I get what your saying and to a point agree but in talking with a couple of good friends who are on the local wrestling board, hockey is the biggest recruiter they have right now. When people get flyers sent home with their kids and see that playing Squirt B hockey is going to cost $450 + $40 to USA Hockey before equipment, team fees, and travel (gas and lodging) you're going to see more kids never start hockey because it's unaffordable by the fourth grade for far too many people. Wrestling costs $25 K-8 plus a pair of shoes. Until hockey people figure out a way to hold costs down for at least some of the kids and have a path for simple rec leagues like baseball does they're in trouble.observer wrote: Recruiting lots of 5 and 6 year olds, both boys and girls, is the only way to grow your association. 12 year olds don't fall from trees and even if you could find a few late starters it's very difficult for them to catch up to the ones that started when they were 5.
How Affluence Affects Hockey Success
Moderators: Mitch Hawker, east hockey, karl(east)
How Affluence Affects Hockey Success
Note: This thread has been split off from the "Warroad Coach Resigns" thread, since we got a bit off topic. -Karl
I agree with the costs. My question has been to school and city officals as why don' they charge a rental fee for their facilities that will make money or at least cover the costs? Most youth athletics use city or school district facilities for nothing, but youth hockey has to pay hourly rates. Why?goldy313 wrote:I get what your saying and to a point agree but in talking with a couple of good friends who are on the local wrestling board, hockey is the biggest recruiter they have right now. When people get flyers sent home with their kids and see that playing Squirt B hockey is going to cost $450 + $40 to USA Hockey before equipment, team fees, and travel (gas and lodging) you're going to see more kids never start hockey because it's unaffordable by the fourth grade for far too many people. Wrestling costs $25 K-8 plus a pair of shoes. Until hockey people figure out a way to hold costs down for at least some of the kids and have a path for simple rec leagues like baseball does they're in trouble.observer wrote: Recruiting lots of 5 and 6 year olds, both boys and girls, is the only way to grow your association. 12 year olds don't fall from trees and even if you could find a few late starters it's very difficult for them to catch up to the ones that started when they were 5.
-
- Posts: 55
- Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2011 8:08 pm
Hockey up north is significantly cheaper in many places.mulefarm wrote:I agree with the costs. My question has been to school and city officals as why don' they charge a rental fee for their facilities that will make money or at least cover the costs? Most youth athletics use city or school district facilities for nothing, but youth hockey has to pay hourly rates. Why?goldy313 wrote:I get what your saying and to a point agree but in talking with a couple of good friends who are on the local wrestling board, hockey is the biggest recruiter they have right now. When people get flyers sent home with their kids and see that playing Squirt B hockey is going to cost $450 + $40 to USA Hockey before equipment, team fees, and travel (gas and lodging) you're going to see more kids never start hockey because it's unaffordable by the fourth grade for far too many people. Wrestling costs $25 K-8 plus a pair of shoes. Until hockey people figure out a way to hold costs down for at least some of the kids and have a path for simple rec leagues like baseball does they're in trouble.observer wrote: Recruiting lots of 5 and 6 year olds, both boys and girls, is the only way to grow your association. 12 year olds don't fall from trees and even if you could find a few late starters it's very difficult for them to catch up to the ones that started when they were 5.
Yes, hockey up north may be cheaper in some places. Warning: Higher rates ARE making their way north.
Looks like I will be giving up at least $310 next year for a squirt. Above that, 18 hours in the concession stand(optional $10 per hour buyout). I don't know what concession worker makes $10 per hour..... AND the regular fundraiser...selling pizzas, or last year...calendars..or you could buy that out too.
We do not live anywhere near the Twin Cities....though it is considered slightly up north if you live in the cities....
oh yeah, if the younger one plays next year, $50 to play for the first year, and 18 more hours in the concessions.....plus that many more calendars or pizzas.....
The price of hockey is ridiculous. I just look back and remember what my parents did for me and realize I have to do it. It is worth it to the kid who is growing up.
Looks like I will be giving up at least $310 next year for a squirt. Above that, 18 hours in the concession stand(optional $10 per hour buyout). I don't know what concession worker makes $10 per hour..... AND the regular fundraiser...selling pizzas, or last year...calendars..or you could buy that out too.
We do not live anywhere near the Twin Cities....though it is considered slightly up north if you live in the cities....
oh yeah, if the younger one plays next year, $50 to play for the first year, and 18 more hours in the concessions.....plus that many more calendars or pizzas.....
The price of hockey is ridiculous. I just look back and remember what my parents did for me and realize I have to do it. It is worth it to the kid who is growing up.
I have friends who played on the east coast and that price isn't even the first third of the first of three payments for a squirt b program. I know frequently the programs start at 2K and some of them are as much as 4-5K, Not including jerseys and socks and all that jazz which is anther $500 , plus a weekend in Canam which will leave you another 1k short, and then all the travel, tolls and all that jazz. Never ever seem to have a shortage of players though.goldy313 wrote:I get what your saying and to a point agree but in talking with a couple of good friends who are on the local wrestling board, hockey is the biggest recruiter they have right now. When people get flyers sent home with their kids and see that playing Squirt B hockey is going to cost $450 + $40 to USA Hockey before equipment, team fees, and travel (gas and lodging) you're going to see more kids never start hockey because it's unaffordable by the fourth grade for far too many people. Wrestling costs $25 K-8 plus a pair of shoes. Until hockey people figure out a way to hold costs down for at least some of the kids and have a path for simple rec leagues like baseball does they're in trouble.observer wrote: Recruiting lots of 5 and 6 year olds, both boys and girls, is the only way to grow your association. 12 year olds don't fall from trees and even if you could find a few late starters it's very difficult for them to catch up to the ones that started when they were 5.
-
- Posts: 6848
- Joined: Thu Aug 31, 2006 10:21 pm
Gee, hockey costs money? Ya don't say.PWD10 wrote:I have friends who played on the east coast and that price isn't even the first third of the first of three payments for a squirt b program. I know frequently the programs start at 2K and some of them are as much as 4-5K, Not including jerseys and socks and all that jazz which is anther $500 , plus a weekend in Canam which will leave you another 1k short, and then all the travel, tolls and all that jazz. Never ever seem to have a shortage of players though.goldy313 wrote:I get what your saying and to a point agree but in talking with a couple of good friends who are on the local wrestling board, hockey is the biggest recruiter they have right now. When people get flyers sent home with their kids and see that playing Squirt B hockey is going to cost $450 + $40 to USA Hockey before equipment, team fees, and travel (gas and lodging) you're going to see more kids never start hockey because it's unaffordable by the fourth grade for far too many people. Wrestling costs $25 K-8 plus a pair of shoes. Until hockey people figure out a way to hold costs down for at least some of the kids and have a path for simple rec leagues like baseball does they're in trouble.observer wrote: Recruiting lots of 5 and 6 year olds, both boys and girls, is the only way to grow your association. 12 year olds don't fall from trees and even if you could find a few late starters it's very difficult for them to catch up to the ones that started when they were 5.
Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships

-
- Posts: 6480
- Joined: Tue Jul 17, 2007 9:03 pm
- Contact:
East is a private school now?BBB wrote:Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships


East is tough to categorize, I'd say...sure it's an affluent school compared to its area, but it's not Edina. It will never have the numbers of the giant Metro programs, either.
I tend to agree with your point, though...if we consider some of those NWSC suburbs "affluent" as HSHW seems to, how many schools don't qualify as either affluent, private, or rich in tradition?
If you want to know who'll be good in the future, look at program size first, and take those tradition-rich smaller cities and assume they'll get a talent bubble every now and then--they move in cycles. Private schools are somewhat dependent on what the publics around them do, but will do well in areas where there aren't enough spots on the public varsity teams for all the good players (SW Metro). Hill is the exception; they're always good.
I believe Blaine was the only one with a Free/Reduced lunch rate of over 20%, (Roseau is the only other candidate) which is still below average for Minnesota but way above the usual suspects of Edina, Eden Prairie, Hill-Murray, and Holy Angels. On the Runner up side Grand Rapids and Roseville qualify but no one else. From what I remember Austin was near 40% in 2001 which is amazing considering Lakeville, Mayo, Century, and JM were all under 5%. JM is now over 20% which goes to show how things change.
-
- Posts: 68
- Joined: Fri Apr 25, 2008 10:54 pm
That's the point. If you make the link that hockey is expensive to play, therefore, wealthy areas have more hockey players, then a school with a 50% free lunch rate would have fewer hockey players then a school the same size with a 5% free lunch rate.observer wrote:The lunch discussion is silly. Even if a school had 50% of their students on a free/reduced lunch program I'll guess they're not members of the hockey team.
So ER, Blaine, Centennial and Anoka are not affluent areas compared to lots of other AA schools? In case you were not around from 2000-04 these areas are very affluent and have the numbers to support this. Not to mention Blaine has how many rinks in town for all four of those schools to access, (re) Schwanns Super rink. Centennial, not a team made up of affluent familys? I agree with HSHW with his assessment of the affluent familys/areas will almost always win in hockey with the exception of the tradition rich hockey areas.BBB wrote:Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships
If you think the NW suburbs are affluent you are completly nuts. Get in your car and drive around those communties, then go to the west and south and take a look and report back.Howie wrote:So ER, Blaine, Centennial and Anoka are not affluent areas compared to lots of other AA schools? In case you were not around from 2000-04 these areas are very affluent and have the numbers to support this. Not to mention Blaine has how many rinks in town for all four of those schools to access, (re) Schwanns Super rink. Centennial, not a team made up of affluent familys? I agree with HSHW with his assessment of the affluent familys/areas will almost always win in hockey with the exception of the tradition rich hockey areas.BBB wrote:Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships
I could drive you around a couple of neighborhoods in WBL and you would think we are the slums. Then I could drive you around some others and you would think we are filthy rich. Most all suburbs have this dynamic. It's just that some have larger areas of the affluent than others.mulefarm wrote:If you think the NW suburbs are affluent you are completly nuts. Get in your car and drive around those communties, then go to the west and south and take a look and report back.Howie wrote:So ER, Blaine, Centennial and Anoka are not affluent areas compared to lots of other AA schools? In case you were not around from 2000-04 these areas are very affluent and have the numbers to support this. Not to mention Blaine has how many rinks in town for all four of those schools to access, (re) Schwanns Super rink. Centennial, not a team made up of affluent familys? I agree with HSHW with his assessment of the affluent familys/areas will almost always win in hockey with the exception of the tradition rich hockey areas.BBB wrote: Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships
Hockey is an expensive sport, and the more money you have, the more opportunites you can give your children to succeed.
I have been to all northern suburbs and yes there are plenty of affluent neighborhoods in each of those areas. Forest Lake would fit that same mold and are getting better also because of the amount of familys that can afford hockey. EP, Woodbury and Edina have Walmarts and McDonaldsmulefarm wrote:If you think the NW suburbs are affluent you are completly nuts. Get in your car and drive around those communties, then go to the west and south and take a look and report back.Howie wrote:BBB wrote: Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships
So ER, Blaine, Centennial and Anoka are not affluent areas compared to lots of other AA schools? In case you were not around from 2000-04 these areas are very affluent and have the numbers to support this. Not to mention Blaine has how many rinks in town for all four of those schools to access, (re) Schwanns Super rink. Centennial, not a team made up of affluent familys? I agree with HSHW with his assessment of the affluent familys/areas will almost always win in hockey with the exception of the tradition rich hockey areas.
also, does that mean they are not affluent areas? Just saying, when you have a large area you will have enough people to afford the game.
Pretty sure no one outside of the NW suburbs agrees with this....and you might even be lying to yourself.BBB wrote:Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships
I'm outside the NW suburbs and I totally agree with BBBdefense wrote:Pretty sure no one outside of the NW suburbs agrees with this....and you might even be lying to yourself.BBB wrote:Apparently you were not in town in the from 2000-04 when Elk River, Blaine, Anoka, and Centennial won state titles. Anoka is the only one of those who had been to state before the 90's and Centennial didn't make it til the year they won so none of them had the history. Affluent? hardly. Private? nope.Every state champ in the last 20 years has been from an affluent area, a private school or a small town with a history of hockey.
It seems like success moves around the state. Roseau and Grand Rapids along with Moorhead were better 3-4 years ago and lately its been the southwest burbs. The northern suburbs dominated the first half of the 2000's and the privates like East, Hill Murray, and Holy Angels will always win one every 5 or 6 years. I think Section 1 is the next hot bed for state championships
What???Puckguy19 wrote:The Green Wave are who we thought they were! That's why we took the damn ice. Now if you want to crown them, then crown their axx! But they are who we thought they were! And we let 'em off the hook!defense wrote:What is "Hermantown of the west" supposed to mean anyway???
Actually I would consider Hermantown to possibly be chasing Warroad....
But I wouldn't be so forward as to say Warroad of the East.......
I think East Grand Forks is East Grand Forks....they don't need to be likened to Hermantown.
WHo's crowning anyone....and with what????
mulefarm is either fishing, not being honest to himself, or he just plain doesn't know and considers BBB's opinion as gospel.
Elite??? maybe not. Filthy rich???? not likley. Affluent?? yeah I think so. I don't think anyone claimed that these towns were totally cakeater....just mostly...and more of it than most places....
Here's a list by county, the F/R lunch rate is considered one of the best indicators of poverty.
http://datacenter.kidscount.org/data/by ... N&ind=1772
Anoka County's F/R is below the average in Minnesota. Again, most people won't classify themselves as affluent but the statistics would put those northwest suburbs above most cities and towns of Minnesota. It all depends on perspective, is Blaine affluent compared to Edina? How about West St. Paul?
http://datacenter.kidscount.org/data/by ... N&ind=1772
Anoka County's F/R is below the average in Minnesota. Again, most people won't classify themselves as affluent but the statistics would put those northwest suburbs above most cities and towns of Minnesota. It all depends on perspective, is Blaine affluent compared to Edina? How about West St. Paul?
-
- Posts: 7260
- Joined: Tue Nov 07, 2006 10:28 pm
Here's a list of per capita income by municipality:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mi ... ita_income
Interesting that 7 of the top 10 are towns around Lake Minnetonka.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mi ... ita_income
Interesting that 7 of the top 10 are towns around Lake Minnetonka.
-
- Posts: 6848
- Joined: Thu Aug 31, 2006 10:21 pm
I never thought in a million years I'd make one comment and have the majority of responses supporting it
I didn't know the only way to be affluent was to be from Edina. Karl's point is interesting about East. Sure, maybe the average sq footage of the houses is different, but so is the size of the city are you by, the jobs parents have, etc. A doctor/lawyer working in a major city near Edina HS will most likely make more than one near East HS.
Having poor people in your city does not mean the area is not affluent. By that standard few private schools would be and none of the Lake conference would.
As I seem to point out in many places, those who are good at hockey are generally from either a family of wealth or a "hockey family." There are rich places around the state and there are places with many "hockey families." There are also places where hockey isn't good with rich families and a few hockey families, but the teams aren't great.
It isn't all about ability, it's about opportunity. It's the same in other sports too, but you need more material things in hockey to play/practice and it's a more difficult game such that simply being athletic you can't just pick it up.
It's no knock to any school/program/person, simply the way it is. And yes, those areas are affluent, or at least most would put them in that blanket.

I didn't know the only way to be affluent was to be from Edina. Karl's point is interesting about East. Sure, maybe the average sq footage of the houses is different, but so is the size of the city are you by, the jobs parents have, etc. A doctor/lawyer working in a major city near Edina HS will most likely make more than one near East HS.
Having poor people in your city does not mean the area is not affluent. By that standard few private schools would be and none of the Lake conference would.
As I seem to point out in many places, those who are good at hockey are generally from either a family of wealth or a "hockey family." There are rich places around the state and there are places with many "hockey families." There are also places where hockey isn't good with rich families and a few hockey families, but the teams aren't great.
It isn't all about ability, it's about opportunity. It's the same in other sports too, but you need more material things in hockey to play/practice and it's a more difficult game such that simply being athletic you can't just pick it up.
It's no knock to any school/program/person, simply the way it is. And yes, those areas are affluent, or at least most would put them in that blanket.
-
- Posts: 87
- Joined: Sun Sep 19, 2010 9:25 am
Mostly right there. I wonder how much both the size of the population and the age of the population figures into to it though.HShockeywatcher wrote:I never thought in a million years I'd make one comment and have the majority of responses supporting it![]()
I didn't know the only way to be affluent was to be from Edina. Karl's point is interesting about East. Sure, maybe the average sq footage of the houses is different, but so is the size of the city are you by, the jobs parents have, etc. A doctor/lawyer working in a major city near Edina HS will most likely make more than one near East HS.
Having poor people in your city does not mean the area is not affluent. By that standard few private schools would be and none of the Lake conference would.
As I seem to point out in many places, those who are good at hockey are generally from either a family of wealth or a "hockey family." There are rich places around the state and there are places with many "hockey families." There are also places where hockey isn't good with rich families and a few hockey families, but the teams aren't great.
It isn't all about ability, it's about opportunity. It's the same in other sports too, but you need more material things in hockey to play/practice and it's a more difficult game such that simply being athletic you can't just pick it up.
It's no knock to any school/program/person, simply the way it is. And yes, those areas are affluent, or at least most would put them in that blanket.
Seems like it would be more likely that a strong sports team would be from a community with many young and energetic people, than say, a community who cannot keep up with retirement housing.
NO question money is big and helps tremendously, but is it needed???