Trevor Linden: Youth Sports Arms Race, Travel Tournament Traps & The Affordability Gut Punch | Ep 24

Trevor Linden played 19 seasons in the NHL, captained the Vancouver Canucks to the 1994 Stanley Cup Final, and performed under the most intense pressure imaginable. But as a sports parent to his 8-year-old son? He's about as low-pressure as it gets.

In this honest conversation, the former Canucks captain shares why he didn't need his son to play hockey, why parents are caught in an "arms race" mentality, and why travel tournaments to major markets for teams with very young players have become the expected entry point to youth sports.

Trevor challenges the notion that more ice time, more skills training, and more travel equals better development. He advocates for bringing sports back to schools and community centers, questions why we've lost street hockey culture, and delivers a gut-punch reality check about families who can't afford to let their kids play.

FULL PODCAST

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Amar Doman: Coaching Your Kid, Commitment to Community & Fighting the Focus on Phones | Ep 25

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Terry McKaig: An Overtraining Crisis, The Parent Guilt Trap & The Benefit of Being Cut | Ep 23