About the Bow Valley Yeti
Nothing Is Given. Everything Is Earned.
Building leaders, building athletes, and building communities through passion, perspective, and performance. Our programs are designed to support athletes as they grow both on and off the ice. Through structured training, competitive opportunities, and strong mentorship, players develop the habits, discipline, and mindset required to succeed in hockey and in life.
As part of the P3 Sports development pathway, athletes progress through an environment that emphasizes preparation, accountability, and continuous improvement. We believe development happens through commitment, hard work, and a willingness to keep progressing.
- Passion
The commitment players and families bring to the game.
- Perspective
Hockey should help athletes grow as people, not only as players.
- Performance
The daily work required to improve, compete, and contribute to the team.
For Players Ready to Be Challenged
The Yeti program is built for competitive hockey players who want more structure, more accountability, and a stronger development environment.
Players are expected to bring effort, coachability, discipline, and commitment to the team. Families are expected to support the process and understand that development happens through consistency over time.


A Team-First Program with Academy Support
The Yeti remain focused on the team first. Players join the Bow Valley Yeti to compete, train, grow, and represent the program.
What makes the program stronger is the Academy structure behind it. Bow Valley Hockey Academy supports the team experience by connecting player development, academics, training, and pathway consistency under one system — giving players a more complete hockey environment without taking away from the identity and pride of the Yeti team.
Development Through Competition
The Yeti believe competition is a critical part of player development. Through the academy-supported pathway, players are challenged to apply what they are building in training inside real team and game environments.
Practices, academy development, off-ice preparation, and competition all work together to help athletes progress — building habits, resilience, and the maturity required to keep moving forward.
