- Genre:sports & recreation
- Sub-genre:Winter Sports / Hockey
- Language:English
- Pages:244
- Paperback ISBN:9798317831417
Book details
Overview
What are we playing for?
Youth hockey has never lacked passion, effort, or ambition.
What it lacks is alignment.
In What Are We Playing For?, longtime coach, leader, and parent Kyle Kinzie challenges the way youth hockey environments are designed and exposes why so many well-intentioned systems quietly erode confidence, creativity, and love for the game.
This is not a coaching manual.
It's not a parenting guide.
And it's not an attack on hockey.
It's a framework.
Drawing from more than four decades in the game as a player and coach, Kinzie introduces the 3 Loves:
* Love the Game
* Love the Environment
* Love the Person You Become
Through real stories, clear standards, and hard truths, the book explores:
* why kids burn out earlier than ever
* how fear and silence poison environments
* the hidden cost of "win now" culture
* what great coaching, parenting, and leadership actually require
* how development accelerates when environments are built intentionally
Most importantly, it offers a path forward. One where challenge feels safe, standards are clear, accountability is calm, and growth is allowed to happen.
This book is for:
* parents navigating youth hockey
* coaches shaping daily environments
* leaders responsible for culture and standards
* players who still love the game, or want to again
Because development doesn't need to be forced.
It needs to be protected.
Read moreDescription
What Are We Playing For?
Putting the Love Back in Hockey by Rebuilding the Environment
Youth hockey has never lacked passion, effort, or sacrifice.
What it lacks is alignment.
Across rinks, programs, and organizations, well-intentioned adults are working tirelessly. Coaches run extra practices. Parents drive countless miles. Players train earlier and harder than ever before.
Yet despite all of that effort, something essential is quietly slipping away.
Kids are burning out earlier.
Creativity is disappearing.
Fear is replacing joy.
And love for the game is fading long before anyone notices.
In What Are We Playing For?, longtime coach, executive leader, and parent Kyle Kinzie confronts a difficult truth:
The biggest problem facing youth hockey is not talent, effort, or commitment.
It is the environment.
This book is not a coaching manual.
It does not offer drills, systems, or shortcuts.
It is not a parenting guide, and it is not an attack on hockey.
It is a different way of looking at development, leadership, and the environments surrounding young players.
Drawing from more than four decades in hockey as a player, coach, leader, and parent, Kinzie explores how environments shape confidence, creativity, accountability, and long-term growth.
After his own playing career ended abruptly at nineteen because of a life-threatening medical condition, hockey became something deeper than competition. Over the next twenty-five years coaching youth and competitive hockey, while also leading organizations in the business world, one truth became impossible to ignore:
Performance is shaped by environment.
People do not grow simply because they are pushed harder.
They grow because the conditions around them allow them to.
The book examines how youth hockey gradually shifted away from development and toward constant evaluation:
* "Win now" decisions that sacrifice long-term growth
* Fear-based coaching that creates compliance instead of confidence
* Over-structured practices that suppress creativity and thinking
* Parents and players who become afraid to speak honestly
* Environments where identity becomes tied to ice time, roles, or results
At the center of the book is Kinzie's philosophy of the 3 Loves:
* Love the Game
* Love the Environment
* Love the Person You Become
The message is simple:
When kids love the game, feel safe in the environment, and are valued beyond performance, development accelerates naturally.
This book is for:
* Parents navigating youth hockey
* Coaches shaping daily environments
* Leaders responsible for culture and standards
* Players who still love the game, or want to again
Most importantly, it is for people who believe sports should develop more than athletes.
Because development does not need to be forced.
It needs to be protected.
Read more