what is most important skill to have in high school hockey?
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post 9586
Yes, but a coach would rather have that then a wild card type player.who_b_dat wrote:hey boblee, just for the sake of arument, couldn't one be consistently bad?
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TEAMPLAY TEAMPLAY TEAMPLAY!!!
Northern teams that at times have significantly less talent come into the cities and walk away with unexpected wins (look at GR in the last two years) because of great teamplay.
It is by far the most important attribute in highschool hockey. I would take a kid who can set up a 'decent' shooter or a guy with 'ok' hands any day, because a great set-up in highschool does not require an amazing shot or quick hands to beat defense if the pass already did that for you.
Northern teams that at times have significantly less talent come into the cities and walk away with unexpected wins (look at GR in the last two years) because of great teamplay.
It is by far the most important attribute in highschool hockey. I would take a kid who can set up a 'decent' shooter or a guy with 'ok' hands any day, because a great set-up in highschool does not require an amazing shot or quick hands to beat defense if the pass already did that for you.
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I agree with heart there is nothing like skating on to the ice and immedietly getting goosebumps because you love the game so much. When you enjoy doing something with that much intensity your going to do well. Every one may have heard one quote from a man named Herb Brooks " you cant win on talent alone". Thats what it is all about.
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Re: post 9586
I'd rather have a boom or bust than a consistently terrible player...boblee wrote:Yes, but a coach would rather have that then a wild card type player.who_b_dat wrote:hey boblee, just for the sake of arument, couldn't one be consistently bad?

Elk River AA State Champions- 2001 Boys & 2004 Girls
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these are definetly the most important skills. we can go on and on about what kind of mentality needed for the game but we're talkin about skills here.Can't Never Tried wrote:Skating is #1
Puck control #2 IMO this includes stick handling, passing, and shooting combined.
Read and react #3 or as someone said earlier hockey sense.
These are skills........ the rest is mental stuff.
Skating, then
skating, then
skating....
Once you have the skating down, you can improve everything else.
If you are not a good skater, then you will be average.
As Fitzy says, stolen from R.H., there are the 5 S's of hockey...
strength
skills
smarts
speed
& skating
The top four are supposrted by skating. You need skating and two of the others to be an above average hockey player. All five and your at the X.

skating, then
skating....
Once you have the skating down, you can improve everything else.
If you are not a good skater, then you will be average.
As Fitzy says, stolen from R.H., there are the 5 S's of hockey...
strength
skills
smarts
speed
& skating
The top four are supposrted by skating. You need skating and two of the others to be an above average hockey player. All five and your at the X.

Last edited by elliott70 on Tue Jan 22, 2008 6:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Good Shot. Case and Point: Mighty Ducks D2, knuck-a-puck. Could he skate on the ice? no. Could he shoot? Yes. Did he score? Yes. As a goalie nontheless? Yes. If you can't shoot you can't score. Another example? How about Fulton Reed on the Mighty Ducks in D1. Couldn't skate but ended up being a secret weapon. Why? Cause He could shoot. 2nd most important: the triple deke. need I say more?
Its fiction.BranchesMagnum wrote:Good Shot. Case and Point: Mighty Ducks D2, knuck-a-puck. Could he skate on the ice? no. Could he shoot? Yes. Did he score? Yes. As a goalie nontheless? Yes. If you can't shoot you can't score. Another example? How about Fulton Reed on the Mighty Ducks in D1. Couldn't skate but ended up being a secret weapon. Why? Cause He could shoot. 2nd most important: the triple deke. need I say more?
Branches is out of his mind.elliott70 wrote:Its fiction.BranchesMagnum wrote:Good Shot. Case and Point: Mighty Ducks D2, knuck-a-puck. Could he skate on the ice? no. Could he shoot? Yes. Did he score? Yes. As a goalie nontheless? Yes. If you can't shoot you can't score. Another example? How about Fulton Reed on the Mighty Ducks in D1. Couldn't skate but ended up being a secret weapon. Why? Cause He could shoot. 2nd most important: the triple deke. need I say more?
Clearly the most valuable asset a player can have is the ability to properly execute the "Flying V".
If I remember the movie correctly, there were about 4 interference penalties not called on that flying V play.Govs93 wrote:Branches is out of his mind.elliott70 wrote:Its fiction.BranchesMagnum wrote:Good Shot. Case and Point: Mighty Ducks D2, knuck-a-puck. Could he skate on the ice? no. Could he shoot? Yes. Did he score? Yes. As a goalie nontheless? Yes. If you can't shoot you can't score. Another example? How about Fulton Reed on the Mighty Ducks in D1. Couldn't skate but ended up being a secret weapon. Why? Cause He could shoot. 2nd most important: the triple deke. need I say more?
Clearly the most valuable asset a player can have is the ability to properly execute the "Flying V".

But, yes, an essential skill to master to be an elite player.
I believe they were also offside.elliott70 wrote:If I remember the movie correctly, there were about 4 interference penalties not called on that flying V play.Govs93 wrote:Branches is out of his mind.elliott70 wrote: Its fiction.
Clearly the most valuable asset a player can have is the ability to properly execute the "Flying V".
![]()
But, yes, an essential skill to master to be an elite player.
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That is the true beauty of the Flying V though. It makes the rules disappear.Govs93 wrote:I believe they were also offside.elliott70 wrote:If I remember the movie correctly, there were about 4 interference penalties not called on that flying V play.Govs93 wrote: Branches is out of his mind.
Clearly the most valuable asset a player can have is the ability to properly execute the "Flying V".
![]()
But, yes, an essential skill to master to be an elite player.

Elk River AA State Champions- 2001 Boys & 2004 Girls
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i believe hockey sense should be on the list...that and skating are the two most important.....i have seen some great players over years that are below average skaters but have incredable hockey sense....and i have also seen some great skaters with no hockey sense and they are pretty one dementional