Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven You never played in first and second class and the junior division
But iff you did put the players in front off each other still they will lose.
The flicks puck comes down at the playing side from the player and he just has to swim after it were the oponent first has to turn. In that second you will get passed them..And the diagram stays in tact. |
Um, I never played in first, second and junior classes? Right... I was born as an international player, I never progressed at all... I certainly didn't coach seven years of schools hockey...
Firstly, basing your tactics on the opposition being unskilled is neither smart nor progressive. As soon as you meet skilled opposition you fall apart.
Second, again, you're making assumptions about what the opposition will do without performing an action to force them into doing anything. Why would the opposition forward a) not swim straight at your forward to prevent him receiving the pass, or b) swim across in front of him to stop him gaining any forward ground, or c) swim at the space, slap the puck down mid-pass and be halfway to your goalbin before you turn around.
If you want your opposition to be stupid, you have to induce them to be stupid. You have to give them a target to swim for, and then go somewhere else. For example, if you swam as though you were passing to number 1, causing an avalanche of defence to fall on him, and then passed to number 2, number 2 would have a good chance of gaining space on the outside and making some real ground - and would still have number 1 to pass forward to...