"For the strength of the pack is the
wolf, and the strength of the wolf is
the pack."
— by Rudyard Kipling
As the winter season winds down to its
final intense weeks, hockey teams and
wolf packs that haven’t learned the
lesson of interdependence will run into
harsh times —fatal times for those who
think they can hunt alone.

Interdependence has two components:
players must learn to be dependent on
the team, and each player must strive to
make teammates better.
To be successful, every team must have
players who are catalysts — players who
make others better by their playmaking
brilliance. This was Magic
Johnson’s gift to basketball and Wayne
Gretzky’s to hockey. This is how
the pack gains strength from an
individual wolf. Every player
should try to be a catalyst, finding
ways to make linemates better.
The other half of the formula is
dependence — the individual wolf gaining
strength from the pack. This is
more difficult for the most talented
youth hockey players to grasp, because
at a young age, they don’t need the pack
to create offense. They just get
it done by themselves.
Eventually, at a higher level, every
player depends on teammates to be
effective — just as a carpenter depends
on tools — a lesson every young wolf cub
must learn before it’s too late.
Think of your teammates as tools to get
a difficult job done. The quicker
you give your linemate a perfect pass,
the better chance he can return it to
you at precisely the right moment.
The former Soviet Union had an official
government priority to build national
teams so powerful, their dominance would
attest to the superiority of communism.
Well, the hockey teams dominated like
none other in history, but communism was
an utter failure, as capitalism would
also fail if the powerful become
disrespectful of the working class.
To reach their goal of hockey dominance,
every Soviet player learned the wisdom
of Kipling’s words (without ever hearing
of the poet) — unselfish dedication of
individual talents to the team, and in
turn, each individual gains strength
from the group.
Soviet hockey teams for 40 years were
the best example in sports history of
how these concepts create synergy on a
team.
Definition of synergy: When the pieces
of a team are put together in such an
effective way that the whole becomes
greater than the sum of the parts.
This means 2+2+2 can add up to more than
6. Individuals can make others
more effective than they’d be without
the team.
Individual sports (like wrestling, track
or swimming) do not have an opportunity
for synergy.
Certainly, individuals can increase the
emotional suppport for each other by
their own performances. But an
outstanding wrestler cannot make his
teammate better by sneaking up and
holding back the arms of an opponent, as
they might do in pro rasslin.
On a track team, if one runner has a
personal best time, others may be
inspired from seeing the effort, but an
individual runner cannot step out on the
track and push team-mates along.
However, in a team sport every
individual has the ability to physically
make a team-mate better. Good blocking
by the offensive linemen in football
makes the job easier for their running
back. A basketball player can
pick a defender, allowing his team-mate
to drive for an easy lay-up — something
that wouldn’t happen if everyone on the
team simply played by himself.
In hockey, by screening the goalie, your
linemate might score with a shot no
stronger than this writer’s. As a
defenseman, you allow your partner to
create more offense when you cover for
him as he takes a chance. You
make your goalkeeper better by keeping
opponents from screening, by clearing
rebounds from in front, or by covering a
receiver so the puck-carrier has no
option but to shoot. Your goalie
can then play the angle more
aggressively than he would if you didn’t
remove other options.
When Magic Johnson or Wayne Gretzky
pulled defenders out of position and
made a brilliant pass behind the back,
their team-mates had great opportunities
to score. I might have even been
able to tap in one of those gifts.
This is what a catalyst does for a team.
This is synergy. 2+2+2 adds up to much
more than 6 when players are trying to
make team-mates better.
“Once a team learns to become
interdependent, it develops synergy,”
said Herb Brooks in discussing how the
1980 Olympic Team accomplished its
miracle. “A bunch of great
players does not make a winning team
without synergy.”
“This is accomplished by the way you
practice,” he continued. “… by the way
you play in the pre-Olympic games, and
by the camaraderie among the players —
by the trust they have in each other.”
Trust. Interdependence. Synergy.
Without the first two there can be no
synergy, and therefore no success.
The old poet, Kipling, may never have
seen a hockey puck, but he certainly
knew a lot about our game, and any team
that wants to survive in the playoffs
better heed his words.