Volume 1 Issue 6 | December 2020
FOSTERING A GOOD TEAM CULTURE STARTS WITH BUILDING TRUST
By Greg Bates, AHAI – Creating and maintaining a great culture is an essential element for any team.

Whether it’s a bunch of 6-year-olds playing on a team for the very first time or 18-year-olds trying to win a state title, fostering a good team culture starts from the top at the coach and trickles down to the players, who need to keep it going strong.

Lake Forest Academy boys’ hockey assistant coach Rob Klein believes there are three components that make up good team culture. The first, and most important, is trust. Secondly, it is support for teammates. And the final one is collaboration.
CEP NEWS & INFORMATION
AHAI will be hosting Virtual Coaching Education Program Clinics in December. Sign up early as they fill up fast!
  • Virtual Level 1: December 5 and December 6 from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm
  • Virtual Level 3: December 8 and December 10 from 6:30 pm to 9:30 pm
COACHING GOALTENDERS
How Goalies Can Best Stay Sharp During the Pandemic
By Greg Bates, AHAI – The last eight months have been difficult for everyone. For hockey players, not only are they missing jumping on the ice and skating with friends, they’re losing valuable skill development time.

This is especially true for goalies, who rely on reps to maintain their unique skill set. USA Hockey ADM Manager of Goaltending Steve Thompson has some ideas for goalies to stay sharp during these unusual times.
Jets’ Hellebuyck Takes Unconventional Path to NHL and Vezina Trophy
By Dan Scifo, USA Hockey - Winnipeg Jets star Connor Hellebuyck allowed his challenges at a young age to propel him into becoming one of the best goaltenders in the world.

Hellebuyck, a native of Commerce, Michigan, rose from the North American Hockey League (NAHL), one of the top junior hockey leagues in the United States, in 2011-12 to the top of the National Hockey League (NHL) after he won the Vezina Trophy as the best goalie in the league in September.

“On the road to perfection, you have to fail,” Hellebuyck said. “It’s so hard to see in the moment that you have to fail in order to learn what perfection really is. My biggest improvements have come after I failed.”
GREAT READ
3 Keys to Modern Skating Skills
By Minnesota Hockey - Skating has always been a critical skill in hockey, but with the game getting faster and faster at every level, it’s arguably becoming even more important.

For USA Hockey ADM Regional Manager Dan Jablonic, it is clear coaches have been evolving to keep up and are taking advantage of new coaching methods to teach skating skills and how to apply them to the game.
PRACTICE PLANNING
Not All Practices Are Created Equal, But All Should Have These Five Elements
By Greg Bates – USA Hockey has solid relationships with a number of European countries, including Sweden. Recently, USA Hockey representatives — ADM Regional Manager Dan Jablonic being one of them — were on a call with some Swedish hockey representatives. The Swedes mentioned they get their players on the ice an average of six to seven times per week. When asked how many times the Swedish skaters have off-ice practices each week, they stated that every on-ice practice is matched by one off-ice practice. The USA Hockey officials were blown away by the fact that the Swedish players are getting up to 14 hockey-related sessions per week.
Quick Turn Up 2 on 2
Purpose: Work on quick transition to offense, defensive side work on their gaps and puck carriers look for time and space, passing and rebounds. Run this both ways at same time; first group enters the zone, start the next group the opposite way.
F1 Forecheck Game
Purpose: To teach the finer techniques of your forecheck scheme, especially the role and techniques of the F1. This game helps coaches teach how to apply offensive-zone pressure, steal/regain the puck and create more offense.
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