Blue Liner
Registered User
I look and see all these posts..
If you really want to break into the NHL, be related to someone who works for the team or be an attractive female. Seriously.
In my years working for an NHL franchise those are the biggest thing I've seen that will get you hired. I've seen someone whose work experience was stocking shelves at the local grocery store get hired over someone who had years working for another NHL franchise. You know why? He was marrying the sister of one of the guys who was making the hiring decision.
Also being a nice 20-something girl who looks good in a pants suit will get you hired. Executives who aren't in hockey ops are usually slimy old men who get their kicks by watching the Caitlyns, Kaitlyns, Kaitlins and Beccas of the world bounce around the office all morning and do the grunt running.
Do these people usually get promoted? Nah. Once they are tried of working for $27,000 a year to work 40 hours a week, plus all home games, plus all team events, plus the team maintained functions, plus the season ticket holder ass kissing function, they usually burn out and leave for regular jobs. Usually the VP's of the departments have serious experience in sports, not just hockey. I remember the one VP of ticketing had 10 years with an NFL team across the country, another 8 years with an NBA team, etc. People move around for these jobs and usually aren't local. I did see a lot of people jump around from the pro teams in town. People would come in from the NFL and MLB franchise and leave to go there. I never really saw a lot of people come from the AHL team to the NHL club unless it was hockey ops related. There is no loyalty to the team outside of the check that comes very two weeks. If the team wins, yay. If they lose it's just another day.
NHL organizations are slimy and toxic. All the glitz and proudness of being ''classy organizations'' is just a mask for a pile of crap behind the doors. I've seen some pretty crazy stuff that has happened being hid from the media and general public.
Want to be a scout, coach or work in hockey ops? I hope you played professionally. Or be related to a current hockey ops veteran. Everybodyknows everybody in hockey. So and so played jr. with this guy who's a scout for this team. So and so played 4 years in the ECHL with this guy who works for this club in hockey ops. One example I remember is the star player on the team I worked for played in the Q with a guy worked in the youth hockey department.
Being an advanced stats expert was a good route about 5 years ago. That ship has sailed. All those jobs are filled. The advanced stats guy at my club was a guy who had several advanced degrees and was Ph.D'd in stats. I bet he took a healthy paycut to join the team.
Getting into being a media/writer/blogger/radio personality is downright hopeless anymore. Everyones got a blog, everyones got a podcast, everyones got a twitter feed. These people live and die for the team for FREE. Hell, you are doing the dirty work for your club.
I'm glad everyone is so positive and helpful around here, but I just wanted to give everyone the things I've seen after getting inside the arena walls.
A lot of what is said here is true, but the bolded is not. There are numerous people working as scouts, namely on the amateur scouting side, who never played pro hockey and are not related to anybody within the organization they work for. Same goes for coaching, though that's a tougher hill to climb but many do it, nonetheless.
Many scouts at the NHL level started out at the junior levels and worked their way up.