 |
In my experience, most power
skating programs are
actually conditioning
programs. While
conditioning is an important
aspect of hockey training,
it, by itself, does not turn
out a great skater.
Consider the training of a
world class tennis player or
golfer. These athletes,
trained since childhood on
the importance of
fundamentals, never stop
practicing them. Even minor
slumps reinstate the “back
to basics” training regime. |
Hockey kids are put out on the ice with
a stick and puck and told, “Skate”. Not
told or taught how to skate, but just,
“Skate (fast)”. The assumption is that
by skating more and (moving the legs) a
million miles an hour they’ll skate
faster. Wrong! They may learn to move
their legs fast, but they may end up
going nowhere fast.
Over my 30 years in the sport I’ve
watched millions of hockey players -
every age, every level - from novice to
pro. I still cringe at the terribly
small percentage of pros who are great
skaters.
From my earliest days of teaching (and
even now), the most repetitive request
from parents of hockey students is to
“skate them hard”, “make them work”,
“get them tired”. As if the purpose is
to have children come off the ice with
their tongues hanging out, crawling to
the locker room (so they’ll sleep well
that night)? Is this a measure of
learning?
Everyone wants a to skate hard and to
have a good workout. And I make sure
that they always get that! But my power
skating program is a
technique training
program. The purpose is to teach
players “how
to go somewhere –
fast”.
The players who attend my program over
the long term learn how to properly
execute every maneuver in the entire
hockey repertoire. They become not
just fast, but powerful, stable,
explosive and efficiently fast.
To become a great athlete there must be
an interaction between the brain and the
body. Learning a sport requires a
combination of mental function and
muscle function. Brain power combined
with muscle power. The ultimate goal is
to create muscle memory. But the brain
is boss. It teaches the body what and
how to do. So it must understand what
and why and how to do.
The brain cannot learn
when the body moves madly. It needs to
assimilate information. It needs first
to figure things out and then to
transfer signals to the muscles so that
the muscles can perform correctly.
The best way to go fast
is to first slow down.
In my Power Skating System we teach each
part of a skating maneuver separately.
We then combine the parts to create the
whole (completed) move. If you’ve read
my book you know that there are dozens
of hockey maneuvers. Each maneuver has
many parts. For example there are at
least 40 parts to the move called, “The
Forward Stride”. After teaching the
parts, we now introduce one other
elements, such as the puck. Technique
blows up - at least for awhile. The
brain must assimilate the added element
and transfer this information to the
muscles. Now we add another element,
such as skating fast with the puck.
Technique blows up again. Apply this
building block process to all the hockey
maneuvers and you’ll understand why it
takes years to teach and years to master
hockey skating.
The process: Learn first to execute a
maneuver correctly. Then correctly and
powerfully. Then correctly, powerfully,
quickly. Then correctly, powerfully,
quickly with the puck. Finally,
correctly, powerfully, quickly with the
puck, in game situations and under lots
of pressure.
There is no short cut so don’t expect to
become a great skater after one power
skating program. But stay positive and
stay committed to the long term. Within
8-10 years it will all “click in” and
you will.