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Showing content with the highest reputation on 1/4/2023 in all areas

  1. It does seem like additional changes are likely. I have no inside information but it doesn't seem like Black Bear and Esmark are quite on the same page. This has been speculated before but that long-rumored second sheet of ice at Printscape will have a big ripple effect. Everyone and their brother has been saying for about a month now that it's a basically a done deal. I'm skeptical. There are an absurd number of moving parts to make that happen. My guess is that if Black Bear is unable to make an announcement about a second sheet at Printscape in the next week or so, it's likely not going to happen for next season. But if (and that's a big if) they do announce an additional sheet of ice under Black Bear control, here are some possible outcomes that seem somewhat likely... Esmark and Black Bear come to some arrangement and Esmark moves to Southpointe. Esmark tryout registrations would absolutely skyrocket if this happened. I think the numbers would shock a lot of people. And if they don't force high school kids to pay private school tuition, there may finally be somewhat of a PPE competitor in Pittsburgh. Black Bear decides to keep letting Esmark use PIA, and Esmark continues to struggle fielding solid AAA teams, and continues to lose out to "lesser" organizations in the south hills like SHAHA and Preds. Esmark plays in a bad location for many, and there is already a lot of competition from Tier 1 only organizations north of the city. Black Bear starts their fully owned/controlled AAA Tier 1 only program at Southpointe. If they do this correctly, this would rob SHAHA, Preds, and a lot of those south hills kids driving to New Ken or Harmarville to play AAA hockey. Black Bear wins (market share, revenue) in a big way with option 1 and 3, but if option 2 happens I think it hurts Black Bear. Esmark will continue to decline in competitiveness and reputation. But again, I don't think the second sheet at Southpointe is happening. If it is, Black Bear better get in gear and make an announcement. Orgs will be planning tryouts within a few weeks.
    2 points
  2. So much this. Have been through it with a kid and about to with another. Trust me keeping your grades and test scores up are the best way to get a scholarship. So much time and money wasted chasing an almost impossible dream of division 1 full ride. Not to mention put that money towards college and they will have a full ride to begin with.
    2 points
  3. Once adults figured out that there was money to be made it was all over. It's every sport, happening for decades. https://changingthegameproject.com/the-professionalization-of-youth-sports/ Parents want their kid to play on the same teams as the other kids their kid started with. Their kids want that. So they jump onto the hamster wheel of lessons and summer hockey and AAA. It is hard not to give in to the peer pressure. Parents also think this is all leading to college scholarships, too. Most don't really think their kid is NHL material.Many have no idea that NCAA D1 is the only place this happens. I have a pretty good hockey player. People assume my kid is going to get a scholarship to play hockey and when I explain that we are likely going to continue to pay lots of money for him to play because like 90 percent of the hockey kids playing, he is not D1 material, and they are so shocked... because their kid is not playing at my kids level, so if my kid isn't getting anything, then guess who else isn't? People really do have some vague idea that this will lead to money for school. Grades. Grades and high SAT scores may get you money for school. (School is test optional? Well, that SAT score, if good, may help get merit money.)
    2 points
  4. Take some JuCo or Community College classes instead of a freshman year and you might come out even
    1 point
  5. Word is these clowns still use fax machines.......no, I am not kidding. That is all you need to know about progress and innovation / lack thereof going on here.
    1 point
  6. Bottom line! If you are in Youth Hockey to get your kid a scholarship you are plain and simple wasting your time and money. Probably a better chance to hit the lottery! It's hard in all sports but almost impossible in Hockey for all the reasons stated above! I've got eyes wide open now and hope mine are just playing for the love of the sport. Although I would probably still let mine try to play Juniors if he really wants to try. I've wasted far more money on far less endeavors.
    1 point
  7. https://www.midamhockey.com/page/show/5022993-board-contacts Here are the board members and their contacts. Of course there are like 9 DEI administrators but where are the the player development people? Everyone should take the time to contact some of them although don't hold your breath waiting for a response. They are only active when suspending players and Coaches. MidAm somehow is actually worse than DC when it comes to being a swamp. Switaj has been the Coach in Chief for at least 25 years. The top 3 lines of members probably have a combined tenure of over 200 years and with what to show for it? Add in Switaj, Santora, Colligan and Borkowski and you have 3 Centuries of failures. The problem is, they don't hold open and public elections. 5-6 people control EVERYTHING that happens and will continue to until they are ousted.
    1 point
  8. Whoa. Talk about a district completely underperforming and failing to advance players. I knew it was bad, but didn't know it was this bad.
    1 point
  9. According to a Facebook post by Pittsburgh Ice Arena, Esmark will be offered ice there. PIA will offer ice to the Huskies and Esmark. Which now begs the question is Esmark gonna move from NHAHA to Huskies? There are comments on the post about it by NHAHA board members who seem to think that Esmark is staying with NHAHA but Id be curious to know what Esmark coaches/operators have to say. If PIA/BB was working a deal with Huskies on the side, whats stopping them from doing the same with Esmark? It could be Esmark moves to Printscape under Rebellion. AMR24 is a board member on NHAHA, she may have more info. There was an earlier post suggesting that move, to pick up talent from that part of the area, which makes sense. Is Kosick or Yuri on here? Maybe they can clear up the speculation. Idc, im just watching and waiting to see what happens. Either way, its clear that you either cooperate with BB or they arent afraid to explore alternatives in parallel.
    1 point
  10. In the 1990s, there were 3 triple A organizations - Steel City/Pittsburgh Stars, Mt. Lebanon/Pittsburgh Hornets, and Amateur (later Junior) Penguins. I believe the Amateur Penguins was the only one of those three to be AAA in the 1980s. A lot of things hurt HS hockey in the area. It hurt when the PIHL started to require things like minimum grades and students being enrolled in the school they played for. All of a sudden, there was some off-ice accountability. I am sure there was a lot of rule-bending that all of a sudden ended, and in some cases probably resulted in the death of some teams. Even mighty Meadville, who dominated the 1990s, was a victim around 10-15 years ago when it came out that half of their players were enrolled at Cochranton HS and not Meadville (their justification was it is the same school district, and technically there was some precedent with Armstrong Central in the 1990s). Then the new wave of rinks in the 1990s and 2000s hurt because they increase ice fees to cover the cost of their newly constructed facilities. Somewhere around 2000, the Easton Synergy stick came out and normalized paying $100 for a stick, and about the same time, the top end skates starting increasing in price $50 or $100 every year. Top end skates were around $250 in 1995, and by 2005 they were double that. The other equipment crept up as well. Being more organized also drove up costs. Players had to have matching helmets and pants, nicer jerseys, etc. They look much better on and off the ice for sure, but it's not cheap to do that. So while hockey was always expensive, it got much more expensive. The number of new rinks also had a bit of an unintended consequence of increasing the difference between bad and good HS teams. If you watch one of those old games in the 1970s or 1980s, there are about 5-6 kids on the ice who can skate forward and backward and turn both ways , and the rest look like guys who started playing when they were 13-14. Nowadays, there are many more kids who started playing at an early age. I'm sure you all know, an average player can skate circles around a bad player. If you are a good player, but live in a district where your HS team is terrible, is it really any fun to get pounded 11-1 every game? It's no longer like the old days where you could at least be competitive with 3-4 average players. Plus, with kids at cyber schools, charters, and other alternative schools, and with kids jumping organizations at younger ages, representing your high school or community is just not as important to them. So anyhow, a whole lot happened, and I don't think you can blame any one thing. More like a death by 1000 paper cuts. I do think that the programs that have survived are generally much stronger today, and it does seem to have settled out over the last 5-10 years. The whole NCAA thing makes my head hurt. Someone here probably has stats on this, but there are around 60 NCAA teams, and each team has a maximum of 18 scholarships. A lot of teams don't grant 18 scholarships, and it's often more like 9-10 total scholarships they split up among the 25-30 players on their roster. On top of that, something like 35-40% of NCAA D1 hockey players are foreign, and I sort of assume that the scholarship dollars go much more in their direction. So anyhow, hardly any NCAA roster spots compared to the number of kids playing, and many of those people on those rosters are not scholarship players....oh and scholarships are only a 1 year commitment anyhow. Coach thinks you're not working out? He'll give your scholarship to another player and cut you. Just nothing like football, which is 130 teams in the highest tier of D1 and 85 scholarships per team. Or basketball, which is only 13 scholarships per team, but over 350 teams. In both cases, very few foreign players, certainly nowhere near what hockey has. https://www.ncsasports.org/mens-hockey/scholarships
    1 point
  11. When a person is so intertwined into things (DF), it usually isn't a good thing. As one can easily see, the nepotism runs deep in the world of hockey. I don't care for his work with CHE and yet he's now going to run PAHL too... glad I no longer have kids in that org. It was bad enough under Darcee.
    1 point
  12. There are lot's of officials out there giving back to the game. The question is do you want those guys working your game? People don't sit in the stands and appreciate that the official is giving back his time. Gas was also $1.15 in 1990, I assume skates and uniforms were less then to. Drive an hour to get to a game the $45 they pay you suddenly looks like a loss and not really time well spent. I would also guess that in 1990 you were paid with an envelope of cash, now your "additional income" is recorded online and you receive a nice fresh 1099 at the end of the year. People are not necessarily in it for the money but the money sure is nice when you eliminate the tax man and are arguably fairly compensated.
    1 point
  13. How many things can Dave Fryer be in charge of ? The chma, che & piho. He’s set to to be the next Pahl president next year. one of the few good things pihl has done - remove him years ago.
    1 point
  14. Happy Hockey Fan, Unless you are a member of USAH district or national staff, or in a position of administration in a league, you have no right to expect to see such a list of evals any more than you have a right to see the nightly evaluations of NHL officials. AND NO, you do not pay the officials' game fees.... you pay money for your kid to play at xyz org and xyz org in turn pays money to play in abc league... It Is abc league that is responsible for providing officials for their league games and in turn pay for the officials so if anyone gets to see such a list it should be the folks responsible for running the league - not some pissed off self important parent. Just like eval lists, discipline of officials is not normally something made public. I know of two officials that received 1 year USAH suspensions and many other occasions where officials were removed from the schedule for a month or more. The leagues were notified of the actions but it wasn't posted on the interwebs to satisfy the need for a pound of flesh.... Does the HR department where you work send out a memo to all employees detailing infractions and disciplinary actions taken against employees?
    1 point
  15. here's a link to more D1 freshman data for anyone interested
    0 points
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