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While the sport of hockey
has advanced greatly in the
last 20 years with new
equipment technologies,
training procedures,
coaching, recovery methods
and attention to small
details I find it
fascinating that out of our
rich traditions we still
choose to keep some parts of
hockey the same...when it
really should change! |
Take for
example the hockey warm-up.
Comparatively to other sports we are in
the dark ages. While other sports are
applying science and common sense to
preparing for a physical event we in the
hockey community laugh in their faces,
skate around willy-nilly, sit and listen
to a coaches lecture and then stand
around like statues before the game is
played. If this strategy of
physical preparation was used in other
sports like sprinting, bobsled or skiing
(to name a few sports) a great many
athletes would end up with injuries.
Perhaps it's time that hockey learned
from others and adopted a better system.
The Current System
Let me first
dissect a typical hockey warm-up so that
later I can share my views on the flaws
of the current system.
1. Generally if
the team has any person on the staff
with a shred of physical education
training then a dryland warm-up will be
the first order of business. Now
this is not always the case. I
have witnessed high end hockey teams
compete on a regular basis without a
dryland warm-up. Usually teams send the
athletes for a short run or put the
players on a stationary bike followed by
some static stretching. For
argument sakes lets assume this takes 30
minutes (although most teams spend 10 to
15 minutes on the warm-up and call that
good enough).
2. In some cases
coaches want to spend 10 minutes or so
talking about a basic plan for the
upcoming game. Perhaps the
white-board will be broken out and they
will talk about breakouts, penalty kill,
the fore-check for that evening, or
other basic strategies. Some
coaches do not do this at this time so
this may depend on your team.
3. The next order
of business if to put on your equipment
(30 minutes is usually allotted).
4. At this time
players get out onto the ice for the
traditional 15 minute warm-up.
The first 5 minutes is spent skating
around in circles (usually
counterclockwise), followed by 5 to 8
minutes of 2 on 1, 3 on 2 drills to get
peoples feet moving and develop a feel
for the puck. The last 2 to 5
minutes is spent taking shots on the
goaltender, stretching on the ice, some
short sprints from one side of the ice
to the other.
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5.
Following the on-ice warm-up
players go back to the
dressing room (for 15
minutes while the ice is
flooded) and sit down while
the coach presents the
pre-game speech and strategy
session.
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6. The flood
players come back onto the ice to skate
around for a minute or two before the
national anthem (or anthems) are
played. Right after this players
return to the bench and the game begins
shortly after.
Flaws of the Current
System
1. The
first flaw in the system is that coaches
tend to talk strategy and systems too
late in the warm-up when the athletes
are supposed to be warmed up.
Having the team sit down to listen to a
15 minute speech right before the game
is ridiculous. This should be the
first order of business when the
athletes arrive at the rink.
Spend as long as you want going over
this...but do it at the start, not the
end!
2. The next area
for concern is the off-ice warm-up.
To begin with not every team does an
off-ice warm-up and those that do
usually get it wrong. A short run
or stationary bike WILL NOT prepare you
adequately to play hockey. The
hip musculature, core and shoulder
girdle needs to be actively warmed up to
stimulate blood flow and help prevent
injuries. This is accomplished
with a dynamic warm-up (with movements
such as fire-hydrants, wide mountain
climbers, roll-overs to v-stretches,
backwards stretching lunges, scorpions,
and other movements to increase core
temperature and stimulate blood flow to
the muscles. Following this
dynamic warm-up the team should move to
light conditioning movements (like
burpees, lateral lunges, windmills,
swings and push-ups) to break a sweat
and get the body used to physical
activity. Finally you have to get
the feet moving, as hockey is a quick
moving, agility based sport.
Using light plyometrics, ladder drills,
and for goaltenders the hacky-sack will
do wonders for warming up for hockey.
At the end of the dryland warm-up some
light range of motion stretching should
be done just to keep everything loose.
The entire warm-up should take 20
minutes provided you don't fool around
and get down to business.
3. After the
dryland warm-up players should put on
their equipment but this should not take
30 minutes. In that amount of time
athletes will get cold and tighten up so
essentially the dryland warm-up was for
nothing. Coaches should limit the
dressing time to 20 minutes and make
sure that players come to the rink early
enough to sharpen skates, inspect
equipment, tape sticks, and do all the
other necessary preparations long before
they put on their equipment. When
I consult with teams and see the coach
(or assistant) sharpening skates right
before the warm-up that is my first sign
of a poorly run team.
4. When players go
out onto the ice I believe that the
national anthems should be played at
that time. My reasoning for this
is that after the warm-up you have an
additional 2 minutes of singing (2 more
if you play another anthem), plus all
the time it takes to get lined up, and
then back to the benches before the
game. Let's have the anthem
before the warm-up so players can focus
on playing hockey.
5. When players
finally do start the warm-up it's not
the time to skate around willy-nilly
like an idiot. Skate 5 laps around your
end of the ice to loosen up a little bit
and then get started on movements drills
that focus on moving the feet.
From this point coaches can execute 2 on
1, or 3 on 2 drills for 5 minutes.
As this is happening the goaltenders
should have a set routine with one or
two players taking shots or helping them
warm-up (players can rotate in and out
of this so that they also get in a good
warm-up). At the very end of the
15 minutes players should do movement
drills (like inside edges, outside
edges, turns, back to fronts, etc.)
along with some light stick battle or
shadow drills to get the feet moving.
Please note that I have not mentioned
stretching during the on-ice warm-up as
many players seem to do...this is
because it's a waste of time at this
point (you should already be loose), and
the ice really isn't the best place to
warm-up is it?
6. Right after
the warm-up is over I think that the
game should start. You see this in
midget hockey during tournaments where
the rink is trying to make the most of
the time they are allowed. I
don't see the need for a flood after the
warm-up as the ice is not torn up very
much and it gets players right into the
game when they are warm. Leagues
would see a drastic reduction in first
period injuries if they adopted this
method of play and fans would get to see
players able to compete right from the
start of the game without the slow first
period blues that affects many games.
Now I have no
reason to suspect that the current
system of warming up for hockey that has
been around for decades will ever change
as hockey has a rich culture and many
folks in the industry are resistant to
change. Personally I'm waiting for the
day of change...but I'm not holding my
breath.