Ice Sports


The Four Fundamentals of Top Ice Hockey Skating PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 16 January 2008 06:00

In ice hockey, skating can make or break you. Here are the 4 fundamentals to becoming a top performing ice hockey skater, plus 4 extra techniques to push you right over the edge!

1. A solid, well-balanced stance is basic to any degree of speed you want to attain. If you will work on your starts, stops, and turns as described, you will be well on your way to good balance.

2. In striding, you have better balance if you skate with your feet about shoulder width apart. If your feet are too close together, you are more easily knocked off-balance in the heavy going of a game.

3. The faster you skate, the more you should bend forward from the waist. The comparison here is to the body-lean of a sprinter doing the 100-yard dash and the striding form of a two-miler. During the course of a hockey game, you will be both a sprinter and a strider as the play dictates. But when you really want to dig fast, with or without the puck, you should lean well into it.

4. For straight-ahead speed, your power comes from the thrust you get when the knee of the digging foot straightens. To get maximum thrust, the knee of the leg coming forward should be well bent. Be sure you carry this knee forward ahead of the foot. Then when you place your foot on the ice, you get full muscle power when the knee straightens.

Top athletes, especially outstanding track stars, recognize the importance of leg power and do something about it. They use a principle of training known as over-load. And you can use your own form of it, too. Here are some methods of over- loading:

1. Drive yourself all out as long as you are on the ice during scrimmage. Do not just coast around the rink on skates; they will do most of the work for you if you let them.

2. Skate in short, hard bursts, gradually building up the number of lengths of ice you can do successively.

3. Get a buddy to let you push him up and down the ice. You are over-loading by the amount he weighs.

4. In testing yourself at top speed, keep up a continual refrain in your mind: "I can go faster yet!" Be sure to warm up well before any all-out test.

If you study these 4 fundamentals and over-load with the 4 techniques above, you will improve your skating skills dramatically. And that in turn will improve your overall ice hockey performance.

FREE ice hockey training can be found at Sir Jon Weaver"s information web site. Discover the secrets to performing at the top of your game, with a focus on beginners. It"s FREE! Click here: http://www.HockeyForBeginners.com

 
Zamboni Creates Magic at Hockey Games to the Disappointment of Parents PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 30 September 2007 12:00

Frank Zamboni created the world’s first ice resurfacing machine in the 1940’s and today Zamboni is the official ice resurfacing machine of the NHL as well as a magic saga.

For some reason the Zamboni often are more interesting to young kids than the actual NHL they are watching.

Many are the parents who have bought expensive tickets to let their kids experience a NHL game just to find out that the kids find it more interesting to watch the Zamboni out on the ice during the intermissions.

This must be very frustrating for a hockey loving dad who wants to get a cup of coffee between periods to stand and watch the Zamboni instead.

I actually remember one of the very first ice hockey games my dad brought me too. He met some old friends he hadn’t seen in quite a while and they agreed to have a chat during the first intermission.

My dad never got to talk ice hockey with his old friends that night because I didn’t leave my seat during the first break. I just sat there and watched the Zamboni refresh the ice as if the machine was the greatest hero in the world.

When the second break came I agreed to leave real short for some popcorn and dad was all happy to see his pals. His excitement soon disappeared when we couldn’t find them and we returned to our seats for the third period.

Now I am a hockey loving dad myself and maybe one day I will have the same trouble with my kid as dad had with me.

HockeyTribute.com is an informative site for ice hockey fans and a place where you can learn more about the NHL and ice hockey.

 
Why There Are Slow and Fast Ices in Hockey PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 16 May 2007 08:00
Depending on how into ice hockey you are you might or might not have heard the terms “slow ice” and “fast ice”. What you know for sure though is that the game of ice hockey is being played with a puck and what the terms refer to is the pucks ability to move on the ice. On fast rinks the puck moves fast and on slow rinks the puck move slow. That is logic, but why is this and can it be considered a problem? The main reason why the problem with slow and fast ices arises is that hockey is played both up in Canada as well in southern USA and it is because of the difference in climate. Up north where it is cold and dry you get fast ices without lots of snow on it and in the south you get ices with more snow on them because of the warm weather and humidity. In hockey the players most often want to play on fast ice surfaces, because that makes them feel more in control of the puck. The ice gets slow because of the snow that is being created during the game and it makes the puck bounce. One thing that is funny to hear though is when hockey players complain about that it is the ice’s fault when they lose a game. Don’t they realize that both teams are playing on the same ice?
 
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