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American Development Model (ADM)

What is the ADM?

The ADM is USA Hockey’s nationwide player-development program for youth hockey associations. It’s based on age-appropriate, age-specific competition and training for boys and girls, beginning with their first steps onto the ice and carrying them through age 18 and beyond. The ADM places a heightened emphasis on skill development and long-term athlete development principles, providing a blueprint for the best possible youth hockey experience. Put simply, it’s doing what’s best for kids.

NJPE & ADM

The NJPE organization went to the ADM format in 2011. NJPE along with Amherst Youth Hockey were amongst the first local associations to adopt the Mite 8U ADM program. Today NJPE uses the ADM Model for our Mite Division as well as the USA Hockey/ADM sponsored Learn to Skate 1 & 2 Curriculums for our Instructional Program.

How Has the NJPE Implemented ADM?
All 8-and-under players will participate in practices that are based on stations rather than having one team at one end of the ice and another team at the opposite end. The ADM is designed to discourage an “us” and “them” way of thinking. The primary focus is developing skills while making it fun. The majority of practices will be set up with multiple skill stations across the whole rink, possibly a small area game at one area, and the kids will rotate through the stations. This will allow exposure to all the coaches and players on the ice and allow an equal opportunity for development.

For more information about the ADM and we encourage you to explore the links located on the right.

How does the ADM help players reach their potential?

First and foremost, by enhancing athleticism and emphasizing skill development. Through science and experience, we’ve learned that the world’s elite athletes were almost never early-age specialists. They enjoyed a variety of sports and activities. They climbed. They swam. They biked. In short, they were kids. The ADM lets kids be kids. It encourages them to have fun and it amplifies their all-around athleticism  through programming developed by hockey experts, sport scientists and child development specialists. This programming lifts  the lid off kids’ athletic potential, blending with science to create a full toolbox of athleticism. When they apply it to hockey, good things happen. When we complement it with age-appropriate, age-specific skill training, good becomes great.

At the younger age levels, it looks like fun and constant motion in small spaces. The ADM encourages station-based practices, small-area games and cross-ice competition to deliver more repetitions, more puck touches and more skill development per hour of ice time. It provides the most efficient, most engaging development path for children, keeping them both in the game and on a path toward their full potential.

The ADM encourages a 3:1 practice-to-game ratio at these younger levels, while also making hockey more family-friendly. The ADM emphasizes development at your local rink in mite (8U), squirt (10U) and peewee (12U) hockey. This emphasis helps children benefit from more skill development and less burnout.

As children progress in age, the ADM progresses with them, providing age-specific programming designed to prepare, propel and polish, with curriculum proven to produce Olympic- and NHL-caliber players.