How to Skate Fast: What Really Matters!

2023 ж. 22 Қар.
161 940 Рет қаралды

Powerskating has become really complicated over the last few years. There is a lot of fancy lingo being thrown around, and a lot of coaches seem to have become completely focused on having their players skate like certain specific NHL players.
This really irritates me; everybody is unique. Everybody is different. No two players are going to skate alike.
We as coaches have to accept this, and instead of pressing players into a certain mold, in which they may not fit, we need to find ways to maximize each player's own special skating style! Two different styles can both be very fast on the ice!
In this video I'll show you what really matters with regards to skating fast, and what doesn't. I also compare two very fast skaters, Dylan Larkin and Connor McDavid, who both have very different skating styles.
I hope, that I can make skating fast less complicated for you!
SUBSCRIBE to me now!: kzhead.info...
FOLLOW me online:
Instagram: / marceljuhasz73
Facebook: / marceljuhasz73
Website: www.marcelshockeyschool.com
Marcel's Hockey School: Training, Tipps und Tricks rund um's Eishockey um euch zu helfen ein besserer Spieler zu werden!
Marcel's Hockey School: hockey training drills and advice to help you become a better player!
#marcelshockeyschool #hockeyskating #skatefast

Пікірлер
  • As an older adult player, having heard so much advice over the years, I find you have a great “Keep it simple” teaching style. Great lesson, thank you.

    @BobSacamano226@BobSacamano2265 ай бұрын
    • You’re most welcome! Yeah I try to explain everything so that pros but also beginners can understand. I think if you can only explain things in a way that an expert can understand then you are not a good coach.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • In 2007 I had an opportunity to skate with some of the Stanley Cup winning NY Rangers. Mark Messier, Adam Graves, and even Glenn Anderson who was a known speedster. Just for context I’m more of a beer league guy who played some competitive hockey while I was at NATO in Germany when I got to play with the local Canadian team. It was an absolute blast playing with the Canadian guys. Getting back to playing with the Rangers I spent four days on the ice, one day at MSG. What amazed me was how little movement it took for them to get going, high speed. Mess would literally glide up the ice and pass people who were actively skating. He never really had to do much. The skating and the overall talent was so far beyond my beer league comprehension. It was amazing. Glenn, like the others, had been retired for a few years at that point but could absolutely fly up the ice like he had rockets on his skates. I can’t imagine what Conner McDavid must be like…. Anyway thanks for the video. Very helpful.

    @occultustactical6138@occultustactical61385 ай бұрын
    • you're welcome! Yes once they get going the best players can keep their speed very easily. Also, having a flatter hollow with the skate sharpening helps as well.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Keep your blade in the ice as much as possible. You don't need to pick up your feet much when you skate. Transitioning, turning, crossovers, keep the blade down, work on being fluid. Fluidity is very important and saves energy and keeps speed up.

    @jeffholt3841@jeffholt38415 ай бұрын
  • I just wanted to say great job and awesome videos. My daughter and I just started playing this year and we absolutely love your videos. Keep up the great work!

    @user-cb9uy1zb9l@user-cb9uy1zb9l5 ай бұрын
    • Thanks so much! I’ll do my best!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • As an ex pro too and former youth coach, this video is priceless. Very good, worthy and reasonable observations.

    @mkslave9108@mkslave91085 ай бұрын
    • Thanks so much!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Dude your videos are so ridiculously helpful for someone who’s trying to learn how to play hockey on a budget and can’t afford lessons. Thanks so much, and seeing your videos and hockey’s popularity in Germany has me very excited to study abroad there! Danke von Amerika!

    @hunterrobinson6635@hunterrobinson66352 ай бұрын
    • Hey, that’s a lot, you’re most welcome! Hockey is getting more popular in Germany, but soccer is still by far number 1, and always will be over here 🤷‍♂️

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool2 ай бұрын
  • So much useful information. Thank you for sharing this 🙏

    @MaskSwabe@MaskSwabe5 ай бұрын
    • You’re most welcome!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Really useful information. It's helping me improve a lot. Thank you.

    @lydson@lydson5 ай бұрын
    • You’re very welcome! Glad I could help!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • As someone who started skating and playing hockey as an adult in my late 20s, the hardest thing for me has always been remembering to keep my legs bent and to "sit down" into my skating stance, which is especially counterintuitive coming from a running/sprinting background... even after 7 or 8 years and having gotten much better at hockey, I can still tell from videos of myself skating that my form is not quite natural compared to someone who grew up skating and playing hockey...

    @joseph-fernando-piano@joseph-fernando-piano4 ай бұрын
  • Great video, with good tips! I would love to see a similar video on how to skate backwards fast!

    @lightweave@lightweave2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks a lot! I have a backward skating tutorial in German, but yes, I should do one in English as well.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool2 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool I can watch the german as well. I looked through your videos but didnt see it. Can you give me a link or the title? I will look again. Sind die deutschen Videos in einem seperaten Kanal? Edit: Habs jetzt doch gefunden!

      @lightweave@lightweave2 ай бұрын
  • the long stride short stride thingy is SUCH a good observation. With long strides, if you time it perfectly, you can actually blaze down the ice while only really pushing for about 300ms, i think kinda when your feet are approaching their widest part of the stride. Combining the arm swing and shifting the body weight side to side, again, perfectly timed, seems to give these little nitro bumpos. Finally, remembering to kick the toes behind you at the last possible second, and idunno if this is just some kind of placebo, but that part makes you literally take off from the ice and fly around above everyone, haha. Anyhoo, this is a freaking rad vid; you are unbelievably good at explaining this stuff!!!!

    @KevinDoole@KevinDoole5 ай бұрын
    • Thanks a lot! I don’t really focus on flicking the toes anymore (I used to), because I find that when you just focus on a full leg extension your toes are going to flick pretty much automatically.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • Sweet, can't to try that, thanks!@@MarcelsHockeySchool

      @KevinDoole@KevinDoole4 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much. Always love your videos. For me what I find hard, as dumb as it may sound, is to keep staying low.

    @paologrisanti4627@paologrisanti46275 ай бұрын
    • Well, stating low is actually way harder than people think😃 Here is a video with a bunch of drills that could help you with that though: kzhead.info/sun/nKeEktN8hHqEbKs/bejne.htmlsi=adnwmwN9H4R0zOmo

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Another helpful video! You have helped me tremendously with your videos, thank you kindly! From western Ny, USA

    @OnlyOneDSK@OnlyOneDSK5 ай бұрын
    • You’re most welcome! Greetings from Germany!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Beautiful message, thank you!!

    @RB-nv4ri@RB-nv4ri4 ай бұрын
    • You’re welcome!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • I can’t agree more!!! Thanks for sharing!

    @frankz6881@frankz68815 ай бұрын
    • You're most welcome!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • To encourage shin angle I always cue "chest over your toes" in addition to "get low". That also helps prevent kids falling backwards because of too much weight on their heals.

    @RobertStJohn-ro1hp@RobertStJohn-ro1hp21 күн бұрын
  • Great vid. You have awesome form. Growing up we were taught chest up 2 hands on the stick. I received a lot of laps and pushups for skating like you 😅 I am still one of the quickest in my 40’s lol

    @stevemcqueen15@stevemcqueen154 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! Yeah I was taught chest up as well. It’s not completely wrong, because leaning too far forward is bad as well…somewhere in the middle is best!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • as an adult new player, I think the most difficult thing is to remember to keep the legs bent whilst you're going full speed. I cannot even count how many times I've fallen on ice because my legs were like spaghetti haha...

    @Simone-uu8ne@Simone-uu8ne5 ай бұрын
    • Haha absolutely! The biggest difference between beginners and pros is definitely the knee bend.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I remember that outside edge to inside edge roll they used to teach on the recovery leg. Definitely gives that “long smooth” stride appearance but then guys like Crosby and others came along and planted the recovery foot right under their hip and instantly were using that leg to stride.

    @BenBreeg1138@BenBreeg11385 ай бұрын
    • Yes, but I think that you can still be very fast with a long stride. I’m glad though that the shorter stride is also more accepted now because it used to be totally frowned upon.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • Agree. I think the portion of the stride in both that is actually pushing is probably the same or similar. The old way had that landing on the outside edge roll to the inside edge that wasn’t actually doing anything. So the actual length of time you are pushing in both may not be as drastic a difference as it looks, but the modern way may be more efficient. Would love to see more testing on these mechanics (because I am a nerd :) ).

      @BenBreeg1138@BenBreeg11385 ай бұрын
  • Hey man this is a great video and you are bang on, on every point in this video. I've studied ground based sprinting and biomechanics (as well as for skating as my son is a hockey player) and if you dig and research it enough, the best sprint coaches advocate what you are saying for sprinting. Usain Bolt had different strategy for sprinting than Bob Hayes, Carl Lewis, Ben Johnson, Donovan Bailey, Micheal Johnson, Asafa Powell, and Christian Coleman. Yet they were all very fast using their own unique strengths based on their anatomical structures and solutions to running fast. Coaches though both for sprinting and skating like to point to certain individuals to base their entire speed philosophy (which is so wrong).

    @tysonmann3555@tysonmann35555 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. Everyone is different. You have to Maximize the strengths of your athletes, and minimize the weaknesses. You can’t completely change them into a totally different style of skater or sprinter.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I like it👌🏆 Its great when people like me,who like to practice hockey and they aren’t players,can learn and improve skills by watching and listening simple but very useful advices,like yours⭐️

    @LjubaPantovic1@LjubaPantovic1Ай бұрын
    • I’m glad that I could help you out, and my advice is for everyone, beginner to pros!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchoolАй бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool l am already Pro but in other sport (hockey is my love forever),and ofcourse l support motivation theme “beginner to pro” because if you really want something you can achieve it 🏆🥇

      @LjubaPantovic1@LjubaPantovic1Ай бұрын
  • Thanks Marcel! As a new coach myself do you have any videos/ are you thinking of making a video on how players can comfortable staying low? It's something I try to teach my players but haven't been able to think of drills that really help them get more comfortable being in a low stance

    @dloc999@dloc9995 ай бұрын
    • Hey thanks! Yeah a made a whole video about this a couple of years ago. It’s in German but I subtitle all my German vids: kzhead.info/sun/nKeEktN8hHqEbKs/bejne.htmlsi=mvFTueOaZ6kyhiqZ

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool this is perfect. Danke!

      @dloc999@dloc9995 ай бұрын
  • Szuper tippek, köszi Marcel!

    @balazstoti5535@balazstoti55354 ай бұрын
    • You’re very welcome!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • Great vid! I would also like to stress the importance of core strength - one large reason behind the "skating with arms draging the ice", "swinging puppet arms" or the "popeye-like aggressivly tense arms", i believe is due to lack of core strength - or, insufficient control of their core muscles (which both is more common with the high amount of e-sport/gaming)

    @mattetjus@mattetjus5 ай бұрын
    • Thanks, yes the core is super important and also leg strength. I just wanted to stay focused on technique here because otherwise the video would have been way too long.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • This really is a great video, what would you suggest working on to keep the knee bend, especially in game situations ? My tendancy has always been to get upright and when that happens stride shortens become easier to knock off the puck, etc.

    @aleempeermohamed870@aleempeermohamed8704 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! Here is a video of drills that kind of force you to get used to staying low: kzhead.info/sun/arlwcdF-jIenY40/bejne.htmlsi=hP0kzE4LDTWBaN36 Other than that, leg strength/endurance does definitely play a role, because as we tire, we straighten up.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
    • This link took me back to this video, can you try again please ? Thank you

      @aleempeermohamed870@aleempeermohamed8704 ай бұрын
    • @@aleempeermohamed870 oops! Sorry about that! This should work: kzhead.info/sun/nKeEktN8hHqEbKs/bejne.html

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • Couse all your videos was very helpfull for me and a lot of secret for free ! thanks a lot for all! Excuse my English , i want to tell you and your viewer a little secret to go faster on ice. To be in a good balance when skating some advices : Teach your body first and your feet will follow! First use your upper body ( trunc) to transfer the weight from one leg to other then the arms, the weight transfered will helps to improve speed !2) the longer blade on the ice, the slower the skater! 3) the hands must move in this way ... side to side and before the skating leg touch the ice or in other words touch the ice when oposite arm arrive on the middle of the body! the arms will move upper body a little bit rapidly than upper body and will be to the side before skating leg touch ice! a good exercise is to skate with both hands on the stick mooving side to side to feel how the weight will be transfered from one leg to other and helps to speed! thanks a lot! i hope you understand me ! so in one phrase Move weight with upper body and hands before skating leg touch the ice!

    @alexandrumoisac4910@alexandrumoisac49103 ай бұрын
  • I've done well in the past by telling them to bend their knees enough that they can't see their toecaps in full gear. It gets them in the ball park of a deep knee bend. To jump you bend your knees deep before you extend for your jump; its the same thing, you're using the most out of your leg muscles by getting low and extending. You're also a lot more stable which is just as important, if not moreso. I also learned from the same school as you, pushing out is like pinching a marble, except the force is going outward, it naturally pushes you forward. Toe down first, so you "Skate downhill" with an emphasis on the toe flick follow through. Hands in tight, bent elbows but allowing the body to twist as if you were swinging your arms. Worked for me, I learned the arm thing from Smarthockey's Lecavalier training CD haha Great video, wonderfully done.

    @BMack37@BMack375 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! Knees over the toecaps is a good idea because it’s simple to follow👍

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Coach. 🙏🏼

    @HeeyyItsFranklyn@HeeyyItsFranklyn4 ай бұрын
    • You’re very welcome!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • I was trying to emphasize to my 10U A team last year that skating form is so important. I had roller hockey players that skated almost completely upright. The upper body angle was good in description, but for the lower body, I used to make a simple measure by having the kids look down, and see if their plant foot has to visibility. If they could see their toes, then their shin angle wasn't correct. I'd also measure their knee angle by seeing if their knee was in line with their toes. Mind you, these were house league quality players on a travel team. I worked on form before I worked on speed. I had to build them up.

    @jeremyyan437@jeremyyan4375 ай бұрын
    • Looking to see if you can see your toes is a great idea for getting into the proper stance👍

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • @MarcelsHockeySchool I had to start off slow with these kids, but the parents had bigger and better ideas. Obviously you know the importance of edge work with stick handling synchronization and the proper form. It's refreshing for someone like me to hear you emphasize the form and not just fall into the USA Hockey scripts.

      @jeremyyan437@jeremyyan4375 ай бұрын
  • Great video! There’s lots of dogma out there. Good to simplify again.

    @jugglejazz@jugglejazz5 ай бұрын
    • Thanks a lot!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I already knew about this "getting low", but I never did it right. I took a video of myself to see how it looks and I was shocked. I thought I'm well low, but when I saw the video I though it looks like I'm standing upright. 🤪 So I started to keep reminding myself, when I want to get fast, to get down , down, down. A few weeks ago I managed to get so fast that I was actually afraid I cant break well enough, as I was not used to being so fast. 😄 I still have to keep reminding me, it takes some time until you start doing it automatically without thinking anymore. You can even easily check this for yourself. Even if at a low speed, you can see the difference that you get faster without adding more power to it, just by getting lower. Take a few strides, see how fast you are, and then get low and do it with the exactly same effort. You will see immediately that you are much faster.

    @lightweave@lightweave2 ай бұрын
    • We are never as low as we think we are 😃

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool2 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool LOL! Yeah, thas true! When I told somebody else to tell me if I'm low enough, it was quite weird. I went down, and he said lower, lower, lower. In the end I felt as if I was already sitting on the ice. 😄

      @lightweave@lightweave2 ай бұрын
  • good good good teaching!! thanks~~

    @one2_2@one2_2Ай бұрын
    • You're welcome!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchoolАй бұрын
  • Power skating has mostly ruined players ability to determine their own skating style- there are things you can can coach to improve some efficiencies but by in large the best players of all time learned how to skate on their own - on the pond or in small towns at the rink during unstructured practice- free skating. I love that you focused on skating style. Finally someone that understands - i am seeing more and more players have less variability in their skating style- meaning more players look the same. Simple coaching tip which works for most players… head over foot. Helps with stride, edge control and arm swing. Remember technique is as simple as a response to the task. And most of what you said hit that… technique is in response the outcome you want (task)

    @authentichealthcoach4142@authentichealthcoach41425 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! Yes you can’t completely push a player into one specific mold. You just have to maximize their own unique mechanics and physical advantages/limitations

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Good video thanks. Just one correction for you. Larkin had a 25ft run up to the red line before his time started. Mcdavid started on the redline. Anyone who knows considers McDavid having the record for the fastest lap. No way Larkin would slip and still beat McDavid, let alone beat him in a perfectly executed lap.

    @viccycling7862@viccycling78624 ай бұрын
    • Yes you are correct. No idea why they had two different standards for the two. Nevertheless, both are great skaters, and it’s funny that a lot of people say that McDavid has a short stride, because although it‘s shorter than Larkin‘s, it’s not really that short.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool ya it was done in different years the competition. I think Larkin was a year or two before McDavid arose as the fastest skater and maybe they were still figuring things out. I agree, my stride is more like yours in the fact that I push out to the side more than Larkin but not as short as McDavid. My cross overs were more long and powerful than McDavids but have learned to do them more short and fast over the years after watching how effective it is for McDavid. Interesting the science behind McKinnon's cross overs and that he holds the outside edge longer on the inside foot. It would be too difficult to adopt his rhythm at this point but wondering if I should be teaching the kids I coach to try it.

      @viccycling7862@viccycling78624 ай бұрын
  • Was never into hockey or skating, 10 years ago i decided i might try since i was rollerblading for whole my childhood. And I fell in love and went to same rink solo after school for few months.

    @sd5241@sd52414 ай бұрын
    • That’s cool! I’m glad you found a new passion! I like rollerblading too but I like ice skating better!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • Years and years ago I went to hockey camp at the University of Maine, hosted by the Black bears coaches, trainers..etc.. The greatest thing they taught us on day 1 was to stop doing the crossover for a quick start. None of us believed them, cause that's how we all started to skate. Then they timed us.... we were all faster without using a crossover start. Knees bent and inline with your shoulders.

    @youWoNtLikeMe04@youWoNtLikeMe042 ай бұрын
    • The biggest problem with using a crossover for a start is that you cannot use it in a game. Like, when would you ever turn sideways to crossover and start? The only time it’s beneficial is when you need to change direction quickly, like coming back into your zone, stopping of the wing, getting a quick breakout pass and heading back up ice. Then a crossover change of direction is good.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool2 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool at 7years old and you learn to crossover start and a coach never corrects it.... it was a tough habbit to break.

      @youWoNtLikeMe04@youWoNtLikeMe042 ай бұрын
  • That looks like HC Davos arena. Nice rink with lots of additional ice pads around the main indoor arena. 👍

    @406gto@406gto5 ай бұрын
    • It's actually the second rink in Füssen, Germany.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • Love how that was design, with wooden barrel roof and clear wall ends to create all that natural light.

      @Sincopare@Sincopare5 ай бұрын
  • I use the long hard strides on a break away or a chase but maneuvers i use the quick short strides.

    @crystalsaete@crystalsaeteАй бұрын
  • Eishalle in Füssen ……. Danke für das super Video 👌🏻

    @82caferacer@82caferacer5 ай бұрын
    • Yes! Sehr gerne!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • The only reason Larkin holds the record for fastest skater is because he was allowed to start from the blue line. He was nearly full speed by the time.he got to the red line. McDavid had to start from a stand still at the red line. Rant over lol

    @elemeno0pee@elemeno0pee5 ай бұрын
    • Yeah I noticed that and found it give of weird that he was allowed to take a running start 😃 Still a great skater though.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • As a player I didn’t have much opportunity to do any power skating. As a coach I took a deep dive into skating learning all I could. Becoming a better skater is all in the little details. I stress a good athletic stance. Weight to the balls of your feet. Knees bent over toes ( if you look down and see your toes you are either hinged too far over at the hip or standing too tall). Butt out ice your heels. Ankles, knees, hips all compress like a spring. Chest up and head up. Stride out on a 45. Don’t forget toe point at the end and fast recovery keeping your feet low To be a good efficient skater and be good on your edges, learn from a figure skater if you can. Not just hockey players

    @aaronhiscock3813@aaronhiscock38134 ай бұрын
    • You make a lot of good points. Couple of things though: I think the „toe flick“ is totally overemphasized. If a player is naturally extending their legs, they are probably also pointing their toes. It’s like jumping: you automatically point your toes if you fully extend your legs. I think that any extra emphasis on the toe flick leads to players pointing extra after their skate has left the ice. Figure skaters: they are excellent for edgework, and we had one work for our club for quite some time. In other areas of skating, like skating fast in this video, I cannot recommend them.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • The other critical component to skating fast is leg strength that’s achieved off ice in the gym. More strength will creat more speed whatever your individual technique and style.

    @nickknez8294@nickknez82945 ай бұрын
    • True. I just wanted to focus on the technical stuff here.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I believe I been doing this naturally. No coaching advice. Just learning on my own.

    @Polyaxis@Polyaxis3 ай бұрын
    • A good coach is definitely a help though for some fine tuning

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
  • Love the English videos Marcel!

    @SC2013hockey@SC2013hockey5 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! I try to switch back and forth from German to English as much as I can.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool I know you do! I appreciate all the work you've done.

      @SC2013hockey@SC2013hockey5 ай бұрын
  • I'm mostly impressed on how you glide stop so gracefully. I can't understand the mechanics of that knowing the blades can really grip the ice. How do you prevent it from gripping and making you fall over? I have seen many videos about the hockey stop and in practice I always end turning because I cannot prevent my skates from gripping.

    @SaccoBelmonte@SaccoBelmonte5 ай бұрын
    • Hey, thanks! I have a full video on fixing your hockey stop: kzhead.info/sun/l7h-eNONcJ-Jfnk/bejne.htmlsi=ZL5_kH0KHKVRrWnA Also, using a flatter hollow on the skate sharpening is a big help as well. The skates will still be sharp, but they won’t feel as sharp and you’ll be able to shave the ice better rather than feeling like you’ll fall over

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool Yeah I saw your video right after I commented. I'm sure I'm too much on my heels. I have a 5/8 radius so it should be fine. Is my rollerblade technique that is conflicting with my ice technique. :) Thank you Marcel!

      @SaccoBelmonte@SaccoBelmonte5 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool Ok. So if I put my skates over a flat surface, the profile along the blade is so, that my flat spot is quite small, like 5 or 6cm. These are blades for inline skates. I do inline slalom/figure tricks and wizard a lot on rockered 4x80 wheels so I'm used to having a strong radius. I'm having a blast at the ice rink with these blades, doing my usual tricks but somehow the hockey stop is still not unlocked. I can do plough stop with my right foot so perhaps I should start testing with different weight in that foot to try to understand the feeling. See, with inline skates, if you don't lean enough when sliding, you go down hard haha! so is pretty scary on the ice to get used to glide without as much lean. Anyway, enough rambling, sorry. I wanted to ask you: Would such a small longitudinal radius blade make the hockey stop impossible due to too much bite? I'm 80Kg, 49 y/o adult. RoH is 5/8 which I'm enjoying very much. Thanks again Marcel. Servus aus Salzburg!

      @SaccoBelmonte@SaccoBelmonte5 ай бұрын
    • Oh never mind. I seem to have a 11 foot radius profile with pivot point at the middle and a contact lenght of about 6cm at the center. So I'm good. Just need to practice more :)

      @SaccoBelmonte@SaccoBelmonte5 ай бұрын
    • @@SaccoBelmonte yeah your radius and profile ist totally fine for stopping (although I use a 1 inch radius). But like you said, stopping on inline skates and ice skates are completely different so making the switch can be difficult. Keep on practicing!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Any suggestions on how to stay loose? Every time I try to skate fast I experience my quads or the whole leg to kind of stiffen up and I rrreeeaallly need power to go forward... but remain going quite slow. The few time I really felt loose in the legs everybody on my team (including myself 😅) was "shocked" on how fast I really could go... but that also was the downside, since everybody was blaming me not to be motivated enough, "since I could go so much faster!".... but I have no clue what I can change or what I did differently that it worked out those times. Dealing with it for decades now but still wants to improve or at least minimize the personal frustration! 😇

    @SileX406coup@SileX406coup5 ай бұрын
    • That’s a tough one because I think that staying loose is just a matter of practice, practice, practice. Any skill I teach to a beginner, or anything advanced I’m trying to teach a pro, they are automatically tight at the start because they are trying to focus so hard on doing the skill correctly. With time, as the skill comes more and more naturally, they loosen up because they stop thinking about all the steps they need to perform.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Good vid.

    @gerardnadrowski5672@gerardnadrowski56724 ай бұрын
    • Thank you!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • What about 'toe flick'? And collapsing the shin in the end? Toe flick (similar to what one does in crossovers) gives extra push

    @alekseimarkov1665@alekseimarkov16655 ай бұрын
    • The thing with toe flick is, pretty much everybody with a proper leg extension is going to be automatically toe-flicking. It's a natural movement (just like the arms swinging) after your hips and knees have extended. So I don't focus extra on it. I find that a lot of players focusing on toe flicking will flick extra while the foot has already left the ice, which doesn't help. With collapsing the shin, I'm not sure what you mean.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Thanks bro. Running I am one of the faster guys but it doesn't translate to skating, I'm just average. Gonna try some of this.

    @bernardthefourth@bernardthefourth5 ай бұрын
    • You’re welcome! I does translate a bit actually, especially in straight line speed.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • No problems with skating. It’s stopping my problem 😂 From an ashame Canadian lol. Good video tho 👍

    @sebastienroy5857@sebastienroy58575 ай бұрын
    • Then check this video of mine out about stopping: kzhead.info/sun/l7h-eNONcJ-Jfnk/bejne.htmlsi=S1wIHnRZv8bV-Ky_

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Some people say to run on your toes for the first few strides - running is faster than skating. It's definitely not natural for me to get up on my toes to grip the ice but I do see relatively new skaters skate very fast using this technique. Also keep in mind skating speed is correlated to running speed, so some aspect of it is just pure athleticism

    @xskinyx@xskinyx5 ай бұрын
    • Nobody runs on their toes. Watch a slow-motion video of a fast skater starting. Their entire blade hits the ice while pushing off, and only the very last part of the push is on the toes. Nobody can start exclusively on their toes.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool watch the slow-mo video of Mackinnon racing Hamelin. You will clearly see the first step (right foot) mackinnon does NOT put his whole blade on the ice. Hamelin also starts by digging one toe into the ice. As a matter of leverage the whole blade will usually still contact the ice, but the fastest skaters focus weight on their toes and run for the first few strides. You might even do it, and just not realize?

      @xskinyx@xskinyx5 ай бұрын
    • @@xskinyx weight over your toes: definitely. Start exclusively on you toes: no. MacKinnon has one single contact where the entire blade doesn’t hit: the first step with the right foot like you mentioned. The initial starting foot as well as every other step after that first right step the entire blade is hitting. As for Hamelin I don’t know speed skating well enough to understand the mechanics of their start with a long blade. So I think it’s better just to focus on having your weight far forward than running on your toes.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool I think it's surprising to most skaters that Mackinnon has any strides at all where his heels don't touch the ice. I think most coaches would tell you "no way, nobody skates like that" 😛. So maybe "running" isn't a great instructional term, but it does explain *why* normal strides don't work at slow speeds. Try racing someone that's outside the rink in shoes - they will crush you on acceleration, every time. There's a video somewhere of a figure skater running on her toe picks for giggles... she is not going slow lol. And relatively new skaters with poor technique can sometimes still accelerate *very* fast - this is the best I can figure out as to what they're doing

      @xskinyx@xskinyx5 ай бұрын
  • Ok, that’s great!! Now, How to stop fast!!!

    @oscarg6260@oscarg62603 ай бұрын
    • Got two tutorials out on the hockey stop.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
  • When skating forward your weight should be going side to side like if your striding left foot your body is going to the right and right foot is going to the left maximizing the power right?

    @Glazend9@Glazend95 ай бұрын
    • Yes. There is a skating concept about this called “Line of Power”, but again, I don’t want to make things more complicated than they already are.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • Literally how you run its that simple

      @yourmother1631@yourmother16315 ай бұрын
  • you forgot the most important aspect of fast skating.... be strong or get strong! strong legs, glutes and core equals fast stable skating. the stronger and fitter you are the better. competitive players spend a lot of time on leg strength and power. of course you know all this.

    @thecount1001@thecount10015 ай бұрын
    • I don’t think it’s the most important part because then you could just take an weightlifter, throw a pair of skates on them, and they would be fast. So I still think that technique is more important. But yes, strength and sprinting speed off-ice will definitely have a huge correlation to on ice straight line speed. With turning and other more technical elements I find the correlation drops a bit.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Mario Lemieux is a tall guy and would take long strides but he was deceptively fast.

    @run2fire@run2fire5 ай бұрын
    • Yes. He had are relatively low stride turnover but lots of power in his strides.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Hallo Marcel, welches Profil benutzt du für deine Schlittschuhe?

    @janrueticlips@janrueticlips5 ай бұрын
    • Hi, genau weiß ich es nicht 😃 Glaube entweder ellipse oder Quad Zero.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I've gotten a ton faster in the last year, but I still have problems with "grip" in the first like 3-5 strides. I know part of my problem is I shouldnt come to a full stop ever and once I get going, I am generally ok fast, but those first few strides I look like flintstones car. . .

    @bfish9700@bfish97005 ай бұрын
    • Launching and skating are two separate movements. If you try to take off the same way you skate in stride you aren't going to be efficient. Check out in this video each time Marcel takes off. His skate is basically parallel to his direction of intended movement, he has a little hop and then he's off.

      @fumbleb33@fumbleb335 ай бұрын
    • Part of it is how quick your muscles can contract. The rest is just getting low, turning your feet way out, and getting as much distance with those first few steps as possible. As you gather speed, your push will go more to the side, but at the start your feet need to be going back with your blades turned out.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I really need to skate fast because i got tryouts Tomorrow

    @alwaysfootball841@alwaysfootball841Ай бұрын
    • Good luck!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchoolАй бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool thanks

      @alwaysfootball841@alwaysfootball841Ай бұрын
  • shin angle was copied from belfry's pressure on skate tongues coaching cue and renamed. Maybe the kids will understand the original cue better?

    @eugwong@eugwong5 ай бұрын
    • I find that most kids do very well if you just tell them to bend their knees. Some might need extra cues if their upper body stays vertical. Pressing on skate is definitely easier to understand than shin angle though👍

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • how do you always have the rink empty to yourself?

    @Glazend9@Glazend95 ай бұрын
    • I don’t. We had some kids practicing on the other side. Other times, I work full time as a coach at my club so sometimes I can get on the ice if there’s an ice slot open.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Es sah gut aus. ;-)

    @friedrichkoenig6687@friedrichkoenig66875 ай бұрын
    • Danke schön!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Cardio day, huh?😀

    @MakeAGuess@MakeAGuess5 ай бұрын
    • 😃😃😃yeah was a tiring shoot😃

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • As a professional marine biologist I could agree more with what has been said here today.

    @schwamieboy1@schwamieboy15 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • If you watch Olympic speed skaters you will see wide leg strides, and wide arm swings.

    @hr1meg@hr1meg5 ай бұрын
    • Yes, but they also have an absolute extreme recovery under the body, which is tough to do in hockey, and no hockey stick in their hands, which allows them to swing like they do.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool4 ай бұрын
  • Gewachsene Schnürsenkel nehmen oder umgewachste nehmen kannst du mir dabei helfen bin mir unsicher was besser ist habe da keine Erfahrung

    @jorditheg3960@jorditheg39605 ай бұрын
    • Ich mag lieber gewachsed aber das ist wirklich Geschmacksache

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Maybe you should watch a video “How to take a little cardio every now and then so that you do not run out of breath after skating for 5 seconds😂

    @osraneslipy@osraneslipy3 ай бұрын
    • Naw, I did enough cardio so that I could play pro for 12 years. Now I’m just enjoying coaching.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
  • Respect my Wu-Tang style

    @subiesteve2578@subiesteve25784 ай бұрын
  • I can go way faster than I do but I’m afraid to skate faster because I can’t stop propperly😂 is it only me

    @RenanSCstratocaster@RenanSCstratocaster5 ай бұрын
    • 😃😃😃 like Carlos Mendoza from Mighty Ducks 2 😃🐧

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
    • My problem is I'm never just skating, the only time I skate balls to the wall is on a breakaway so I have to control the puck and not get too close to the goalie so I can actually do something with it. . .

      @bfish9700@bfish97005 ай бұрын
  • Send this to Adam Fox of the NY Rangers

    @1rtt1@1rtt15 ай бұрын
    • Why?🤔

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • You failed to mention the Larkin set the record in vastly different conditions. It was the only year where players had a running start, so dont say its an NHL record because its not. Mcdavid did not compete in the event that year. Horrendous comparison.

    @ramymelhem@ramymelhem3 ай бұрын
    • You are correct in that. The fact that they are both very good skaters with different styles is however not a horrendous comparison.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
    • @MarcelsHockeySchool It's still a horrendous comparison. There's a lot of good skaters in the league, but very few elite ones. Larkin is fast, but Mcdavid is elite. They played head to head yesterday and it was quite obvious how much faster Mcdavid was all over the ice both with and without the puck. He's not even in the same stratosphere.

      @ramymelhem@ramymelhem3 ай бұрын
    • @@ramymelhem Well you’re entitled to your opinion. The fact is that not everybody will have a skating style similar to McDavid‘s and they still can be, as you say, „elite“. That was the main point of the video, not comparing McDavid vs Larkin.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
  • Why do Olympic-level 100m sprinters run the same?

    @alexeym311@alexeym3113 ай бұрын
    • What do you mean?

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool All sprinters have exactly the same running technique. Some people move their legs more often and push to the side, others more slowly but back. This is not true!!! In fact, there is correct skating and at high speed you need to push to the side!!! That's why all Olympic sprinters run like clones!

      @alexeym311@alexeym3113 ай бұрын
    • @@alexeym311 I never said that. I said some people have shorter and faster strides while others have longer and slower strides. I did not mention anything about pushing out or pushing back in relationship to stride speed. But as the examples of Larkin and McDavid show, you can have a different stride angle and still be fast on the ice. This is different on shoes because it is possible to push directly back with shoes, without any hip rotation.

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool Whoever has shorter legs has more legs. Whoever is longer has a longer stride. But you meant that whoever pushes back returns his leg faster and that it doesn’t make any difference how you skate.

      @alexeym311@alexeym3113 ай бұрын
    • @@alexeym311 No, I didn’t🤷‍♂️

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
  • Mcdavid didn’t get the head start that Larkin did. Invalid record

    @RobertBennett-fs3sd@RobertBennett-fs3sd5 ай бұрын
    • True, I was wondering about that. But still both very fast skaters

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • train 2.0, 2.0 =D

    @burossiggumunn5100@burossiggumunn51005 ай бұрын
    • 😃😃😃

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • Magyar fordítást nem tervezed?

    @Giovanni-fh6bw@Giovanni-fh6bw5 ай бұрын
    • No, because sadly I don't speak Hungarian so the video is only in English or German :(

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • I think Antonio Stranges has the most insane skating style. Mohawk skating style, and does it quick.

    @Dork2017@Dork20173 ай бұрын
    • Yes he’s really good at that. I did a coole of vids about this. Here‘s one of them: kzhead.info/sun/fJuqc66Na3-dja8/bejne.htmlsi=JOSt-C2twCr2kSSN

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 ай бұрын
  • My mans cardio is bad lol

    @RussPeter-wd3wj@RussPeter-wd3wj3 күн бұрын
    • 😃😃 your man is getting older 😃😃

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 күн бұрын
    • @@MarcelsHockeySchool i know how that feels haha is it ok to ask your advice on something??

      @RussPeter-wd3wj@RussPeter-wd3wj3 күн бұрын
    • @@RussPeter-wd3wj of course!

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool3 күн бұрын
  • kzhead.info/sun/a8eQeq1qbnt5oX0/bejne.html - That's how to skate fast in real hockey! You puck players in your heavy gear will never be able to run so easily..😂

    @user-sm5mc9xq4i@user-sm5mc9xq4i3 ай бұрын
  • So true. Everybody has a different body anatomy and build. Different leg length for example.

    @geneh2972@geneh29725 ай бұрын
    • Exactly

      @MarcelsHockeySchool@MarcelsHockeySchool5 ай бұрын
  • С конькобежцем встаньте на старт и пробегите 100 м за 9.6🎉

    @user-de1yb6er3s@user-de1yb6er3s15 күн бұрын
KZhead