17 years old and I'm a coach on a Squirt A team. I was wondering if I'm the youngest rostered coach in the state??


Can anyone beat me??
CoachJ
Posts: 179
Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2008 4:10 pm

Post by CoachJ »

Happy to see some associations give a coach a chance at your age.


Is your Dad on the Team?


Or do you already have a kid at the squirt level?


Just kidding

Keep up the good work
youngcoach
Posts: 9
Joined: Sat Mar 01, 2008 3:18 pm

Post by youngcoach »

Nope I'm coaching my brother.

Thanks
bigpoppababy
Posts: 87
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2007 10:41 pm

Post by bigpoppababy »

Actually, my 14 year old is a rostered coach for my daughters team. We told him that he either did some volunteering, or help coach the mini mites. He chose the lesser of two evils lol. I love how the kids respond to him as a coach. They really enjoy having an older kid they look up to helping them. Hats off to you for coaching!!
jackstraw
Posts: 316
Joined: Thu May 18, 2006 12:58 pm

Young Hero

Post by jackstraw »

High school junior ran the in-house squirt program in Albert Lea. He did a fantastic job and the young kids really looked up to him, actually, I am an adult and I look up to him for that!
Cabela10
Posts: 292
Joined: Thu Feb 08, 2007 3:23 am

Post by Cabela10 »

youngcoach wrote:Nope I'm coaching my brother.

Thanks
So you are an assistant coach? Make sure you don't favor your brother during practice and drills. You have to treat your brother the same way you treat the other players.
Rocket78
Posts: 358
Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2007 6:14 pm
Location: Douglas

Post by Rocket78 »

All of these kids under 18 are (or are supposed to be) Student Coaches and not registered coaches. To be a USA Hockey certified coach you must be 18 years old. If they are rostered as coaches then their District Registrar was snoozing when he approved they roster. Anyone under the age of 18 on the bench needs to wear a helmet and mask too.

It's great to get the younger people involved in coaching. Many of them have a perspective that older coaches will not have. In some cases and older coaches no longer has (or never did have) the ability to demonstrate a drill or skill. On the flipside, the young coaches are not really equipped with the life experiences to handle conflict resolution with angry parents, referees, player rivalries etc. If you ask referee's opinions, they generally don't like the younger coaches because they are more likely to be mouthy and know-it-alls. Our association allowed 3 recent D-3 grads to coach one of the bantam A teams and I think every ref in town has had a bad experience with them. We also had another bantam team coached by a D-1 grad who was paired with older coaches and they worked out well since there were older adults to provide balance.
goldy313
Posts: 3949
Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2002 11:56 am

Post by goldy313 »

Not all levels of hockey resiter their players with USA Hockey. Some associations choose not to register kids as a cost saver or to avoid the hassles. If you're a house team there really is no need to be registered.
Rocket78
Posts: 358
Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2007 6:14 pm
Location: Douglas

Post by Rocket78 »

goldy, you're probably correct. I think that some house & mite programs do that to save money.

I hope that nobody ever gets hurt because they will not be covered by the insurance and if they use the USA Hockey certified referees for games they put the refs at risk. USA Hockey registered teams should not play them either. If everything is kept in house and theyuse non-registered refs they are probably ok. Of course you can always sue somebody if there is an injury :oops: .
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