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Keloland visits the Flyers on day two of their home opener in the Midwest High School League.
Cross Ice in: Michigan/Atlantic District
American Hockey Magazine Article
The USA Hockey Cross-Ice program is based on a model of practicing and playing hockey across the ice surface as compared to practicing and playing lengthwise along the full length of the ice surface. This cross-ice practicing and playing model has been used in many of the leading hockey nations in the world for a number of years and has stood the test of time. It has been shown that children who begin their hockey training in this environment have an outstanding hockey experience.
Parents may ask the question why should my child play cross-ice, what will this bring? I want my child playing like the professionals do, full-ice, because I want my child to experience “real hockey”.
To help address these questions, let’s think about a child trying to skate with a puck while performing a drill from one end of the rink to the other, how long will this take? How much energy will this require? Will the player’s decision-making skills be enhanced more in the close action of the smaller cross-ice surface or in the wide-open area of the full-ice surface? In which situation will the child be more involved in the action?
A study of hockey games played on the full-ice surface by George Kinston in 1976 found the following:
In a sixty-minute running time hockey game between 6-8 year old children, the average player had possession of the puck for 20.7 seconds. Top National Hockey league and international professional players were also timed and no player exceeded 85 seconds of puck possession time. In a sixty-minute children’s game the actual playing time of the game was 20 minutes and 38 seconds. Taking this into consideration, the individual player is only on the ice every third or fourth shift depending on how many players are on the team, resulting in even less ice time. An average of less than 0.5 shots per game for youth players and only 1.5 shots per game for junior and professional players.
The study concluded that:
Many players never touched the puck in the game, especially in youth hockey.
USA Hockey firmly believes that by giving children the opportunity to participate in the Cross-Ice hockey program, which supports cross-ice practicing and playing, that their enjoyment of hockey as well as their hockey skills will be greatly enhanced.
CROSS-ICE PROGRAM
To help you further understand the benefits of the cross-ice practicing and playing model, some of the advantages are listed below.
PRACTICING
ACTUAL GAME
GENERAL ORGANIZATION
GENERAL SPIRIT OF PARTICIPATION & FUN
If you could take your game to the next level, you would, right? Well, you can...by eating the right foods everyday. That’s how important your daily DIET is! What you put in your mouth affects you DIRECTLY - that includes on the ice, and in your daily activities. To be the best, you have to eat like the best!
The article "You Are What You Eat" in the September 2008 issue of USA Hockey is a hockey players guide to eating right.
Sports drinks and energy drinks, is there really a difference? You bet there is, and it’s time athletes distinguish between the two. Check out the following articles in the USA Hockey Magazine.