I
have yet to see an off-season program
for hockey that recommends a significant
commitment to skating and
skating-specific dryland training.
Yet, most people in our sport would
agree this is a very high priority,
perhaps the most important training a
young player can do in the off-season.
Our
mission to help young hockey players
with lofty dreams - - this is not rocket
science. It's not even exercise science
- - at least in the first stages of
planning.
Initially, it's about deciding what an
elite player looks like - - what
attributes of skill and athleticism set
him/her apart. Forget (for the
moment) the mental qualities.
They are extremely important, of course.
To
help a youngster train in the most
effective way, we first need a picture
of where he/she has to go in order to
move up in hockey. Is strength
important? Endurance? Speed?
Agility? Coordination? Balance?
Power?
Yes.
Yes. Yes. And yes.
Of
course, these are all important
qualities, and as outside experts
inserted themselves into hockey - - once
we moved inside, out of the cold, of
course - - each expert had his own
personal favorite. Some said that
cardiovascular fitness was the base upon
which all other training depended, and
our hockey players were sent out to ride
bikes and run around the lake.
Others believed that strength was the
"top priority," not bothering to
differentiate between the strength of an
Olympic lifter and that of a five
year-old hockey player who was just
starting to skate. We've been
told that "core strength" is critical
and balance is "extremely important."
So athletes were told to lift weights
while standing on a balance board that
tipped over when you leaned a little to
one side or another.
I
watched a hockey conditioning film
recently that listed 14 different types
of training as "extremely important,
highest priority," or just plain
"critical." And none of them
looked the least bit like hockey.
This
is the problem when outside folks - -
expert or not - - are given a free reign
to set up training programs for hockey
players. If there are thirty
experts in the NHL, there will be thirty
different training programs - - when the
experts are given no clear picture of
the needs in hockey.
It's
like having an assembly line in Detroit
with thirty employees - - each an expert
at his own job. If no one knows what
the final product is supposed to be (Is
it a car? A truck? An SUV?), the end
result will not look like a bunch of
experts built it.
Hockey people need to sit down - -
without the outside experts - - and
paint a picture of what the final
product should look like. What
qualities does a youngster need in order
to become an elite player sometime in
the future?
By
hockey people I mean coaches, former
players, and scouts - - people who know
what it feels like to skate, or shoot on
the move, or check, handle the puck, or
pass. Decide what physical
qualities are really critical in
hockey. Then, when that picture
is clear, perhaps at that point we might
ask experts how we help young kids get
there.
To
collect opinions from experts about
whether or not a certain type of
training is "good" makes no sense until
we know what it takes to become an elite
hockey player. For example,
swimming is a good exercise, but it
doesn't develop hockey players.
We've turned the developmental training
over to people who don't understand
hockey. We tell our players to
train hard in the off-season, "Do what
Joe tells you. He's an expert on
training. We (coaches) really
don't care what you do. Just train
hard."
But
if the coaches sat down and compiled a
list of those physical qualities that
make a great player, it is not difficult
to find exercises that fit the needs.
And what are the needs? Every
hockey group would list things like
skating, shooting, stick-handling, right
at the top of the list. These are
trainable, physical qualities, and it
would be easy to draw up a plan for
youngsters to get better in each area.
How do you get better at shooting?
"Shoot. Shoot hard!" I
recall these words from a former NHL
player many years ago - - before the
experts came at us with words like
cardiovascular fitness. "You need
to be in hockey shape," he would say.
But then we found out we couldn't use
such simplistic language. Better
to use terms like "aerobic" and
"anaerobic."
It's
not about "quickness" or "explosiveness"
any more. It's
"rate-of-force-development."
Without the outside experts looking over
our shoulders, hockey people might say
that players need speed, agility,
quickness, rhythm, balance,
coordination, and endurance - - all on
skates! But the experts have told us we
need to train on bikes or run marathons.
They're not bad people, these outside
experts. And they're pretty darn
smart. But just like the
assembly-line workers at an auto plant,
the experts were never given a clear
picture of the final product. So,
we have an approach to training in
hockey that is so far off line, there is
no other sport that compares.
If we
picked up a training manual for a
basketball team, we would see they are
not told to train on bikes for most of
their cardiovascular workouts. Lance
Armstrong isn't told he must run
marathoners in preparation for the Tour
de France. Swimmers aren't told
to skate. They swim!
But
hockey players are told to cross-train.
We
need to tell the experts we think
skating is important - - just as
important to us as swimming is to
swimmers. Maybe we just assumed
they'd pick this up at a hockey game.
Skating is a rather important
attribute. It takes years to
master, and we'd like our players to
become faster, more agile, and more
efficient - - at skating, not biking.
To
improve skating - - or any skill
(shooting or stickhandling) - - we first
must learn to skate with correct
fundamentals. This might require some
instruction from a skating coach or
hockey coach. However, watching
and copying a great player will also
help a youngster learn to skate
correctly.
The
ABC's of skating improvement are
simple. Think of the planning
process as a pyramid, where the most
important priority (SKATING) is at the
top (See Pyramid graphic below).

(A)
We must follow up after the instruction
with thousands of repetitions - -
quality repetitions. This is the first
place where we fail in hockey.
Figure skaters and speed skaters spend
hours and hours doing quality
repetitions on-ice. In hockey we
do not. We don't encourage
youngsters - - or provide enough
opportunities for them to work on
skating repetitions without the
distraction of pucks, or other skills,
or competition.
To
rely on hockey games to help youngsters
improve skating is a sure way to
compound bad habits. It might also
result in new ones as well, because
games are about competing, not
concentrating on correct skating
fundamentals.
(B)
We can learn a lot from speed skaters on
dryland training. They would never
think of teaching someone to skate
without concurrently doing support
exercises off-ice that build a base for
good posture, endurance, and strength -
- all done in a skating range of motion.
They
believe that if someone has great knee
bend and body posture - - a base built
from dryland training, they are much
more likely to skate correctly.
Jack Nicklaus believes that if any
golfer would stand up to the ball like
Tiger Woods, he/she would swing better.
Skating posture with optimal knee bend
is the first fundamental of skating.
Acquire good skating posture, endurance,
strength, and explosiveness in dryland -
- doing exercises that look and feel
like skating - - and the chances of
improvement from on-ice repetitions is
much greater.
(C)
General off-ice qualities of fitness,
strength, and speed will certainly
provide a solid base from which to do
the training in (B) and (A). Some
of this general training is important at
appropriate ages. But it is a
myth to think that training for (B) and
(A) can only be done after significant
work in (C). Furthermore,
spending too much time doing general
training (C) does not leave much time
and energy for the most important
training (A) and (B).
I
have yet to see an off-season program
for hockey that recommends a significant
commitment to skating and
skating-specific dryland training.
Yet, most people in our sport would
agree this is a very high priority,
perhaps the most important training a
young player can do in the off-season.
That
is why hockey people need to replace
outside experts in planning the
development programs for our young
athletes.