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THE TRIANGLE OF INFLUENCE: PART 6
The triangle of player, coach, and parent will always exist.
The forces are permanent.
But the quality of that triangle — whether it becomes a source of strength or a source of fracture — is a choice that all three corners make every day.
Mar 24


THE TRIANGLE OF INFLUENCE : Part 5
The Professional Level
When the Triangle Becomes a Dyad
At the professional level, the parent largely exits the triangle. Their role is now that of a loving family member — not a stakeholder in the player's career. The most successful professional players are those who have fully internalized the values their coaches and parents modeled and no longer require external validation to drive their performance.
The primary relationship is now between the player and the organization
Mar 23


TRIANGLE OF INFLUENCE: Part 4
When a player moves into junior or college hockey, the triangle undergoes a significant structural change.
The coach is now a professional. The team is a business with organizational
goals. And the parent, for the first time, is not in the same city.
This physical distance is both a challenge and an opportunity. Players who have been given agency and taught to self-advocate tend to thrive. Players who were managed by their parents and never learned to navigate adult relation
Mar 22


THE TRIANGLE OF INFLUENCE: Part 3
Everything changes in adolescence — and that includes what the triangle needs to look like.
The teenage player is not just developing hockey skills. They are forming identity, navigating peer relationships, managing academic pressure, and beginning to think seriously about their future. The triangle must adapt.
Mar 21


Motivation Fades. Structure Stays.
What actually changes a player’s identity isn’t hype.
It’s awareness.
It’s understanding how your mind works under pressure.
And it’s small, daily reps that build mental strength the same way you build a shot or your stride.
Feb 27
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