Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
This is a losing mentality. Play at the highest level you can and you will develop faster if you choose to push yourself. The younger you can do it, the better. Its extremely difficult to break into AAA after U14. This is terrible advice.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
Poor advice from our experience. If your child is able to crack a AAA roster, even as a 3rd liner on a weak team, accept the offer if you can afford it. The development will be better, they will be on the ice more, and they will be playing against the best teams and players in the loop. My oldest child made a AAA at u10 where he was a 3rd liner. The following 2 years he dropped down to AA so he could get more shifts and score more goals. When he went back for the u13 AAA tryouts with the same team and many of the same players he played with at u10, the group was unrecognizable. The speed and skill of the game had gotten away from him even though he was 'the guy' in AA.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Obviously there will be others where the AA experience works out for them and they can successfully transition back to AAA, but for us we regret not keeping our son in AAA and allowing him to grind it out and earn his minutes.
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
Great advice. If you like the coach and you have a AAA spot, go for it..Guest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 10:41 amPoor advice from our experience. If your child is able to crack a AAA roster, even as a 3rd liner on a weak team, accept the offer if you can afford it. The development will be better, they will be on the ice more, and they will be playing against the best teams and players in the loop. My oldest child made a AAA at u10 where he was a 3rd liner. The following 2 years he dropped down to AA so he could get more shifts and score more goals. When he went back for the u13 AAA tryouts with the same team and many of the same players he played with at u10, the group was unrecognizable. The speed and skill of the game had gotten away from him even though he was 'the guy' in AA.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Obviously there will be others where the AA experience works out for them and they can successfully transition back to AAA, but for us we regret not keeping our son in AAA and allowing him to grind it out and earn his minutes.
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
It's all about being in the right situation for your child and your family. If that's AAA or AA, it's all about what's best for you personally.Guest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 11:05 amGreat advice. If you like the coach and you have a AAA spot, go for it..Guest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 10:41 amPoor advice from our experience. If your child is able to crack a AAA roster, even as a 3rd liner on a weak team, accept the offer if you can afford it. The development will be better, they will be on the ice more, and they will be playing against the best teams and players in the loop. My oldest child made a AAA at u10 where he was a 3rd liner. The following 2 years he dropped down to AA so he could get more shifts and score more goals. When he went back for the u13 AAA tryouts with the same team and many of the same players he played with at u10, the group was unrecognizable. The speed and skill of the game had gotten away from him even though he was 'the guy' in AA.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Obviously there will be others where the AA experience works out for them and they can successfully transition back to AAA, but for us we regret not keeping our son in AAA and allowing him to grind it out and earn his minutes.
Obviously you want your child to play at the highest level possible so you can come on here and brag anonymously but you need to decide what you the best fit is.
Is it winning?
Is it development?
Is it minimal politics?
Is it travel?
What's the end goal? (OHL, College, JR A/B/C)
The list goes on.
No one should tell you what to do you. You need to decide for yourself.
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
the AAA teams at the bottom of the league tend to have poor coaching and AA quality players. These teams are not going to help your kid develop the right work ethic or habitsGuest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 9:59 amThis is a losing mentality. Play at the highest level you can and you will develop faster if you choose to push yourself. The younger you can do it, the better. Its extremely difficult to break into AAA after U14. This is terrible advice.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
If you noticed i said play on the TOP AA teams not just AA
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
What would have been different? Do you think he would have enjoyed playing less minutes and losing at AAA more than he did at AA?Guest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 10:41 amPoor advice from our experience. If your child is able to crack a AAA roster, even as a 3rd liner on a weak team, accept the offer if you can afford it. The development will be better, they will be on the ice more, and they will be playing against the best teams and players in the loop. My oldest child made a AAA at u10 where he was a 3rd liner. The following 2 years he dropped down to AA so he could get more shifts and score more goals. When he went back for the u13 AAA tryouts with the same team and many of the same players he played with at u10, the group was unrecognizable. The speed and skill of the game had gotten away from him even though he was 'the guy' in AA.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Obviously there will be others where the AA experience works out for them and they can successfully transition back to AAA, but for us we regret not keeping our son in AAA and allowing him to grind it out and earn his minutes.
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
If this were true, and its not, you're still playing against top teams and gaining valuable experience you cant get in AA. Its a whole different level with a higher pace of development regardless of what level team you're on. Show me a single AA player that jumped up to a top tier AAA team, it doesn't happen. It also takes the months to catch up to the speed of the game.Guest wrote: ↑Tue Apr 01, 2025 8:21 amthe AAA teams at the bottom of the league tend to have poor coaching and AA quality players. These teams are not going to help your kid develop the right work ethic or habitsGuest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 9:59 amThis is a losing mentality. Play at the highest level you can and you will develop faster if you choose to push yourself. The younger you can do it, the better. Its extremely difficult to break into AAA after U14. This is terrible advice.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
If you noticed i said play on the TOP AA teams not just AA
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
I think he would have continued developing alongside the other players on his AAA team, being challenged more in practices and in games by being surrounded by better competition, learned to understand and enjoy 'the process', and continued doing extras to catch up and hopefully surpass some of those players to earn more minutes. It's all speculative, but my point was that from our experience, dropping down to AA for 2 years to build his confidence did not translate to being a better AAA player - it set him back even further. Again, this is just our experience and i'm sure others have done this successfully and have differing opinions.Guest wrote: ↑Tue Apr 01, 2025 8:23 amWhat would have been different? Do you think he would have enjoyed playing less minutes and losing at AAA more than he did at AA?Guest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 10:41 amPoor advice from our experience. If your child is able to crack a AAA roster, even as a 3rd liner on a weak team, accept the offer if you can afford it. The development will be better, they will be on the ice more, and they will be playing against the best teams and players in the loop. My oldest child made a AAA at u10 where he was a 3rd liner. The following 2 years he dropped down to AA so he could get more shifts and score more goals. When he went back for the u13 AAA tryouts with the same team and many of the same players he played with at u10, the group was unrecognizable. The speed and skill of the game had gotten away from him even though he was 'the guy' in AA.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
Obviously there will be others where the AA experience works out for them and they can successfully transition back to AAA, but for us we regret not keeping our son in AAA and allowing him to grind it out and earn his minutes.
Re: Credit River Capitals - Coach and Feeder Teams
Now keep in mind I am not talking about middle of the pack or even competitive AAA teams. Take for Example this years U13 CRC team. They got blown out by literally every team in the league including the bottom teams. Does that sound like an environment that will provide valuable experience?Guest wrote: ↑Tue Apr 01, 2025 9:41 amGuest wrote: ↑Tue Apr 01, 2025 8:21 amthe AAA teams at the bottom of the league tend to have poor coaching and AA quality players. These teams are not going to help your kid develop the right work ethic or habitsGuest wrote: ↑Mon Mar 31, 2025 9:59 amThis is a losing mentality. Play at the highest level you can and you will develop faster if you choose to push yourself. The younger you can do it, the better. Its extremely difficult to break into AAA after U14. This is terrible advice.Guest wrote: ↑Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:59 am So my recommendation for any players looking to play AAA for U14 and younger
Take an honest look at your child and their skills.
Are they able to play on the top 2 lines/top4 D on the better/Mid pack AAA teams?
If not you are better off playing on a top AA team with a good coach and using the difference in fees for more ice time.
Your kid will develop more have more fun and enjoy the year more.
Remember that the bottom AAA teams are only going to have AA players with maybe 1-2 real AAA players on them
If you noticed i said play on the TOP AA teams not just AA
If this were true, and its not, you're still playing against top teams and gaining valuable experience you cant get in AA. Its a whole different level with a higher pace of development regardless of what level team you're on. Show me a single AA player that jumped up to a top tier AAA team, it doesn't happen. It also takes the months to catch up to the speed of the game.
the AAA teams ranked 30+ are really just AAA in name but AA in quality with the exception of maybe a couple of their top players
Also when I talk about TOP AA teams I refer to the top 10 teams in AA. All of whom would be equality as competitive as those 30+ ranked AAA teams
As far AA players moving to the TOP teams I am sure it happens (not often) but I am sure it does probably as much as the chance of a player on the bottom AAA team does of moving to the TOP teams. David Perron played AA at U15 and this year is his 20th in the NHL
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