The Hockey Dad Survival Kit: Essential Gear Every Hockey Parent & Coach Should Carry
If you’re a hockey parent or youth coach, you’ve probably experienced it, a broken helmet screw, snapped lace, or unexpected injury right before puck drop. This hockey dad survival kit is the practical gear setup I carry to every youth hockey game to keep small problems from becoming big ones.
If you’ve spent any real time at a rink, you know this truth… Something will break! A helmet screw will roll across the locker room floor five minutes before warmups. A lace will snap halfway through the second period. A kid will block a shot and insist he’s “good” while very clearly not being good.
And that’s why this bag exists! It either lives inside my son’s hockey bag or sits behind the bench when coaching. It’s not overbuilt. It’s not tactical for the sake of being tactical. It’s just practical.
And for me, it’s become one of the most valuable pieces of equipment we bring to the rink.
Let me be clear I’m not an equipment manager or medical expert. I’m just a hockey dad who’s been around long enough to notice patterns.
Gear breaks.
Kids get bumps and bruises.
Tape disappears.
If you stick around this sport long enough, you start building your own solutions.
The Bag Itself
The bag matters more than you’d think.
I didn’t want something huge that turns into another piece of luggage to haul around the rink. But I also didn’t want something so small that everything gets crammed in and impossible to find.
This one hits the sweet spot.
It’s technically a small tactical-style bag durable fabric, strong zippers, organized compartments, but it’s not doomsday prepper overkill. No giant MOLLE panels hanging everywhere. No “end of the world” vibes.
Just sturdy. Practical. Built to take a beating in the back of a hockey bag.
It’s easy to grab and carry. Compact enough to tuck inside a hockey bag or slide behind the bench. Big enough to hold tools, tape, first aid gear, and the extras without feeling overloaded.
Most importantly, it’s organized.
The Fix-It Side
The Multi-Blade Compact Ratcheting Screwdriver - This is the MVP of the whole setup. It’s compact. It has multiple bits. And most importantly… It’s Ratcheting. That ratcheting feature matters more than you’d think. When you’re tightening a helmet screw in a cramped locker room or adjusting hardware between shifts, not having to reposition your grip every half-turn makes everything faster and calmer. Helmet screws. Cage adjustments. Random bench repairs. This thing handles almost everything I’ve needed. There is nothing more stressful than a helmet falling apart during warmups. Being able to fix it in 30 seconds without drama? Worth it!
https://amzn.to/3N7FwXFHelmet Hardware Repair Kit - Extra screws. Posts. Spacers. Because when a screw falls out, it doesn’t just fall out. It teleports into another dimension under the bench. This little kit has saved more than one game.
https://amzn.to/4u0rEzaStick Tape & Sock Tape - Black or White stick tape, for obvious reasons.. taping blades and handles. Quick patches. Emergency fixes. Clear sock tape, shin pads sliding down mid-game is basically a rite of passage. One quick wrap and you’re back in business.
https://amzn.to/4tWP6gEExtra Laces - You won’t need them… Until you really, really need them. Then you’ll feel like a genius for carrying a spare pair.
https://amzn.to/4rzvi1gGoalie Toe Ties - If you’re a goalie parent, you already understand. When toe ties go, they go at the worst possible moment. Having replacements tucked in the bag keeps your night from ending early.
https://amzn.to/4u7e1yj
The “Stuff Happens” Section
First Aid Kit - Nothing extreme. Just a solid travel-size kit with bandages, gauze, wipes, and the basics. It handles the small stuff so it doesn’t become big stuff.
https://amzn.to/4cONVJZTourniquet - This is one of those things I hope I never use. But if you’re coaching or around youth sports regularly, having one isn’t overreacting, it’s being responsible.
https://amzn.to/4s7IkmCInstant Ice Pack - Blocked shots. Pucks off the ankle. Collisions. Ice solves a lot of problems at youth levels.
https://amzn.to/4u7pSwjHot Hands - Outdoor practices. Cold rinks. Frozen toes. Sometimes a little warmth goes a long way physically and mentally.
https://amzn.to/4rNS7P6
The Extras I’m Glad I Have
Knife – Tape, packaging, random fixes.
https://amzn.to/4u57d4gMedical scissors – Safer for cutting tape or gear quickly.
https://amzn.to/4aHwRV3Flashlight – Arena lighting is… inconsistent. Dropped hardware under a bench? This saves you.
https://amzn.to/4kZARnfTactical pen – Part pen, part tool. Small, practical, easy to carry.
https://amzn.to/4rItMtT
None of this is extreme.
It’s just stuff I’ve found useful over time.
Why I Keep It Around
I’ve realized this kit isn’t really about gear.
It’s about lowering stress.
When something breaks and you can fix it calmly, the player stays calm. The team stays calm. The night continues.
That ripple effect matters more than the screwdriver.
As a dad and coach, I’m not trying to be “the expert.” I’m just trying to be prepared enough that small problems stay small.
There’s something steady about being the guy who can quietly fix a helmet, hand over tape, or produce an ice pack without turning it into a scene.
And once people know you carry this stuff?
“Hey, do you have tape?”
“Got a screwdriver?”
“Anyone have an ice pack?”
But lets be honest, I don’t mind being that guy.
More Than Just Hockey
This is the start of something bigger for me.
Yes, hockey is a big part of our life. But this space won’t just be about hockey. It’ll be about being a dad. Coaching. Building things. Running a business. Figuring life out as it comes.
Because honestly, life feels a lot like youth hockey:
It’s fast.
It’s unpredictable.
Stuff breaks.
You adjust.
You fix what you can.
You keep moving.
And sometimes, having the right tools nearby makes all the difference.