Title: Achieving Your Hockey Goals
1Achieving Your Hockey Goals
- Stephanie Gray
- Girls Director, Northern Plains District
- And
- Titia Leisz
- Girls Director, Wyoming
May 1, 2009 GIRLS Northern Plains District Player
Development Camp
2What next?
- Womens Adult Hockey
- Collegiate Club Hockey
- Post-graduate hockey
- Division I, II and III Womens Programs
3What are the numbers?
- D-1 32 Teams, 776 players 496 US (64), 258 CAN
(33.2) - D-3 37 Teams 1,070 players 916 US (86), 152
CAN (14) - All Women There were 1,847 female players.
- There were 1,413 female players from the United
States (76.5) and 410 from Canada (22.2). - The leading sources of female players last year
Minnesota (370), Massachusetts (206) and Ontario
(205). - Registered USA Hockey numbers (12.5) 1/8
- ACHA Div 1-2 1,125 Female Players (16.7) 1/6
4Typical Questions
- What is my best route to college hockey? Is there
more than one option? - Where do I fit?
- How important are academics?
- What is best for me?
- How do I get noticed?
- If I am a good player, will they find me?
- What role should my current coach play?
5Typical Routes to NCAA Womens Hockey
- Prep School (72 boys 56 girls programs, /-)
- Solid Academics plus who do they play?
- Placements Where are girls being placed?
- Cost
- Distance from Family
- Public High School sanctioned /accredited
- USA Hockey Tier 1 (ages 18 under)
- 9,000 U.S. 24,980 Canadian Girls ages 15 to
20
6Factor to Consider When Selecting Your Route to
College Hockey
- Academic Impact NCAA eligibility
- Reputation of the Program History
- Recruiting foot print
- Location you should visit before committing
- Cost Direct Indirect
- Be Realistic play or watch
- Are they really interested in you?
- Social Aspects
- Coach
7What is important to the coach?
- Academics - note for every Athletic Scholarship
dollar there are 12 Academic scholarship dollars - Passion Purpose Hungry Spirit
- Mental Toughness Discipline
- Training Nutrition Strength
- Practice habits Coach-ability
- Respect
- Skills
- Hockey Sense
- Team Player accept your role
- Character Counts
8181 College Hockey Programs(includes Mens
Womens)
- SAT Scores of Schools you ACT
- (Verbal Math only) Qualify for
- 1400 181 Avg ACT 31
- 1200 to 1299 153
- 1100 to 1199 115
- 1000 to 1099 75
- 900 to 999 17 Avg ACT 17
9NCAA Female Players Where they came from -
2007-2008
- Division 1 Women 776 players (258, 33 Canada)
- Minnesota 136, 17.7
- Massachusetts 71, 7.4
- New York 40, 5.4
- Connecticut 25, 3.2
- Illinois 20, 2.5
- Division 3 Women 1,070 players (152, 14
Canada) - Minnesota 233, 21.7
- Massachusetts 148, 13.8
- New York 103, 9.6
- Michigan 61, 5.7
- Wisconsin 49, 4.6
10- Division I 34 Womens Programs
- 776 Females (1/8 12.0)
- Leagues HEA, ECAC, AHA, CHA, WCHA, CCHA
- 18 full scholarships per team maximum (1/450
0.22) 190 new scholarships each year - Operating budgets 875,000 to 2,000,000
average 1,100,000 - Must register through NCAA Clearinghouse
Eligibility Center - Academic Certification in 16 Core Subjects
- Recruiting
- Can have 7 contacts/evaluations in Senior year
(5 official visits) - Can receive written materials after September 1
in Junior year - 34 games per year
- 30 player roster 62 females are U.S.
Citizens - Full time professional coaching
- NCAA National Championship
11- Division 2 2 Womens Programs
- 48 females per year
- ECAC III East
- 18 full female scholarships per team
- Must register through NCAA Clearinghouse
Eligibility Center - Academic Certification in 14 Core Subjects
- Recruiting
- Can contact June 15 before Senior year
- 5 official visits
- 30 games per year
- 22 to 25 players on roster
- Full time professional coaching
- Similar to Division I, but No NCAA
National Championship -
2008
12- Division 3 37 Womens Programs
- 1,070 females
- Leagues NESCAC, MIAC, ECAC, SUNYAC, NCHA,
IND - No athletic scholarships
- Operating budget average 250,000
- Official visits only one per school
- Unlimited contacts
- One expense paid official visit
- 28 games per season
- 30 to 35 players on roster
- Full time professional coaching
- NCAA National Championship
13ACHA Non Varsity College Hockey
- Since 1991
- Division 1 - 17 women programs
- Division 2 28 women programs
- 25 to 30 players on playing roster
- Part-time coaching staff varies by school
- Members of USA Hockey 501 (c) (3)
- Standard college admission process
- Tuition based varies from program to program
- Player Fee
- Range from 0 to 2,500 -Average 1,000 to
1,500 - ACHA / NCAA National Championship
- Tier II can play at this level (1 /10 10)
14Northern Plains DistrictCurrent College Players
- Division 1
- MT 1 (Prep. School)
- ND 5
- SD 0
- WY 1
- Division 3
- MT 0
- ND 7
- SD 2
- WY 1
152007-2008 Freshman What programs did they come
from?
- Program Div. 1 Div.
3 Total - U.S. Prep Private Schools 78 97 175
- USA Hockey Associations 62 98 160
- Canadian Hockey Associations 61 29 90
- U.S. Public High Schools 52 146 198
- Canadian Prep Private 17 16 33
- Europe 13 0 13
- Canadian Public High schools 6 3 9
16WCHA Western Collegiate Hockey Association
17ECAC Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference
18- Womens Hockey
- Womens National Team
- Competes yearly in
- Four Nations Cup
- IIHF Womens World Championship
- Competes every 4 years in
- Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, February 2010
- Blaine (MN) Residency Program
- Started in 2008. Play games against the WCHA
women's teams, local boys' teams and men's
league teams, as well as the professional
women's hockey team in Minnesota, the
Whitecaps. - How Players are Selected
- Womens National Festival Performance Camp
- Under 22 Camp (Invited from college programs)
- Womens National Festival
- Open Tryouts in May, 2009. (Boston
Minneapolis)
19Womens Hockey
- Under 22 Womens National Team
- Competes yearly
- Under 22 Series v. Canada
- How Players are Selected
- Under 22 Camp (Invited from college programs)
- Under 18 Womans National Team (since 2007)
- Competes yearly
- Under 18 Series v. Canada
- IIHF Womens World U18 Championships
- (won last 2 championship v. Canada!)
- How Players are Selected
- National Player Development Camps
-
20KEYS TO GETTING NOTICED SUMMARY
- Be academically attractive
- Select a good skill development program
- Select a program with a history of moving players
to the next level. - Target recruiting area(s)
- Your coach must be your strongest advocate
- Alumni speak on your behalf
- Participate in USA Hockey District National
Tournaments - Participate in USA Hockey District National
Camps - Showcase Camps-Rinksport, Chowder Cup, NAHA
- Pick commercial camps carefully skill vs.
games, staff and record of alumni - Give your best at all times you never know who
is watching
21Post College Hockey
- Recreational Hockey
- Coaching youth hockey local assn
- Referee Program
- Local Association
- National and International
- Professional Coaching
- High School Prep School
- College
- Hockey Schools, Summer camps
22References
- Thomas Keegan College Hockey Guides 2008/2009
- www.nhl.com
- www.ncaa.org
- www.usahockey.com
- www.achahockey.org
- www.collegehockey.com
- www.prephockey.org
- www.achahockey.org
- www.playcollegehockey.com
- Rae Briggle - USAH Assistant Executive Director,
Member Services - Scott Borek University of New Hampshire NCAA
Hockey vs. CHL - Jeff Sauer former Head Coach University of
Wisconsin - Jim Johannson USAH Assistant Executive
Director, Hockey Operations - Al Bloomer Opportunities in Hockey - 2008
- THANK YOU GOOD LUCK!
23College Hockey . . . Live It!!!
24Discussion Panel
25- Prep School Kelli Vossler Natl Sport
Academy Lake Placid, New York - Tier I 19U Dan Clafton Andrew
Downing Minnesota Crunch Grand Rapids,
Minnesota - ACHA College Leif Snyder Minot State
University
26- NCAA Div 3 Terry Manon St. Marys
University Winona, Minnesota - NCAA Div 3 Joel Vannett Concordia College
Moorhead, Minnesota - High School Calla Lundquist Blaine High
School - Blaine, Minnesota