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Confessions Of A Junior Hockey Coach – So You Got Cut, So What

To be sure this is the crunch time.  The final camps are on the go and the chase of the dream is entering its last phase for this season.

So what happens when you get cut from the team tryout?

There is no time to site and cry over the milk that has been spilled.  With an average of five players competing for every spot on every roster, you begin the tryout with a twenty percent chance of making the team.  Open your eyes and look at the numbers.  If you did not do all that you could have done in the camp, and did not treat every game as if it was a championship game, you will not make the team.

So get over it and move on.

It is now almost August.  The season will be starting in some five weeks or so.  The tryout camps are winding down, and rosters are being posted.  So you didn’t make the team that you wanted to make.  Are you going to let that disappointment break you, or are you going to continue to look forward?

It is now time to put the “backup plan” into action.  If you don’t have a backup plan with another team, in another league, at another level, then you are behind all of the smart hockey players in the world.

Right now we are in the middle of NAHL and Canada Tier II tryout camp times.  If you do not have a Tier III or Midget backup plan in place by now, you may not have a team to go to if your plan does not work out.  The player must remember that there are only so many spot on so many teams and too many player to try out for those spot.

For those with no backup plan, the Midget and Tier III team have already too been holding the tryout camp.  You will have to work hard now to create the plan.

There is no time to worry over the disappointment any longer.  You got cut, so what.

Nearly every player in the world get cut in their career.  The best player is the one that turns getting the cut into motivation to perform better.  The smart player can look in the mirror and say “I could have done this better” or “I should have done that better”.  The smarter player can say “I am not quite ready for that level and I need to got to the other team to get ready.”

If you are player, not just person who plays the game of hockey.  You self examine you play and you know others were just a little better.  When you see this, and you see that summer is almost over, it is time to make the backup plan work.  Don’t be the player who has no team to go to in September because your ego dont allow you to.

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