Do Draft Status and Combine Results Really Matter

Posted on July 20, 2010

We often hear about young hockey players that perform really well at team tryout camps and combines in the summer months. In my opinion players and parents spend far too much time and money trying to attend these things. Most often people do these things in an attempt to get noticed or discovered. However, the most important thing a young player can do to get recognition is to perform well on your regular, winter ice hockey club. Scouts and managers are not going to use summer time performance to make decisions about players over regular season performance. Remember, the best players in the world do not play hockey in the summer months. They train to improve their hockey playing ability.

Also, I feel that combine results are of very low value. First, it is generally accepted that the tests performed at combines are not accurate indicators of athletic ability or hockey playing potential. Exactly what do grip strength, sit-ups, and bench press for reps have to do with hockey performance anyways? Patrick Kane went to the NHL draft combine and performed one rep on the bench press test. Yet, he was still the first pick overall due to his hockey ability.

What does matter at the combine is the way a player carries himself and interacts with those around him. We have many NTDP players that attend the NHL combine every spring and they all have the same things to say when they return to Ann Arbor. Nobody really cares how we performed on the tests. They just wanted us to try hard.

Here is a very good quote from an article published in The Journal of Strength and Conditioning

Research in September of 2008. “It has also been suggested that because scouts already have a good idea of how players are ranked on the basis of game play, if deciding between two equally ranked players, scouts may actually choose a player who scores lower on a given test. In theory, if a player has significant room to improve on a particular physical attribute compared with an equally ranked rival, he can be coached to work on his weakness, thus raising it to a level equal to or better than, the other player “(1). This study analyzed the draft combine results of 853 players collected over several seasons. Also, it is interesting to note that one of the article’s authors is EJ McGuire, Head of NHL Central Scouting.

After I present people with these facts they often ask “How do I train to improve hockey performance?” The answer to this is simple. A good strength and conditioning program geared towards making you faster and stronger. Develop some strength in the torso and back musculature along with lots of hip and leg power. Forget the Bench press for reps, sit-ups, and writs curls. Do things what will fill out your frame to athletic proportions such as Olympic style lifting, squatting, and pulling exercises. Also, you can skip the spinning classes and jogging. Instead, perform some intensive interval training for cardiovascular endurance. Here are some more good facts from the combine data analysis. “The ability to generate high amounts of power was universally related to hockey success…Body index (height, lean mass, muscular development) was a significant predictor in all four models, which is likely associated with the full-contact nature of ice hockey” (1).

With all this being said, don’t be in a hurry. Too often players and parents want to accelerate the process. There is no need to play up in age group or travel all over the country for tournaments. Very few players are ready for junior level hockey by age 15. In fact, these things often stunt development rather than accelerate it. Instead, take time to develop and grow. Put in the time training to gain size, strength and power. These very important traits take time to improve. It takes several years of good strength and conditioning training for a player to attain good levels of muscular size and strength.

In fact the average age of an NHL rookie was 22.66 years old in the 2009-10 season. There are very few 18 and 19 year olds in the NHL so why hurry. You only reduce your chances of making it as a player. Graduate from high school and play 4 years of college hockey and you will be 22 years old. Play a year of domestic junior hockey in the USHL, EJHL, or NAHL and then attend college and you will finish at 23 years of age. It is no coincidence that the average age of a NHL rookie falls right into this time frame. Most NCAA hockey programs have elaborate strength and conditioning facilities with full time strength and conditioning coaches. This will only increase your odds of success.

So let’s take a look at some of the best NHL players that developed after the age of 17 or 18 when draft eligibility occurs. This is a list of the top NHL players that entered the league as undrafted free agents and where they played college/junior hockey:

Ed Belfour Univ. of North Dakota

Dino Cicarelli London Knights

Curtis Joseph Univ. of Wisconsin

Joe Mullen Boston College

Adam Oates RPI

Peter Statsny Univ. of Denver

Dwayne Roloson UMass Lowell

John Madden Univ. of Michigan

Rene Bourque Univ. of Wisconsin

Chris Kunitz Ferris State

Jason Blake Ferris State/North Dakota

Andy McDonald Colgate

Martin St. Louis Univ. of Vermont

Niklas Backstrom HIFK (Finland)

Brian Rafalski Univ. of Wisconsin/HIFK

Dan Boyle Univ. of Miami, OH

1. Relationship of Physical Fitness Test Results and Hockey Playing Potential in Elite-Level Ice Hockey Players. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. Volume 22. Number 5. September 2008.

By Darryl Nelson

Darryl Nelson has been the strength and conditioning coach with the USA Hockey National Team Development Program located in Ann Arbor, Michigan since the 2000-01 season. During this time the program has seen success winning multiple U17 World Challenge gold medals and IIHF U18 world championship gold medals. Before his stint with USA Hockey, Nelson worked at International Performance Institute in Bradenton, Florida and Mike Boyle’s Strength and Conditioning in Winchester, Massachusetts. Nelson has a Masters degree from the University of Georgia and a Bachelor’s degree from the University of Maine at Presque Isle. He is also certified by the National Athletic Trainer’s Association.

Article Source:

http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Darryl_Nelson

Read this article: Do Draft Status and Combine Results Really Matter

Internet Marketing

Incoming search terms for the article:

Printable – Should Your Child Leave Home to Play Junior Hockey?

Posted on July 19, 2010

Ice hockey is very unique when you compare it to most other sports. While many youth hockey players and parents have dreams of their child going off to play an elite level of hockey such as juniors, college and eventually professional hockey. Many parents and youth hockey players think that they need to leave home at an early age such as fifteen or sixteen years old. Is this true?

Actually it is very debatable whether or not having a hockey player leave home in their early teen years is beneficial for that childs’ development as a hockey player and as a person. While many hockey players who live in hockey hot bed areas of North America probably will not have to worry about going too far from home, there are countless other hockey players that at one point or another have to decide whether or not it will help them to further their young career to move away from home to get more exposure and potentially better training and coaching.

In most cases I am of the opinion that it really is not a good idea for your child to leave home to go play hockey elsewhere before they are out of high school. I think that it is very important for the hockey players’ personal development to spend his or her high school years at the same school with all of their childhood friends. As long as your child has a fair amount of competition to play against in their hometown, wait to send them off to play juniors until after graduate from high school.

If however, your child plays hockey at a very high level and has enough skill to play in the top junior hockey leagues in North America while still being able to produce and be an elite player at that level, it might be a good idea to let your child leave home in order to further develop their hockey skills at a high level before graduating from high school. I cannot stress enough the fact that the percentage of players that this would apply to is very small.

While many young hockey players have dreams of becoming professional hockey players, in all reality the chances of that actually happening are incredibly slim. The best thing that your child should do when playing hockey is to concentrate on having fun. If when all is said and done your kid has developed into an elite hockey player that can go on to get his college paid for or even make some money playing hockey, then that should just be the icing on the cake.

As a parent it should be your duty to stress that your child has fun and not to push them. Hockey is an incredibly fun sport in so many ways, from the hockey equipment and the goalie masks to the early morning practices and the holiday hockey tournaments, it is incredibly important for your child to enjoy the journey of playing youth hockey which will not only help them to develop into better hockey players each year, but if they take the proper approach to hockey and having fun hockey will help them to develop into better people as well. Do not rush your childs’ development and if it is meant to be for them to leave home to seek out better competition to speed up their development, then you should be absolutely sure that this is what your child wants at this time in their life.

Robert has extensive knowledge on ice hockey and hockey equipment. He has recently posted articles about tackla hockey pants and pro stock hockey sticks at his new blog.

Article Source:

http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Robert_Probert

See original here: Printable – Should Your Child Leave Home to Play Junior Hockey?

Autoblogging