Hockey was not in the cards for the Gershkovich family living in the Phoenix area until they were approached about a program that provided free gear and an eight-week program to try things out.
''That's kind of what roped us in,'' said Phil Gershkovich, whose sons Eli and Josh each got into it and Josh is still playing in high school. ''That gets a lot of people in, and that's a good avenue.''
The United States has experienced steady growth in the sport over the past decade while Canada grapples with youth numbers declining significantly over the same period of time. Efforts by USA Hockey, National Hockey League teams and others to bring in more diverse families — and a boom especially in girls participation — have fueled the increase and opened the door for the U.S. to one day overtake its neighbor to the north as the game's preeminent power.
''When I was younger, it was always Canada,'' said Logan Cooley, a Pittsburgh native and graduate of the U.S. National Team Development Program who just completed his first NHL season with Arizona. ''There were even kind of kids from my age growing up moving to Canada and all you heard about was Canada hockey and all the stars they had. But now it's really cool to see that the USA's kind of right up there with them.''
GIRLS GROWING THE GAME
USA Hockey reported 387,910 registered youth players in 2022-23 — up from just under 340,000 in 2009-10, and an increase of more than 12%. In its most recent annual report, the organization said over 70,000 girls under age 18 are registered to play, which could soon surpass Canada.
USA Hockey's Kevin Erlenbach cited specifically a 94% increase at age 8 and younger.
''Whether it's female hockey, if it's just underserved communities, even our disabled community, if you can see it, then you can be it and it makes way more impact,'' said Erlenbach, the organization's assistant executive director of membership.