The Problem with SandBagging...
In my time in Youth Hockey I’ve come to notice several disturbing traits from Youth Organizations, and one of the most egregious is the concept of “Sand Bagging”. Placing your team at a skill level they are above, in a lesser division to artificially boost their success hurts players in many ways. Parity tournaments trouble shoot this issue in many leagues, but if your organization is getting moved up a level (or two) with several teams within the first few weeks of the season, it means you placed them below their ability to start, and oftentimes, this is done with intention.
“Sandbagging” means intentionally underperforming so you can gain an advantage later.
It’s used in a few contexts:
Sports (including hockey)
A player or team plays below their true skill level—maybe in tryouts, scrimmages, or in a lower division—so they can dominate later or get placed in an easier bracket.
Example: A strong player pretends to be weaker so they get put on a lower team.
Here’s how sandbagging shows up in youth hockey and why coaches, evaluators, and leagues watch for it:
How Sandbagging Happens in Youth Hockey
1. Tryouts
A player skates slower or holds back so they get placed on a lower team where:
they’ll get more playing time
they can be a star
parents think it will be “easier” or more fun
Coaches usually spot this because a player’s in-season game speed never matches their “tryout speed.”
2. Tournaments / Team Placement
Teams sometimes enter weaker divisions to rack up wins or tournament titles. Signs include:
blowout scores
top players who clearly belong at a higher level
a team mysteriously moving down after dominating a higher level previously
Tournament directors consider this benching themselves to chase banners.
3. Shifting Between “A” and “B” Levels
A player who should be at “AA” or “AAA” plays “A” because:
parents want them to dominate
the player wants to look like a superstar
the team wants to win at a lower tier
This leads to mismatched competition and unfair games.
Why Sandbagging Is a Problem
It can:
hurt development (players grow from challenge, not coasting)
distort competition
create resentments on teams
lead to blowouts, which help no one
undermine credibility of organizations
Evaluators know this, which is why:
they use multiple sessions
they watch game footage
they talk to previous coaches
they check consistency across drills
How to Avoid or Prevent It
For players:
Always skate at your real speed—coaches notice consistency.
Focus on development, not dominating weaker competition.
For parents/coaches:
Encourage challenge over comfort.
Place kids where they’re pushed but still confident.
Emphasize long-term growth, not short-term trophies



