by Guest » Wed Jan 01, 2025 8:46 pm
I agree I think all this talk about playing other sports is BS because elite hockey programs are literally going 5, 6, 7 days a week all year long. How are you supposed to do another sport? My kid used to do baseball and soccer in the summers, but now they have hockey practice 3 nights a week, gym session once a week, and a tournament every 2 or 3 weeks all summer long. So what nights is he supposed to do any other sport? But this is how a lot of teams train all year round, so you can't opt out of it or then you aren't participating or keeping up with the rest of the boys.
Maybe my thinking is old school that it's good to cross train in different sports, but the way elite hockey programs run these days you couldn't do another sport even if you wanted to!
(And yet our Canadian junior hockey players still look like crap against the USA and friggin Latvia! So what does that say about our training!)
I agree I think all this talk about playing other sports is BS because elite hockey programs are literally going 5, 6, 7 days a week all year long. How are you supposed to do another sport? My kid used to do baseball and soccer in the summers, but now they have hockey practice 3 nights a week, gym session once a week, and a tournament every 2 or 3 weeks all summer long. So what nights is he supposed to do any other sport? But this is how a lot of teams train all year round, so you can't opt out of it or then you aren't participating or keeping up with the rest of the boys.
Maybe my thinking is old school that it's good to cross train in different sports, but the way elite hockey programs run these days you couldn't do another sport even if you wanted to!
(And yet our Canadian junior hockey players still look like crap against the USA and friggin Latvia! So what does that say about our training!)