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Featured Hockey Articles

An Air Hockey Table Review - For Fun, Excitement And Fast Action
The air hockey table is a classic returning those of us who were young people in the seventies to the regretful recall of violent snap and glowing cheers on windy winter nights. In the single pub in Smalltown, U.S.A., we’d step, beating off the slush and ...

Ice Hockey History and the NHL
Even though the history of ice hockey began earlier than 1917, many people say that this was the year when the modern hockey history began.You probably already new this, but 1917 was the year when the first historical game of the National Hockey League ...

Public Relations for Hockey Teams
Public relations for the game of hockey is not as easy as it used to be. Today, more and more parents are concerned that the game of hockey is too bloody and too violent. It isn't really however, in the United States of America we are trying to develop ...





The Physical Challenge Of Hockey
 
Hockey is one of the most physically demanding games known to man. This intense sport requires that a skater have as much strategy and skill as football or baseball player in addition to the strength that only a conditioned athlete can bring to the ice, and a kind of ferocity that is a rare quality indeed. Hockey players must tolerate quite a bit of pain and discomfort, and serious players must be able and willing to participate in very heavy training all through the year to remain competitive. Unlike many sports that primarily require endurance, Hockey is all about sudden short bursts of extremely intense activity. This makes hockey a very different kind of physical challenge than a sport like soccer where movement is lower-intensity but continuous.

A hockey player must be able to rev their personal engine from zero to sixty in a matter of seconds. At the pro level, a hockey player rarely spends more than a full minute at a time actively skating on the ice. Between those brief flurries of almost manic activity, a player can recover and catch his or her breath, but must remain alert and in readiness for the next explosion of action on the ice. Suddenly jumping from a fairly passive and relaxed state to the height of speed and power isn't easy. The discipline and talent a hockey player must posses in order to do this well are often a large part of what separates the amateurs from the professionals.

The need to be able to swiftly transition from a state of rest to one of peak activity requires specific forms of training that focus on shortening response times and achieving graceful and efficient movement without much of a warm up. A hockey skater's workout regimen contains many predictable

activities like lifting weights and jogging, but one place where many players go in order to improve their agility and response time proves to be somewhat surprising to many sports fans.

Although classical music and pink tulle are the last things most people associate with the rough and tumble sport of hockey, many players train at ballet studios. From young boys and girls who are in amateur junior leagues all the way up to Olympic-level hockey players, spending time refining plies at the ballet barre often proves to give skaters a leg up on the ice.

From dance studios to weight rooms to jogging tracks, a hockey player must train his or her body in a variety of ways to prepare for what many consider the most physically demanding of all sports. Between the strenuous flurries of activity, the psychological stress of performance, the lack of warm up time, and the bulky padding of a hockey uniform, a player at the top level of competitive hockey may sweat away up to eight pounds of water weight during the course of a single game. There is no other sport where this kind of drastic weight loss due to exertion happens so quickly. A hockey player's body must be prepared to safely weather this kind of ordeal on a regular basis, which requires a level of physical fitness that few other sports require.

About The Author:
Gray Rollins is a featured writer for HockeySky. To learn more about hockey visit http://www.hockeysky.com/ and http://www.hockeysky.com/hockeyplayer/

Written By: Gray Rollins

Hockey News



Joe Hockey regrets $70bn savings figure
The Australian
JOE Hockey says he regrets saying the Coalition needed to find up to $70 billion to fund its election promises, despite denying he ever put a figure on the opposition's budget savings target. As Tony Abbott today refused to commit the Coalition to a ...

and more »

Big Ten Alters Hockey Playoff Plans
Bucky's 5th Quarter
Last spring when the Big Ten Hockey conference was formed, representatives from the six member schools that will make up the future conference set to start in 2013-14 (Penn State, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, Michigan State, and Ohio State) voted on ...

and more »

KARE

Head injuries changing hockey in Minnesota
KARE
There are few sports so thrilling as hockey, and few states that love it so much as Minnesota. The sport has a special place in our hearts, but now it is also on our minds. First it was the death of Minnesota Wild player Derek Boogaard in spring of ...

and more »

Ramapo hockey team relishes volunteer work
NorthJersey.com
While the Ramapo senior accomplished that goal, he got much more than a few hours from the classroom last winter when he and the rest of the Ramapo hockey team volunteered at the Special Olympics New Jersey Winter Games. Buccigrossi and his friends ...

and more »

24 Hours Vancouver

Iginla believes Flames playoff-bound
24 Hours Vancouver
LW Devante Smith-Pelly, who suffered a broken bone in his foot while blocking a shot for Team Canada during the world junior hockey championship, was sent by the Ducks to the AHL's Syracuse Crunch for conditioning. Smith-Pelly made the Ducks out of ...
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