Community Discussion: What Skill Separates Good from Great?
Every player works on skating, shooting, and puck skills — but some players just seem to create more time and space on the ice.
What skill separates good players from great ones?
• skating
• hockey IQ
• puck control
• deception
• something...
Community Discussion: What Skill Separates Good from Great?
Every player works on skating, shooting, and puck skills — but some players just seem to create more time and space on the ice.
What skill separates good players from great ones?
• skating
• hockey IQ
• puck control
• deception
• something...
Hockey IQ is the separator, and I’m not just talking about knowing your systems or reading the play. The real edge is emotional regulation under pressure. Can you slow the game down mentally when the intensity spikes? Do you let anxiety tighten your game, or do you channel it into sharper focus and heightened awareness?
At the lower levels, compete level and raw skill can carry you. But as you climb, every player on the ice can skate and handle the puck. What separates the elite is the ability to stay composed when the game gets heavy. Supporting your five man unit in all three zones, making the right read in a tight situation, not panicking when you turn it over or take a bad penalty. That mental discipline is what keeps your compete level high when the game is on the line.
Anyone can put in the reps and develop skill. Hard work and dedication will get you there. But learning to control your emotions and use that competitive fire as a tool instead of letting it burn your game down? That is a completely different level of development. It is easy to take a bad penalty or lose your edge after a rough shift. The players who can shake it off, refocus, and bring it every single shift are the ones who make the difference when it matters most.
How to toe drag in hockey?
You actually don’t want to toe drag at all. Top 1% hockey players deke laterally with the Kane Drag. It’s faster, smoother and impossible to read!
Learn it and give it a try ✅
Understanding the importance of protecting the puck is crucial to having time and space to make plays.
This is a great example by Demidov on this goal. As soon as he wins the puck battle, he gets butt to hands which allows him an extra second to...
Every player wants the puck on their stick more when they play. If that’s the case, you have to learn how to battle, smart, and battle hard.
Here’s a great drill you can do to work on eliminating a player stick and getting butt to hands to protect...
Generally I always start my lessons with an edge progression, first without and then with pucks.
Yesterday I decided to change it up on my Monday 10U AAA group and started with a v-starts focus, while adding in some pivots and ending with a shot....