18 Jan Play the Body Sutes!!!
I know, I know we can all sit there as armchair coaches and say Ryan Suter should have played the body in stead of the puck… but honestly have you slowed Bollands second goal against the Preds a few Sundays ago down to see how impossible it was to stop?
 If he had not done this, the puck would have been close enough to his body that Suter would have simply had to put on the breaks and go shoulder to chest… but with the stretch, now good ol’ Sutes has to start crossing over. Once you have a defenseman playing a loose gap crossing over toward you…. you got ’em! (This stretch is the hardest thig to teach a young player since it involves moving the hands away from the midline of the body, and the natural tendencey of a child from birth is to keep the hands close to this area… I don’t know evolutionary thing that has to do with protecting vital organs… go ask your DNA!)
If he had not done this, the puck would have been close enough to his body that Suter would have simply had to put on the breaks and go shoulder to chest… but with the stretch, now good ol’ Sutes has to start crossing over. Once you have a defenseman playing a loose gap crossing over toward you…. you got ’em! (This stretch is the hardest thig to teach a young player since it involves moving the hands away from the midline of the body, and the natural tendencey of a child from birth is to keep the hands close to this area… I don’t know evolutionary thing that has to do with protecting vital organs… go ask your DNA!)
 Second, and this is where any chance Suter had went right out the window, was Bollands slight use of the backhand to pull the puck back away.  Instead of pulling straight accross with the middle of his blade which usually results in a diagonal line into the defenders skates, he pulls back with the backhand just enough to make sure suter can’t reach with a poke check. Watch the video at full speed and you’ll see it happens so fast, it’s almost hard to notice he’s doing it. Most minor hockey players don’t realize the benefit of understanding the entire blade of the stick and it’s six parts. The see it as “the blade” and are often limited by how many tools they have in the good old “offensive toolbox” that they bring to work with them everyday.
Second, and this is where any chance Suter had went right out the window, was Bollands slight use of the backhand to pull the puck back away.  Instead of pulling straight accross with the middle of his blade which usually results in a diagonal line into the defenders skates, he pulls back with the backhand just enough to make sure suter can’t reach with a poke check. Watch the video at full speed and you’ll see it happens so fast, it’s almost hard to notice he’s doing it. Most minor hockey players don’t realize the benefit of understanding the entire blade of the stick and it’s six parts. The see it as “the blade” and are often limited by how many tools they have in the good old “offensive toolbox” that they bring to work with them everyday.

Well, we all know how this story ends…having gained the advantage on the helpless Defenceman and the goalie, Bolly cuts back in and tucks her away five hole as the tender frantically tries to buterfly slide accross… Hasek would have stopped this for sure, since there is no five hole lying on your back!
There are huge lessons to be learned for minor hockey players in this goal:
Work on your reach!
Not enough players understand how rolling the wrist and getting the top hand of the stick away from the body adds at least another foot and a half to their reach!
Aim to move east to west;
executing a move is the easy part, getting away from an angry embarrassed defenceman after is the key!
Get the Goalie to move;
Stop goin in right down the middle , pull th goalie to the side so that areas of the net open up for you. Sure, goalies can come accross perfectly cutting down the angles, but not often, especially in minor hockey!
Tune in next week when Doctor Hockey visits with a skill breakdown!
 
  
  
  
 
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