Picture the Detroit Red Wings.
It’s the model that should be
permanently stamped in your mind as you
work out this summer. As we get
into August, if your workouts — on-ice
or off — don’t remind you of the Red
Wings, they’re not the best you can do
with your time and energy.
Speed, quickness, agility
— combined with skill.
These are make-or-break requirements for
success in hockey and many other
sports. Every coach would say
they want to condition their team to
play at high speed with quality skills
the entire game — not just for a period
or two.
When
we get to the time in practice when the
coach says, “OK, line up on the goal
line, we’re skating” — when we get to
what is called the “conditioning part of
practice in any sport” — why do we
condition for slowness?
Increasing “hockey endurance”
should
never involve slowness because
there is no part of any game that can be
won with slowness. There should
not be one skating drill in hockey — not
one sprint in football, soccer or
basketball — that trains habits of
slowness and poor fundamental
technique.
Never
sacrifice quality to gain endurance.
Remember the pace of the Stanley Cup
Finals if you want to move up the ladder
in this game. Copy that in your
training program.
Definition of “hockey endurance:” the
ability to finish each game with the
same high speed and quality skills you
bring to the start of the game. And,
I’ll add to this definition … if you
don’t bring speed and quality skills to
the start of the game, join me in the
bleachers.
Forget the words “aerobic” and
“anaerobic.” They’re distractions.
They encourage training “gurus” to
recommend separating your workouts into
compartments — strength workouts
separated at all times from speed and
skill — aerobic workouts at a different
time than anaerobic training.
For a
game that requires all of this at the
same time, this is as foolish as
isolating each individual muscle,
thinking that strong muscles will turn
you into a great athlete like Michael
Jordan, Randy Moss or Alex Ovechkin.
Developing athleticism requires training
that looks and feels athletic — fast,
explosive, coordinated, rhythmical
movement — poetry in motion. And
endurance means keeping up that fast,
poetic movement for as long as it takes.
Consider just one piece of the poetry —
skating. If you are unable to
keep your knees bent at the end of a
game or shift, it doesn’t matter if an
expert with impressive language defines
the problem as aerobic, anaerobic,
strength endurance, or skating skill.
The lingo isn’t important. At that
moment, you are just as poor a skater as
a beginner who has never learned correct
technique.
The
1980 Olympic hockey team had, as its
basic conditioning philosophy, that each
practice would require
faster-than-comfortable execution of
skills. Short practices at the
start, but by the end of the training
season, these practices required
“overspeed” tempo for the length of a
game.
Forget Hollywood’s over-emphasis on the
endless stops-and-starts that coach
Brooks would pull out of his hat when he
got mad — when he thought the team
needed a lesson in discipline. Those
lapses were outside his true plan for
conditioning.
The
goal was to play hockey in the
high-speed comfort zone that the Soviets
developed with each of their practices.
As a player — a veteran of two Olympic
teams — Brooks had experienced the
discomfort of playing the Soviets on
their terms. It was much too fast
for teams that hadn’t practiced for
months at an “overspeed” pace.
Here’s why the traditional approach
doesn’t work. When all-out
skating drills last more than 20
seconds, the remainder of the drill is
an effective practice for slowness. The
neuromuscular memory bank isn’t smart
enough to determine which movements it
is supposed to remember and which it
should forget. Repetitions are
recorded and will be repeated, whether
or not this is your intention.
Using
the traditional approach, endurance is
gained certainly, but it means you have
extended your ability to skate with poor
mechanics. You are practicing
slow strides, inadequate knee bend and
extension, exaggerated flexion at the
hips into an inefficient “pike”
position, overuse of arms and other
muscles that are not part of an
efficient skating stride.
Hockey isn’t alone in this ridiculous
tradition. Go to any high school
practice field in the next few days and
watch the illogical way football and
soccer coaches approach their goal.
They want their teams to execute at the
highest possible speed, but when they
get to the “conditioning” portion of
practice, they condition for slowness.
Sprints should always be done for the
purpose of increasing speed.
“Two-a-day” marathon practices in heat
and humidity are not only dangerous —
young athletes die each year from this
misguided tradition — but there will be
repetition after repetition after
repetition of neuromuscular patterns of
slowness. Then athletes go out
for a bite to eat and return for more
repetition at a sluggish pace.
The players who are in the worst shape
practice at a snail’s pace if they don’t
collapse from heat stroke.
Stop
this nonsense. If you want fast,
skillful execution, your entire practice
has to be high quality skills executed
at the fastest possible tempo.
When it is no longer physically possible
to keep up the quality, practice is
over. Do something else. Lift
weights in an air-conditioned room.
Watch films. Go swimming.
Do
anything else — but never practice poor
skill execution at a slow speed.