icybits

8.7K posts

icybits

icybits

@icybits

little bits of hockey...along with a few bits of anything else. Member of the goalie union.

Manitoba, Canada Katılım Mayıs 2009
834 Takip Edilen218 Takipçiler
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icybits
icybits@icybits·
A gif is worth 10 000 words. Even after the skills to play have long abandoned me, being with teammates and around the rink is what I remember and why I return.
USA Hockey@usahockey

This is why we play 🏒

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Topher Scott
Topher Scott@HockeyThinkTank·
Winning gold medals starts at the grassroots. It starts with families choosing to put their kids in hockey and kids falling in love with the game. That has been Canada's edge forever. Pure pride and love of the game leading to so many kids choosing and loving hockey. Tens of thousands less boys are choosing hockey than a decade ago. That would be the fact I am most concerned about regarding the health of the game in the country. Maybe the discourse over the past few days is overblown from a gold medal standpoint - that's fair and I don't think gold medals should be the full barometer of how we judge hockey anyway - but all you have to do is talk to people involved in youth hockey and look at the membership data to know the system is broken. These are great conversations to have. I see your perspective, hopefully you can understand where I'm coming from too.
Jason Gregor@JasonGregor

You talk about not developing. Okay. Fun facts for Canada in development age. 2024 U17 - Gold 2025 U17 - Gold AND Silver as Canada Red and White were in final. Canada is only country who ices multiple teams. 2024 U18 - Gold 2025 U18 - Gold. U20... we had six of the best eligible players in the NHL in Celebrini, Sennecke, Kindel, Catton up front and Schaefer and Dickinson on the backend. Won't win every year. Doesn't mean we have to act like we aren't developing good players. We are and are still doing great even as other countries catch up. Why are they catching up, because their players are getting to play in Canada. Which makes overall game more competitive. Which is great for growth of hockey.

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Chris Pronger
Chris Pronger@chrispronger·
@HockeyThinkTank Topher this is an interesting take and one I firmly believe is valid. As our analytic friends always say the data doesn't lie. I think there are a number of other issues but to your point on passion for the game. Young adults playing men's league and the like shows that too.
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Topher Scott
Topher Scott@HockeyThinkTank·
Following up on this as there’s some discourse saying everything’s fine in Canada and if they had the likes of Celebrini and a few other NHLers they would have won and we wouldn’t be having this conversation. And they’re right. Canada would’ve had a much better shot at gold if they had their full arsenal to work with. But two things can be true at the same time. I feel like that argument is just putting lipstick on a pig. Every year Canada is missing top players. Yet in its history they’ve still fared way better than this 3 year stretch where they haven’t played in the championship game. It’s not just about this year. It’s about the big picture and what could be ahead if things stay the same. I also don’t think we should judge a country’s development model solely on how they do in best-on-best competition. It’s a part of it for sure, but there are other things like growth and retention rates and other metrics that tell a more complete story. If you think that everything is fine in Canada because the best players weren’t at World Juniors, I don’t think you’re looking deep enough at the systemic failure of the youth hockey model in the country. Literally tens of thousands of less boys playing the game than a decade ago. Costs out of control. Winning over development. Super teams over TEAM teams. Ego over process. Fast track over patience. We’re taught to look at process over result. So let’s forget about the result of World Juniors. Do you think the way youth hockey is delivered is the right process? Every elite player I know has one thing in common. They LOVE the game. Do you think that the youth hockey experience is growing a love for the game more today than when you played? With the amount of pressure that is being put on kids and their families to dive into the crazy younger and younger every year? I get messages from parents and coaches daily. We collaborate with a ton of youth organizations. The stress and FOMO is real. And the membership numbers are hard data to back it up. The issues are real. Results aside, it’s imperative that hard conversations need to be had about youth hockey in the country. For better results in competition. For better development. For better mental health for the kids. And for the game we all love.
Topher Scott@HockeyThinkTank

Thoughts on Team Canada at World Juniors: There's been a lot of discourse today about Canada's performance after bowing out to Czechia again. I've read a lot about roster construction, team toughness, how players were used during the tournament, and other things related to the team's inability to get the job done. These things may have been an issue, but reality is the problem runs way deeper. Here is the biggest thing that people aren't talking about: Canada has WAY fewer youth boys playing hockey than it did a decade ago. Looking at Hockey Canada registration and membership data, it's mind-boggling to see the numbers. And the numbers in the biggest provinces (Ontario and Quebec) are especially egregious. So why is this happening? Hockey is Canada's sport. It shouldn't be like this. It's what we hear every day from families all over North America: Costs are too high. It's professionalized at too young of an age. The stress of the youth hockey experience is too much for kids and families. Community programs have been replaced by for-profit entities leading to higher costs and more pressure. Development has been replaced by super teams and rogue/outlaw leagues outside of Hockey Canada even before kids are 8 years old. At the older ages, hockey academies have become what families believe is the only way their kids will make it - shelling out INSANE amounts of money to send their kids to do so. Ontario just got rid of residency rules which will only lead to less accountability and more club-hopping than there already was in the nation's craziest and biggest youth hockey market. The reason why Canada was the hockey superpower for so long is because it was part of the fabric of the country. There was such a pride and passion for the game and what the game meant to the flag. There was such a sense of playing the game for something bigger than yourself. Now rather than playing for the love of the game, hockey in Canada is like a job for many of these kids in the environment they're being put in. It's less about pride and passion and more about the path to making it. When in all honesty, it's the pride and passion for the game that is the biggest consistency in the kids that do end up making it. If Canada wants to restore its hockey dominance, it better take a long look in the mirror at the grassroots and what is going on in youth hockey. If you have tens of thousands of fewer boys playing the game, you should probably look at that first. The bigger your pool of athletes, the more elite athletes you can develop. "As many as possible, for as long as possible, in the best environment possible". That has to be the guiding principle. There's a lot of great people in Canada doing incredible things for the game, but the system itself is fundamentally broken. If Hockey Canada is serious about getting back to the top, it has to start at the bottom.

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Chris Sevier
Chris Sevier@csevs19·
In Finland they need every kid. They don’t know who will be good so they aim to provide every kid great dev. We separate at 8 by skill or $. Small % get most resources. Most kids probably never reach potential. USA hockey has a massive opp to create an even bigger powerhouse
Ken Campbell@Ken_Campbell27

For every person Finland has, USA has 60. For every youth hockey player Finland has, USA has nine. For every indoor rink Finland has, USA has seven. Finland is an incredible hockey country.

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Steve Lansky 🍁
Steve Lansky 🍁@bigmouthsports·
I should like to thank Gord Miller for understanding fully that the role of a pxp person is to, first and foremost, call the pxp. #LetsGoOilers fans know this is skill is far, far, far, far from a given.
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Carlo Colaiacovo
Carlo Colaiacovo@CarloColaiacovo·
Minor hockey in Canada can share the blame too. Kids between ages 10-16 Chase W’s and build super teams, while training with numerous skills coaches to improve their individual game instead of focusing on being coached and developing to play the game of hockey. Players on super teams don’t know how to lose and then struggle to deal with adversity. I see it first hand and it’s very troubling
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Topher Scott
Topher Scott@HockeyThinkTank·
Thoughts on Team Canada at World Juniors: There's been a lot of discourse today about Canada's performance after bowing out to Czechia again. I've read a lot about roster construction, team toughness, how players were used during the tournament, and other things related to the team's inability to get the job done. These things may have been an issue, but reality is the problem runs way deeper. Here is the biggest thing that people aren't talking about: Canada has WAY fewer youth boys playing hockey than it did a decade ago. Looking at Hockey Canada registration and membership data, it's mind-boggling to see the numbers. And the numbers in the biggest provinces (Ontario and Quebec) are especially egregious. So why is this happening? Hockey is Canada's sport. It shouldn't be like this. It's what we hear every day from families all over North America: Costs are too high. It's professionalized at too young of an age. The stress of the youth hockey experience is too much for kids and families. Community programs have been replaced by for-profit entities leading to higher costs and more pressure. Development has been replaced by super teams and rogue/outlaw leagues outside of Hockey Canada even before kids are 8 years old. At the older ages, hockey academies have become what families believe is the only way their kids will make it - shelling out INSANE amounts of money to send their kids to do so. Ontario just got rid of residency rules which will only lead to less accountability and more club-hopping than there already was in the nation's craziest and biggest youth hockey market. The reason why Canada was the hockey superpower for so long is because it was part of the fabric of the country. There was such a pride and passion for the game and what the game meant to the flag. There was such a sense of playing the game for something bigger than yourself. Now rather than playing for the love of the game, hockey in Canada is like a job for many of these kids in the environment they're being put in. It's less about pride and passion and more about the path to making it. When in all honesty, it's the pride and passion for the game that is the biggest consistency in the kids that do end up making it. If Canada wants to restore its hockey dominance, it better take a long look in the mirror at the grassroots and what is going on in youth hockey. If you have tens of thousands of fewer boys playing the game, you should probably look at that first. The bigger your pool of athletes, the more elite athletes you can develop. "As many as possible, for as long as possible, in the best environment possible". That has to be the guiding principle. There's a lot of great people in Canada doing incredible things for the game, but the system itself is fundamentally broken. If Hockey Canada is serious about getting back to the top, it has to start at the bottom.
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Nature is Amazing ☘️
Nature is Amazing ☘️@AMAZlNGNATURE·
Moose are majestic and fast even in deep snow
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The Original Burnsie
The Original Burnsie@burnsieoriginal·
And I also added this this legendary rookie today and I’m pretty happy about it. ⁦@grantfuhr
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LandryClaude
LandryClaude@Claude6Landry·
Mask
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Lyss 📈
Lyss 📈@lysshoude·
Feel-good story of the day: today, my local minor hockey association had almost 40 girls come out to a clinic we hosted with PWHL goalie Corinne Schroeder. The association will have girls teams of every age this season (U7 - U15). When I was growing up, they didn’t have any.
Lyss 📈 tweet mediaLyss 📈 tweet media
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The Original Burnsie
The Original Burnsie@burnsieoriginal·
I just heard the news and I’m shocked. Rip Bernie! Only god saves more.
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"Mr.Goalie" The Film
"Mr.Goalie" The Film@MrGoalieTheFilm·
We are thrilled to announce the world premiere of “Mr. Goalie”, celebrating the legendary life and career of Hall of Fame goaltender Glenn Hall, at @WindsorFilmFest October 2025
"Mr.Goalie" The Film tweet media"Mr.Goalie" The Film tweet media
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Kokou Assigbe
Kokou Assigbe@KAssigbe·
⚽️ Parents: The game itself isn’t the most important thing. What’s being developed during the game is what truly matters. Educate yourself & don’t reduce it to a win = good & a loss = bad. There’s a difference between developing a winning mindset and winning at all cost.
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