Today’s article is a guest post from Chris Phillips, an Athletic Trainer and Strength and Conditioning Coach that runs a facility called Compete Sports Performance and Rehab in Southern California. Before opening Compete, Chris spent 8 years working in the NHL. It’s always great to get someone’s perspective that has worked at the highest levels, and is actively involved in training youth players. Enjoy today’s post and please post any comments you have below!

Off-Ice Training for Goalies

Off ice training plays a vital role in the development of hockey players. USA Hockey follows the Long Term Athletic Development principles as the basis of their program. These principles will assist in creating a more consistent training regimen. Today’s training programs should not be based on how hard the program is, but rather on specific goals and  progressions.

When training for hockey, the program should be devised with the following in mind:

  1. Is the program age specific?
  2. Is the program based on meeting the demands of the sport?
  3. Is proper technique being used?
  4. Does the program include fundamental movements that progress to more complex ones?
  5. Does the program address injury prevention exercises that relate to the sport?

Goalie-Specific Training

Now that we covered some of the basics, here’s where it gets tricky. Should a goalie train like a skater? They both play the same game, so can we train them the same off the ice? Let’s look at the movements each player will go through during a game. A forward predominantly skates forwards, weaving and turning as they skate up the ice. A defenseman will skate backwards more than the forwards during a game. Both will utilize a crossover step while turning as well. There is one main component that is similar with skaters, they mainly skate north and south in a linear pattern.

Now let’s look at how a goalie moves. Their movement is more lateral in fashion, moving from post to post, not to mention dropping into a butterfly and getting back up on their skates quickly. It’s pretty obvious that the demands on a goalie are pretty different than a skater during a game. So if the demands are different, shouldn’t the training program be different? That’s not to say that there will not be a lot of crossover in the training program, but that there are certain aspects that need to be addressed. This isn’t always as easy as it sounds. Many teams train together and it can be difficult for the Strength Coach to modify the program for the goalies, but it should be noted and modified as much as possible.

Hockey Training-Lateral Squat

Now that we have deciphered that the demands on a goalie are different than a skater and that their programs should also be different, what should be the focus of the program? The program needs keep in mind the age and level of the athlete. Exercises that are good for one goalie may be too complex for another. Always begin simple, then as the athlete masters the exercise, make it more difficult. Adding resistance, placing the athlete on an unstable surface or making the movement more complex are all good examples of how to make the training more difficult.

Below are some of the basic principles that should be included in a goalie dryland program.

  1. Agility exercises that focus on lateral movement
  2. Plyometric exercises that focus on lateral movement
  3. Single leg and hip strengthening exercises
  4. Core stability
  5. Shoulder strengthening and stability exercises
  6. Hand eye coordination

Off-Ice Training for Goalies

There is an unlimited amount of exercises that can be used with goalies that will improve performance on the ice.

Using the principles previously mentioned, here are some key exercises that can be implemented into your goalie training program:

  1. Lateral lunges
  2. Lateral bounds
  3. Resisted shuffles
  4. Mini band exercises for hip strength
  5. Rear foot elevated split squats
  6. Medicine Ball Russian Twists
  7. Dumbbell forward, diagonal and lateral shoulder raises
  8. Dumbbell rows
  9. Alternate ball toss with partner

Hockey Training-Alternate Ball Toss

The way you train off the ice directly affects the way you perform on the ice. Take a step by step approach with long term athletic development in mind. Have goals in mind with proper technique and progression as the basis of your program to maximize performance and limit injuries.

Chris Phillips is a certified Athletic Trainer and Strength and Conditioning Specialist with over 20 years experience in professional sports. Chris spent 8 years in the NHL with the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim and the Washington Capitals. He was a member of the 2003 Mighty Ducks Stanley Cup Finalists and now owns and operates Compete Sports Performance and Rehab in Orange County, California. Chris can be contacted via email at chris@competeperformance.com or through their website at www.competesportsperformance.com.

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

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“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

Today I have another awesome sports nutrition tip from Brian St. Pierre. This tip is a “teaser” from the Nutrition Guide he wrote for my new program Ultimate Hockey Transformation. Enjoy! – KN

Tip #3: Eat Protein at Every Meal and Most Snacks

As an athlete, protein plays a critical role in achieving the health, performance and body composition you desire. While many debate about carbs and fats, it has become increasingly clear that protein is the most important macronutrient of them all.

The sports nutrition research shows over and over again that when protein intake is sufficient, good things happen. Optimal rates of muscle gain are achieved, health markers are improved, performance is maximized, and hard-earned muscle is retained when getting lean – while also maximizing fat loss.

Simply put, if you don’t eat enough protein, it’s hard to recover from your training, hard to build muscle, hard to lose fat, and hard to optimize health.

Adequate protein will also help you:

  1. digest your food better
  2. make hormones (like testosterone and growth hormone)
  3. maintain a healthy immune system
  4. make neurotransmitters for better brain function
  5. and much more.

As a hard-training athlete, your goal is to consume approximately 1 gram of protein for every pound of your desired body weight.

Desired body weight is a representation of your lean body mass (your weight minus your body fat), as getting in 1 gram of protein for every pound of lean body mass is ideal. Since it is a pain to calculate your body fat percentage (and it is unnecessary), simply using target bodyweight is a simple and accurate method.

For example, if you weigh 250 lbs and want to be 200 lbs, then simply aim for ~200 grams of protein. If you weigh 170 lbs and want to be 200 lbs, then simply aim for ~200 grams of protein. If you weigh 130 lbs and don’t want to change your weight, then simply aim for ~130 grams.

The best part is you don’t have to count grams to achieve this.

A portion of protein is the size, thickness and diameter of your palm. This provides about 20-30 grams of protein.

Palm Sized Protein Portion

Photo Credit: PrecisionNutrition.com

Men should aim for ~2 palm-sized portions of protein at every meal (40-60 grams).

Women should aim for ~1 palm-sized portion of protein at every meal (20-30 grams).

Simply eat the 1-2 palms of protein with every meal, 3-5 times per day, and you will get all the protein you need!

-Brian St. Pierre, MS, RD, CSCS, CISSN, PN1

P.S. For more information on how to get a copy of Brian’s incredible hockey nutrition resource, click here: Ultimate Hockey Transformation

Brian is a Registered Dietitian and received his Bachelor’s in Human Nutrition and Dietetics from the University of Maine, where he also received his Master’s in Food Science and Human Nutrition. He is a Certified Sports Nutritionist as well as a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist.

Brian worked for three years at Cressey Performance as the head Sports Nutritionist and as a Strength and Conditioning Coach, working with hundreds of athletes and recreational exercisers of all types. During this time, he also authored the High Performance Handbook Nutrition Guide, Show and Go Nutrition Guide, Ultimate Hockey Nutrition and dozens of articles for publication.

Nowadays, he works closely with Dr. John Berardi as a full-time coach and a nutrition educator at Precision Nutrition. In particular, working closely with our elite athletes and fitness professionals. As part of the Precision Nutrition mission, he helps to deliver life-changing, research-driven nutrition coaching for everyone.

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Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

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“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

Last week I broke down the skating technique of a youth hockey player. If you missed that post, you can check it out here: Analyzing the Skating Stride

The main focus on that post was on identifying on-ice technique flaws, and following up with a few basic tips on how he could try to make improvements in his most lagging areas.

As I’ve written about in the past, the reality is that players adopt sub-optimal skating patterns for two reasons:

  1. They don’t know better
  2. It’s the closest to their interpretation of optimal that their body allows

The first point is the one most coaches are familiar with. This simply needs they need more practice and more coaching. A lot of the tips I wrote about in the last post (See: Analyzing the Skating Stride) and this one (3 Keys to Developing Optimal Skating Technique) will make a huge impact here, but it still takes time and A LOT of practice.

The latter point boils down to identifying what, if any, physical barriers the individual player has that may be limiting their ability to get into and maintain an optimal skating position.

One of the things I’ve noticed from talking to so many parents at Endeavor is that the common assumption is that kids don’t have any joint restrictions that may prevent them from achieving desirable athletic positions. It’s true that most people tend to lose range of motion with age, but it’s dangerously misguided to think teenage kids are free of these limitations. In fact, a 2013 study from Marc Philippon‘s demonstrated that 37% of PeeWee (10-12 years old) hockey players already met the minimal diagnostic threshold for Femoroacetabular Impingement (FAI or “hip impingement”), a bony adaptation that will limit skating depth. In the midget age group, 93% had FAI, with bantams falling nicely in between (63%).

Femoroacetabular Impingement

Demonstrations of the different types of FAI

Having assessed hundreds of youth athletes over the years, I can attest that there are similarly startling limitations in ankle mobility in youth athletes of both genders across all sports. A lot of athletes also really struggle with thoracic (upper spine) rotation. Sometimes this is a mobility issue and sometimes it’s simply a stability or control issue, but either way, it means the athlete can’t consistently access it.

Slapshot

Rotation through the upper spine is crucial for skating and shooting. …Pretty sure this shot left a solid bruise on the center of goalie’s chest.

This is doing specific exercises to address these limitations is such an important part of the training process.

Tying in breathing into the Quadruped T-Spine Rotation exercise in the video above (See 6:30) can help unlock a lot of motion and control

I could teach a whole course on how off-ice limitations influence specific skating patterns and hockey performance in general, so it’s a difficult topic to address in a short article. That said, I’d refer you to these two posts to learn more.

  1. Limitations to Optimal Skating Performance
  2. Why Your Kid is Slow!

An old video from Endeavor…back when I was doing assessments on a shaky desk
Tying this back in to the previous post, these are all off-ice physical limitations (e.g. not skating technique issues) that could be causing his major stride faults:

  1. Deeper Skating Stance: May be limited by a lack of foot stability, ankle dorsiflexion range of motion, low position strength, hip flexion range of motion (FAI/hip impingement), excessive anterior pelvic tilt/poor core control
  2. Recovering Stride Leg Under Body: May be limited by lack of foot stability, ankle dorsiflexion range of motion, hip adduction range of motion or single-leg stance control on stance leg, hip adduction range of motion on stride/recovering leg
  3. Pushing “Out” not “Up” on Starts: May be limited by low position strength, hip flexion range of motion (FAI/hip impingement), excessive anterior pelvic tilt/poor core control, hip extension range of motion, hip adduction/abduction range of motion in side starting positions
  4. Diagonal Arm Swing: May be limited by core control, thoracic spine rotation, shoulder flexion/extension range of motion
  5. Pushing “Under” with Cross Under Leg: May be limited by hip adduction and internal rotation range of motion on cross-under leg, and hip flexion and external rotation on stance leg

A big take home from this discussion is that it’s important to have an assessment process to identify whether a player’s skating limitations are:

  1. Due to a lack of practice/proficiency
  2. Due to an insufficiency in a modifiable physical factor (e.g. low position strength or muscular endurance)
  3. Due to an insufficiency in a non-modifiable physical factor (e.g. hip impingement)

If you’re a training professional, keep your eyes open for an email from me later in the week as I have an awesome “Black Friday” sale coming up on my DVD Optimizing Movement.

If you’re a hockey player, parent, or coach, and interested in more information about optimal stride patterns and off-ice training strategies to maximize skating speed, check out Breakaway Hockey Speed.

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

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“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

Today I have a guest post from my friend Andreas Wochtl. Andreas has been a great resource for me since we reconnected a few years ago, as he’s not only a dedicated student of hockey development, but he brings an interesting perspective having split his youth hockey years playing in Sweden and the US. If you’ve missed his previous articles, you can check them out here:

  1. Thoughts on USA Hockey’s American Development Model
  2. How to Breed Talent

Today’s post touches on an important piece of the coaching process that I agree gets overlooked a lot. This “secret” to getting the most out of your athletes is about as simple as it gets, but it’s important that all coaches (myself included) check in with themselves to make sure they’re doing this consistently. Enjoy the post, and please pass this along to other coaches; we could all use the reminder!

Teaching Work Ethic

Hockey development in the U.S. has taken some major strides in the past few years with the introduction of ADM, SAGs, and most importantly even more FUN!  Coaches everywhere are doing a great job adjusting to this “new” structure of how the game is taught.  I love looking down on a sheet of ice and seeing almost every player engaged in something.

The Lab Training Center

The Lab” in Exton, PA

There’s one area where I see an opportunity to continue this improvement and connection with players development.  We spend a lot of time teaching technique, Xs and Os, and other technical aspects of the game.  We spend very little time on the emotional aspect of the game – aside from maybe an occasional (and likely exaggerated) pre-game speech.  Most coaches expect their players to show up and always want to play their hardest….something all of us will agree is never going to be the case.  How do you teach dedication?  How do you teach work ethic?  One way is to get to know your players better – what makes them tic?  Spend 10-15 minutes at some point during the season talking to players individually.  Get to know them, find out what motivates them, how they learn new things, what they feel like their struggles are on and off the ice.

I argue that just taking the time to have this conversation will have a meaningful impact on your ability to push these individuals to new limits.  If you listen to their comments and apply it to your coaching you will take them even further.  Kids are not robots, they can spot the coaches who care and those who do not.  There may be one kid out of a million who naturally has the innate drive to spend his free time practicing his outside edge turns.  If we can help some of the other 999,999 get to that point imagine what we can help these kids accomplish both on and off the ice!

-Andreas

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
BreakawayHockeySpeed.com
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

Get access to your game-changing program now >> Ultimate Hockey Transformation

“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

This morning I came across an article from Josh Levine at Let’s Play Hockey that I wanted to share with you. I’ve enjoyed reading Josh’s articles in the past, and think he hit the nail on the head with this one. It seems, in the interest of constantly pursuing “better opportunities” for their kids, parents overlook the value of allowing their kids to overcome some adversity. Great article from Josh.

Click here to read the article >> Dear Parents: I want your kid to fail

To your success,

Kevin Neeld
BreakawayHockeySpeed.com
HockeyTransformation.com
OptimizingMovement.com
UltimateHockeyTraining.com

Please enter your first name and email below to sign up for my FREE Athletic Development and Hockey Training Newsletter!

Get Ultimate Hockey Transformation Now!

Year-round age-specific hockey training programs complete with a comprehensive instructional video database!

Ultimate Hockey Transformation Pro Package-small

Get access to your game-changing program now >> Ultimate Hockey Transformation

“Kevin Neeld is one of the top 5-6 strength and conditioning coaches in the ice hockey world.”
– Mike Boyle, Head S&C Coach, US Women’s Olympic Team

“…if you want to be the best, Kevin is the one you have to train with”
– Brijesh Patel, Head S&C Coach, Quinnipiac University

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