Roller Hockey Sticks For League Play

Posted on July 20, 2010

I have to admit right here and now – I’m not the world’s expert on roller hockey sticks. But I do have a 13 year old son who has been playing roller hockey since he was 6 years old, So I believe I have some authority on the subject. I’ll tell you what I know from a purely practical viewpoint, and let you be the judge of the information. Fair enough?

Size The Roller Hockey Stick Correctly

Roller hockey sticks must be sized correctly for the height of the player. After watching literally hundreds of hockey games, I can tell you that parents are not always on top of their kids’ hockey gear – especially hockey sticks. More often than not, the hockey player will grow out of his or her stick. This is so true as you watch a kid out on the rink who has a hockey stick that would have been too small even last season! Come on, parents – roller hockey is difficult enough without being hampered by a too-small stick. ‘Nuff said on this topic.

Exotic Materials Vs Wood

If you keep the business end of the stick taped up with that special hockey tape (it comes in all kinds of colors, and it is tough as nails) you can make due with a wooden stick for years. Even if your child is a power hitter, that taped-up wooden hockey stick will surprise you with how long it lasts. Maybe that’s why you see so many kids with too-short sticks? I suppose if you have extra cash burning a hole in your pocket, then you could go all out and get a composite or a graphite stick – but why?

These hockey sticks can be quite costly, and I don’t see any evidence that they will outlast a good wooden stick.

Consider A Goalie Stick

If your child is a goalie, chances are you might just use the skating rink’s goalie pads, etc. That may be a good call, because the equipment is expensive, and the chances are that your kid will outgrow the goalie outfit before the season is over. But, don’t scrimp on a goalie stick. Especially, a hockey goalie stick that is sized for the height of the player. This may be one of the most frustrating things I’ve ever witnesses in a hockey game: a goalie with a too-short goalie stick. In this situation, you (and the unfortunate goalie) will watch the puck slide through his or her five-hole more times than you care to remember. How about a stick that’s sized for the goalie – please?

Roller hockey sticks don’t have to be expensive or super high tech to be a great part of your hockey player’s hockey gear.

All Roller & Ice Hockey Gear At RollerHockeySticks.org We also have hockey sticks, helmets, skates, pads & guards and almost everything you could ever need for the best hockey experience at RollerHockeySticks.org.

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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.

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