

is it just me or is this comical? is this a bit overkill. I understand high school and above.
Moderators: Mitch Hawker, east hockey, karl(east)
justhavefun wrote:A co-worker of mine told me today about her son's hockey team. They have to dress up to show up to the arena, walk in the door, go to the locker room then change into sweats to do pregame stretchingher son's in 6th grade
is it just me or is this comical? is this a bit overkill. I understand high school and above.
I have had coaches do this to teach dicipline and team building. Not my gig but if he is a good coach let him teach your kids some other life lessons. overkill probably but it won't kill her kid to comb his hair prior to games either. I would say make sure that you support the coach whatever he is doing and don't sell him out with an excuse for little Johnny..he might learn personal responsibility.play4fun wrote:justhavefun wrote:A co-worker of mine told me today about her son's hockey team. They have to dress up to show up to the arena, walk in the door, go to the locker room then change into sweats to do pregame stretchingher son's in 6th grade
is it just me or is this comical? is this a bit overkill. I understand high school and above.
We're not talking about the Fire, right?
Our previous organization required every player to wear the following to all games home and away.A co-worker of mine told me today about her son's hockey team. They have to dress up to show up to the arena, walk in the door, go to the locker room then change into sweats to do pregame stretching her son's in 6th grade
is it just me or is this comical? is this a bit overkill. I understand high school and above
Wow, that's a chatty co-workerjusthavefun wrote:Thank you for your comments. I can see how "A" Bantams and up can where it. PW and below, I really question. JR kids maybe, Elementary?? NO way. funny when kids change at home to nice pants and a shirt (Plus wore out tennis shoes) walk in the arena door, the change to sweats. No one saw them walk in. In fact the coach wasen't isn't even there yet. then he shows up in jeans, looks like he just came form the construction sight. Much easier for the Coach to get cleaned up, then the elementary child..
Please tell me where is this construction site you speak of!!justhavefun wrote:Thank you for your comments. I can see how "A" Bantams and up can where it. PW and below, I really question. JR kids maybe, Elementary?? NO way. funny when kids change at home to nice pants and a shirt (Plus wore out tennis shoes) walk in the arena door, the change to sweats. No one saw them walk in. In fact the coach wasen't isn't even there yet. then he shows up in jeans, looks like he just came form the construction sight. Much easier for the Coach to get cleaned up, then the elementary child..
it is one of Obama's Green jobs... Wait lets not turn political on this site.GreekChurch wrote:Please tell me where is this construction site you speak of!!justhavefun wrote:Thank you for your comments. I can see how "A" Bantams and up can where it. PW and below, I really question. JR kids maybe, Elementary?? NO way. funny when kids change at home to nice pants and a shirt (Plus wore out tennis shoes) walk in the arena door, the change to sweats. No one saw them walk in. In fact the coach wasen't isn't even there yet. then he shows up in jeans, looks like he just came form the construction sight. Much easier for the Coach to get cleaned up, then the elementary child..
Not all that much different from what I require from our PW-A team. I expect a respect for the game, the team, their team mates, the rink and their opponents. Dressing is a formality yes. But anyone who wants the kids to feel part of a better "group" knows that building routine, builds morale and a "collective" feel. The kids sort of were wondering, but when the moms, dads and folks all let them know they are "stylin" They really get the feeling of being proud they are part of something.justhavefun wrote:A co-worker of mine told me today about her son's hockey team. They have to dress up to show up to the arena, walk in the door, go to the locker room then change into sweats to do pregame stretchingher son's in 6th grade
is it just me or is this comical? is this a bit overkill. I understand high school and above.
Get RealMaverick1999 wrote:It is more about getting mentally prepared for a game. When you are getting dressed in your shirt and tie before you leave for the game, it is time to reflect and get prepared for the task at hand. I think of it as getting ready to go to the office, cause there is a job to do!!
ThePuckStopsHere wrote:Get RealMaverick1999 wrote:It is more about getting mentally prepared for a game. When you are getting dressed in your shirt and tie before you leave for the game, it is time to reflect and get prepared for the task at hand. I think of it as getting ready to go to the office, cause there is a job to do!!That my friend is the dumbest thing I have heard all day
It is much less of a mental game at 12 years old than at 20.Maverick1999 wrote:Typical MN Hockey responses. Stop comparing hockey to school. Hockey is just as much a mental game as a physical game. And if you do not think so I question how much hockey you have even played yourself.
how is team unity different at pw a's and ba a's then any other travelling team? ophrah, i will hang up and listenFaceguard79 wrote:For A PeeWees and A Bantams I think it teaches team unity and respect for the game and your opponent. I also think it should be each team's decision, I also like the matching warm up suits some teams wear, to me they make much more sense than Khaki's and dress shirts and shoes.