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Jack Ceglarski on Player Development, Recruiting, and Building Middlebury Hockey
Episode 80

Jack Ceglarski on Player Development, Recruiting, and Building Middlebury Hockey

Jack Ceglarski, head coach of Middlebury men’s hockey, joins Puck Academy to talk about building players — and building a program — in today’s evolving hockey world. A former SUNY Geneseo national champion and pro (Reading, Indy, Huntsville), Jack shares his path from player to coach, including lessons learned from growing up in a deeply rooted hockey family and navigating expectations along the way. We cover: • Why he believes multi-sport athletes develop better long term • What’s broken in modern youth hockey (over-specialization, money, drill culture) • Why cross-ice and small-area play matter more than ever • What he actually looks for in recruiting (hint: it’s not just points) • How academics factor into roster building at a place like Middlebury • His philosophy on the transfer portal and NIL • Practice structure, video usage, and the balance between analytics and the eye test • Why players should dominate a level before moving up • The importance of trust, relationships, and enjoying the college experience Jack also shares his vision for Middlebury: competing annually for NESCAC and national championships while developing complete people, not just hockey players. A thoughtful conversation about development, patience, and choosing your own path in an increasingly complicated hockey ecosystem.

Puck Academy · Jason Jacobs, Jack Ceglarski

March 17, 20261h 9m

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Show Notes

Host Jason Jacobs welcomes Jack Ceglarski, head coach of Middlebury men’s hockey, for a wide-ranging conversation on development, recruiting, and leading a program in today’s changing hockey landscape.

A former SUNY Geneseo national champion and pro (Reading Royals, Indy Fuel, Huntsville Havoc), Jack shares his path from player to coach — including stops at New England College, Notre Dame, and ultimately Middlebury, where he became head coach in 2024.

Jack reflects on growing up at Governor’s Academy in a prominent hockey family and why expectations around his last name felt more motivating than burdensome. He credits multi-sport development and patience in juniors for shaping his long-term growth — and critiques today’s youth hockey culture as overly specialized, travel-heavy, and increasingly money-driven.

We discuss:

Why early specialization may hurt long-term development

The tradeoffs of modern “skills” training vs hockey IQ

Why cross-ice and small-area games matter

How he transitioned from playing to coaching

The importance of borrowing ideas and learning from mentors

As a head coach, Jack emphasizes relationships, trust, and culture. He looks for “thumb guys” — players who respond to adversity — and prioritizes character, academic fit, compete level, and winning traits over raw point totals. On Middlebury’s larger ice surface, skating and puck skill are essential.

He also shares:

Practice structure: systems early, more adaptive later

How he balances video, data, and the eye test

Why players should dominate a level before moving up

His cautious approach to the transfer portal

How NIL, the portal, and major junior shifts are reshaping the college path

Jack closes by outlining his vision for Middlebury: competing annually for NESCAC and national championships while developing complete people — not just hockey players — and encouraging families to trust their own path rather than chasing someone else’s.

Show notes:

00:00 Welcome to Puck Academy + Meet Middlebury HC Jack Ceglarski 

02:36 Hockey family roots: Grandfather, dad, and early influences 

04:48 Jack’s playing journey: Governors Academy to juniors, college, and pro 

07:49 Pressure, expectations, and building your own name 

08:58 Multi-sport development vs early specialization 

12:35 State of youth hockey today: money, travel, and the Minnesota model 

15:44 Skill camps vs hockey IQ: why small-area games matter 

19:10 When coaching took over: deciding to hang up the skates 

21:14 Coaching development: mentors, “borrowing” ideas, and learning fast 

24:36 Taking the Middlebury job: culture, buy-in, and leading with care 

29:52 Academics vs athletics: what it takes to get recruited at Middlebury 

33:12 Choosing the right level: reclassing, juniors, patience, and dominating your league 

36:08 When to Make the Jump: Timing Your Next Step 

36:38 Recruiting Non‑Negotiables: Character, Community & Compete Level 

37:29 Building a Balanced Roster: Different Player Types, One Team 

39:22 Winning Traits Over Points: What Actually Translates 

42:44 Coachability & Details: Teaching ‘Stick on Puck’ and Other Habits 

44:23 Transfer Portal Strategy: Add Pieces Without Breaking Culture 

48:24 The New Hockey Landscape: Major Junior, Prep Paths & Tough Tradeoffs 

51:08 Practice Planning Like a DJ: Systems Early, Adjustments Later 

52:59 Consistency, Accountability & Responding to Adversity 

55:27 Video, Data & the Eye Test: What Tech Can’t Replace 

57:22 Developing Players In-Season vs Off-Season: Who Owns What 

59:23 Parents, Advisors & Communication: Recruiting the Player, Not the Handler 

01:01:28 Who Gets Scouted In Person: Showcases, Shortlists & Final Eye Tests 

01:02:30 Selling Middlebury & the NESCAC ‘Best Package’ Pitch 

01:03:56 Where the Program—and the Coach—Go Next (and Final Advice)

Note: Editing and post-production work for this episode was provided by The Podcast Consultant (https://thepodcastconsultant.com).

Topics

hockeynescaccoachplayer developmentyouth hockey