SKILLS and ATHLETICISM. This is where
NHLers are superior, and this is where
your time and effort should be spent.
Note,
however, in this article I am referring
only to physiological attributes, not
mental qualities. Rink sense and
competitiveness, for example, are much,
MUCH more important than the
physiological attributes we’ll discuss
here.
In
the last two articles I suggested that
the weight room and isolated core
exercises have become somewhat
over-rated. They are only a
piece of the development puzzle — an
important piece at some ages — but just
one small aspect of a plan to become the
best player you can possibly be.
Even
at high school and college age, where
strength training with heavier weights
becomes an important tool, we have a
tendency to exaggerate its importance.
It’s all too common to equate “a
workout” with weight training.
However, if you are serious about
striving to be a great hockey player,
your time and energy must be focused on
three areas: (1) learning to play the
game, gaining exceptional rink sense;
(2) hockey skills like skating,
shooting, stick-handling and receiving
passes; (3) athletic qualities like
speed, quickness, coordination, dynamic
balance, agility, leg power, strength
and endurance (as a byproduct of all the
other training).
Is
strength an important building block for
these attributes? Yes. Is
it important to have core strength and
stability? Absolutely.
The
only question is: How can these be
achieved most effectively — in a way
that allows for practicing skills,
sprinting, jumping and learning to play
the game — a full-time project of its
own?
What
does “strength” and “core stability”
really mean for a 10-year-old, or a
seven-, or 15-year-old?
Obviously, no one is advocating heavy
weight training at the youngest ages, so
“strength” means something completely
different than it does for an NHL or
college player.
I
would also suggest that “core training”
is totally different for youth hockey
than it is currently practiced in the
NHL. Kids are (or should be)
playing active sports and skating
year-round. These sports, and
activities like sprinting, jumping,
agility exercises and shooting pucks are
excellent core exercises.
This
is not an opinion. It is verified
by a great deal of scientific research
which has shown that in any movement of
the limbs, the first muscles to be
activated are the deep core muscles of
the back and abdomen (Dr. Paul Hodges
has been a leader in this research. For
more on this subject, start here:
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3987/is_20070813/ai_n19467136
).
Paraphrased in everyday language, this
means that any athletic movement is an
excellent core exercise.
You
couldn’t find better stimulus for core
muscles than skating, sprinting, running
hills, jumping, etc. The twisting
movements of shooting pucks or swinging
baseball bats or throwing balls are at
least as effective as twisting exercises
in the gym with a medicine ball.