That's a very, very good question and I hope I can be very short with my answer. It's kind of a long answer, but I'll try to make it short.
If you compare, in Europe there are so many players and in Canada we have so many players, and there are so many players falling through the cracks. In my opinion, in the minor hockey structure itself, I think we should look into that a little better. I don't know if this is a discussion that needs to be taken.
In my opinion, if you're signed to a AA midget team, for example, and you excel at the start of the season during the first two or three months, which can very well happen on many occasions, now you cannot move from this team. You have to be there. You're not allowed to call the AAA midgets because they already have their team. Now, you have a AAA midget player who is not performing at all. He's slacking off. His school work is not getting done. But you stay there because that's where you were signed.
It is completely opposite if you're looking at the European structure. They have all the age groups. They have all the different levels. They put them in at the start of the season in these levels, wherever they belong. During the season there's a lot of flexible movement between those levels. I think that is something we should definitely look into, because I don't think we should waste good talent in Canada, even though we have a lot of volume. I think that is big thing, more or less with the minor hockey end of the discussion. That is something that I see, and it's a huge issue.
Also, we were talking about the qualified coaching as an issue. We don't have a structure in the minor hockey system. Everybody is on their own. Everybody is doing their own thing, and it's win, win, win. That is a mentality that we have. I would bring Europe in again. Don't get me wrong: I'm more Canadian than a lot of Canadians themselves, but they're trying to maximize every player because they know they cannot waste any talent, in any which way.
I think we've been a bit too comfortable in our success, of any sport in Canada. We haven't talked about what we can actually do to change and make it better. We talk, talk, talk, but not about things we can actually do.
I think if we could get some type of a system in minor hockey—I'm talking hockey now—to get a person who is very qualified, he could make the structure from the peewee or atom, whatever they do, and educate the parents and players as to how they're going to do it, how it's going to work. They are going to make all the practice plans, and it should only be skills and more skills, I would say, until the end of bantam. Then when we hit the midget, we have a coaching staff that is very qualified to do that, and you have the tools. This is your time to make some noise.
That's where we are lacking in this whole structural situation. If we could get a little bit at that.... It's only getting the coaching staff who are qualified and putting the money into it so we can have that.
We can talk about this whole scenario, different things here, different things there, but what would we actually do? I think with the structure of the minor hockey systems, at least in what I've seen in Alberta—I don't know anywhere else—there's a lack of knowledge and a lack of making this more seamless, the movement from team to team if the player is qualified to move up.