We are continuing our series on the habits that shape strong, confident young athletes. In Part 1, we focused on responsibility, discipline, and accountability. These habits create the foundation every athlete needs as they grow in sport and in life.
Part 2 goes deeper. These next habits are tougher, more uncomfortable, and often the ones players resist at first. But they are also the habits that separate athletes who develop real character from those who stall the moment things get difficult.
Parents play a major role in reinforcing these lessons. Players grow by living them daily.
Hockey Is Not Fair And Whining Will Not Help
Nothing in sports is fair. Ice time, bounces, politics, depth charts, coaching decisions, injuries, and opportunities rarely line up perfectly. Players who complain about fairness get stuck. Players who adapt move forward.
Whining never changes a situation. Adaptability does. Coaches trust athletes who stay focused and find solutions instead of slipping into self pity. Life works the same way.
The game rewards resilience, not excuses.
Action Items for Players
• Replace every complaint with a question: What can I control
• Spend less time comparing yourself to teammates and more time improving your habits
• Accept adversity as part of the process rather than a personal attack
• Practice adapting quickly when things go wrong
Action Items for Parents
• Avoid feeding unfairness narratives
• Encourage your athlete to focus on what they can influence
• Model calm problem solving when things feel unfair at home
• Reinforce that obstacles are part of every competitive environment
Control Your Emotions Or They Will Cost You Games
Emotions are powerful, but they can destroy performance when they go unchecked. Bad penalties, frustration, retaliation, sloppy backchecks, and lost focus all come from emotional reactions, not intentional decisions.
The best competitors stay composed even when chaos hits. Calm players think faster. They see the play. They manage pressure. They make smart choices when everyone else spirals.
Emotional control is a competitive advantage.
Action Items for Players
• Take one deep breath before reacting in tense moments
• Practice reset routines when you make a mistake
• Learn to recognize when frustration is building
• Focus on staying composed rather than being right
Action Items for Parents
• Praise emotional control after games, not just goals or wins
• Avoid venting about refs or opponents in front of your child
• Encourage your athlete to reflect, not react
• Support calm communication during tough conversations
Respect Is Earned Through Effort, Not Talk
Respect cannot be demanded. It cannot be forced. It definitely cannot be talked into existence. Respect comes from hard work, consistent habits, and doing the right things even when nobody is watching.
Teammates respect the ones who work, who push themselves, who stay accountable, and who stay humble. Nobody respects the loudest voice or the biggest ego. Respect grows quietly but disappears instantly.
Action Items for Players
• Show up ready to work every day
• Let your habits speak louder than your words
• Hold yourself to a high standard even in small moments
• Encourage teammates through action rather than chirping
Action Items for Parents
• Reinforce humility at home
• Praise effort, consistency, and accountability
• Avoid celebrating arrogance or ego
• Encourage quiet leadership and example setting
Comfort Early Creates Soft Players
Nothing strong is built in comfort. Easy practices, guaranteed roles, and constant protection from struggle create athletes who crumble the moment adversity shows up. Toughness comes from challenge, not convenience.
Players grow when they face difficulty, fail, adjust, and try again. Struggle is not a problem. It is the process.
Action Items for Players
• Embrace uncomfortable drills or roles
• Lean into challenges instead of avoiding them
• Do difficult things even when nobody is watching
• Treat struggle as a sign you are getting stronger
Action Items for Parents
• Do not rush to remove struggle
• Avoid bubble wrapping your athlete from adversity
• Encourage hard practices and tough coaching
• Reinforce that discomfort is part of growth
Your Word Matters In The Locker Room
Your reputation is built quietly. If you say you will be ready, be ready. If you say you will work, work. If you commit to something, follow through. Teammates trust the players whose words mean something.
Trust is built slowly and lost instantly.
Action Items for Players
• Only make commitments you intend to keep
• Follow through every time you say you will do something
• Show teammates you are reliable through action
• Protect your reputation by staying consistent
Action Items for Parents
• Teach follow through at home
• Hold your child accountable for their commitments
• Reinforce the value of honesty and consistency
• Celebrate reliability as much as performance
Learn To Stand Alone
There will be seasons where crowds disappear. When you are scratched, injured, benched, overlooked, or struggling, it can feel like nobody is cheering for you. These are the moments that build self belief.
Players who can stand alone grow stronger than players who rely on constant praise. When support fades, your habits, confidence, and work ethic must carry you.
Self belief is built in quiet moments.
Action Items for Players
• Develop confidence that does not rely on validation
• Work even when nobody is watching or cheering
• Use setbacks as fuel rather than proof
• Trust your process when results are not showing
Action Items for Parents
• Avoid rescuing your child from lonely or difficult moments
• Encourage inner confidence, not external validation
• Support effort during slumps, not excuses
• Teach your child that belief must come from within
Part 2 digs deeper into the habits that build real competitors and strong young adults. These lessons are not easy, but they are essential. When players learn to handle adversity, control emotions, earn respect, stay true to their word, and rely on inner belief, they grow far beyond the game.