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So dramatically has the game
changed in the NHL that any
plans to get there better
change to the same extent.
To put this on a more
immediate level for kids in
high school or youth hockey
— if you want to become as
good as you can be, your
training better reflect the
shift toward skillful
hockey.
The creative, smart,
talented players in the NHL
are loving it right now —
and laughing all the way to
the bank. Some say
it’s going the same way in
college, juniors, and high
school — and it is — only a
bit slower.
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Defensemen who can quarterback a power
play, who can skate and make the quick,
accurate breakout pass — they’ve
replaced the goons who’s sticks were
nothing but a weapon. Forwards who
make deceptive passes, who protect the
puck with their bodies, who have the
audacity to cut to the net with only a
half-step on the D — they’re on every
team’s shopping list.
It’s
all about skill, so make sure your
efforts to chase your dreams are spent
wisely. Skating, stick-handling,
shooting — these are the highest
priorities on-ice and off.
Not
that strength training is less important
than before, but now, more than ever,
the focus should be strength workouts
that support hockey skills.
Do your leg workouts make you a better
skater? Can core exercises be
modified to make you a better shooter?
Does stick-handling practice include
exercises to strengthen the shoulders,
arms, and core muscles? When you
work on agility and explosiveness, does
it transfer to skating?
Endurance has always been important in
hockey, and it always will be. The
important question is: Can you improve
endurance while working on hockey
skills? The answer is yes —
definitely yes. You just have to
incorporate interval training.
Skating, stick-handling, shooting — you
can’t get enough. It’s interesting that
in just 90 days, the NHL has done more
to lead young hockey players in the
right direction than anything it’s done
in 90 years. Consider a young
teen-aged Tiger Woods, dreaming of being
the best golfer in the world. His
parents were willing to try anything,
and they sought the best advice
available.
Some
“experts” said Tiger should work on
strength, endurance, flexibility and
core stability, because these are all
important for golf (as they are for
hockey). However, no one could
have convinced Tiger or his parents that
any of these things were more important
than the skills of golf.
His
plan left nothing to chance, so he
worked hard on strength, endurance,
flexibility and core stability.
But, of course, the vast majority of his
time was spent perfecting golf skills.
The same plan works for basketball or
tennis or any sport. But somehow,
personal trainers have convinced hockey
players that training in the weight room
or riding a bike for aerobic fitness is
more important than practicing hockey
skills.
It
took the referees in the NHL to remind
us how important skills are to hockey
success — just as they are in every
sport. Don’t be misled; hockey is
a game of skill — the skills take years
to master — and every skill is highly
trainable.