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A
pillar represents a column of support, a literal tower of strength.
There are five pillars of hockey conditioning that should be used to
improve on-ice skill development. Those pillars are as follows:
Focusing exercise creation and training guidelines towards
these five pillars stems from the goal of improving five other pillars.
Here are the pillars that will develop on-ice skills:
The five pillars of conditioning make up the main categories of
training. They represent different physical attributes that improve the
transferability of training results and directly impact performance
gains. What makes this conditioning program unique is the fact that
there are three main steps to be developed within each pillar mentioned
above. The first step deals with improving fitness, the next deals with
enhancing athleticism and the final is hockey specific conditioning.
Step #1 - Improving Fitness
Improving fitness builds a foundation that more hockey specific
training styles and intensities can build upon. Fitness is improved
with increasing hockey specific flexibility, using proper nutrition to
improve performance, decreasing body fat to improve an individual's
efficiency, increasing strength and muscle mass and elevating aerobic
power. These are also important to health and immune function during a
long season and will usually help an athlete perform almost any
activity a little better. For hockey players, improved aerobic power
aids endurance, decreased body fat allows for faster, more efficient
skating and added strength, flexibility and a healthy diet help you
maintain your exercise regimen with reduced risk of injury. Because the
aerobic energy system helps the body recover from bouts of anaerobic
activity, it is necessary to develop the aerobic system first.
Similarly, proper strength, lean mass and flexibility development are
required before progressing to work on strength capacity, explosive
power, speed, quickness, agility and reactivity.
Step #2 - Enhancing Athleticism
Athleticism builds off of fitness, helping you become more in tune
to your body, with general balance and coordination benefits. Just as
power skating coaches modify body mechanics on the ice, a focus on
athleticism improves body function off the ice. There is no doubt that
the best athletes make the best hockey players, and the higher fitness
and athleticism you have, the more you can capitalize on hockey
specific training. Within the Balance, Agility and Reactivity pillar,
you can improve movement skills such as lateral movement, open steps,
drop steps, crossovers, back pedaling and loaded starts. These are
fundamental hockey motor patterns that, when linked together in
sequence, are expressed as multi directional movement. Without
improving power, speed or quickness through physiological training
adaptations, each can be improved right away by upgrading critical
movement skills. Improving the biomechanics for multi directional
movement helps you to move more effectively and efficiently, enabling
you to cover more ground in the same number of strides while expending
less energy. Thinking like a power skating coach, on and off the ice,
makes your agility training more purposeful.
Step #3 - Hockey Specific Conditioning
The third category of hockey conditioning focuses more on the sport
specific demands you’ll encounter on the ice. Exercises and drills must
be selected and completed with specific exercise prescriptions so the
players’ physical and physiological development best suits the game of
ice hockey. Sometimes gains in strength, flexibility or lean body mass
can actually detract from hockey skills because the “improvements” are
not appropriate for the demands of hockey. Meanwhile, other development
crucial to hockey success is sometimes overlooked. In the
NHL, often aspiring players report to camp with far too much upper body
bulk, changing their center of gravity and interfering with fluid
skills. Others make the mistake of too much aerobic training, which is
essentially training to be slow. It is the anaerobic energy system that
needs to be conditioned for hockey, as players depend on this system
for explosive movements and intense action. Equally important in the
conditioning pillars are quickness and agility. Quickness and agility
need to be developed for improved reaction time, coordination, foot
work and explosiveness. Muscular endurance and power are also physical
attributes essential to helping improve skills and game performance,
and they allow players to perform longer before fatigue deters proper
execution.
The three categories feed the order of training in that fitness is a
base of supply and recovery, providing readiness for more complex and
intense exercise. Athleticism influences the results of hockey specific
training by improving the body’s ability to safely coordinate more
challenging movement and power exercises. By design (i.e., training
style, intensity and complexity), the hockey specific phase will also
continue to improve fitness and athleticism as a byproduct of the
demands of hockey specific training. Your focus, when players are
ready, should shift to hockey specific programs, carefully selecting
hockey specific exercises and the training guidelines you will apply to
continue to also increase fitness and athletic skills.
Below you will see how we tie all the pillars together and utilize the components with hockey athletes.
Pillar Emphasis During Each Step (pillars in italics below)
Step #1 - Improved Fitness
Step #2 - Enhancing Athleticism
Step #3 - Hockey Specific Conditioning
The five pillars above represent different physical attributes that
improve the transferability of training results and directly impact
performance gains when training for hockey conditioning. Good luck!
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