HOCKEY TRAINING FOR DIFFERENT AGE GROUPS
With special
thanks to my friend and colleague, Dr.Jack
Blatherwick, PhD., Physiologist, Washington Capitals
Hockey Team. His
thoughts, insights, and knowledge were invaluable in helping me write this
article.
In
recent years sports scientists have spoken out emphatically about the harmful
effects of premature and over-intense athletic training of young children.
Many complain that hockey programs for youngsters are too intense,
competitions too many, seasons too long, emphasis on winning too great.
Young children are pushed by parents and coaches to choose and specialize
in the sport way before they are mature enough to do so.
Up
to the age of eight, children should enjoy a variety of fun and stimulating
activities; they need to develop a broad base of movement skills.
Intensive training and competition at too early an age inhibits the
development of skills such as balance, agility, and coordination, and it
prevents youngsters from learning other sports.
It’s been shown that children who specialize too early do not develop
the varied motor skills necessary for maximum athletic performance in later
years. These children are the
physical equivalents of specialists who have little competency outside of their
specialty.
Young children (up to six) should
engage in many different movement activities.
Dancing, tumbling, and jumping, are excellent activities. Since these youngsters have very short attention spans,
instruction has to be unstructured and fun; teaching should be short and simple;
it is best accomplished using “show and tell”.
There is no long- term advantage
from structured practices at these ages.
Between the
ages of seven to ten, postural
and balance skills mature and become more automatic. Children are able to master
some of the basic movements needed for organized sports, but they still have
short attention spans. They have difficulty making rapid decisions involved in
complex sports. Skating skills can
be introduced and practiced at these ages, but again, practices must be fun.
Sports like hockey, soccer and basketball, as well as martial arts,
swimming, t-ball, lacrosse, etc., are excellent choices.
Between the ages of ten to twelve (pre-pubescence) there is
great improvement in coordination, motor skills, and decision-making
capabilities.
For
children who choose to participate in hockey, skating
skills now must be strongly emphasized. Skating techniques should be emphasized
and built upon in the ensuing years.
Players
are now ready for some endurance and quickness training as well; they should
engage in activities and perform drills that incorporate core strength,
quickness, coordination, body awareness, balance, and rhythm. Fun and variety is still important so kids should be
encouraged to participate in other sports.
Between the
ages of thirteen to sixteen (adolescence)
athletes
can
incorporate complex skills and integrate large amounts of information. They can focus appropriately and their decision making
capabilities improve dramatically. They
are ready to specialize in their sport of choice and to practice with true
dedication and intensity. It
is also the time of the Adolescent Growth Spurt (“AGS”), the
time of greatest and most obvious (catastrophic)
change in a young person’s life.
The Adolescent Growth Spurt: Body changes during
the AGS can temporarily diminish over-all skill and speed and increase
vulnerability to injuries. The
effects of AGS and its effects on core strength, postural control, and
performance (coordination, skill, speed, quickness, agility, technique) can be
enormous while athletes struggle to adjust to their rapidly changing bodies.
At their fastest, boys grow by four inches a year and girls by two and a
half inches a year. It’s no wonder teenagers are clumsy -- their bodies
shoot upwards at speeds their brains can’t keep up with. As height increases, the center of gravity lifts.
This happens so quickly that the brain does not get a chance to calculate
the new rules for balance.
On
the average, boys grow fastest between fourteen and fifteen and girls grow
fastest between twelve and thirteen. Girls
finish their growth spurt at eighteen while boys need another two years before
they finish growing at about twenty.
Medical aspects of AGS must also
be noted. Shin splints, stress
fractures, and growth plate injuries such as Osgood-Schlatter Disease, are
prevalent during the periods of fastest growth.
Training regimes need to
accommodate this; they should be temporarily modified
during extreme growth spurts.
All of these considerations, combined
with normal adolescent hormonal and emotional changes, can lead to lack of
self-confidence and low self-esteem. Adolescents need to be assured that they
will regain their technical control and skills when the AGS has ended.
AGS starts at the outside of the body and works in.
Hands and feet are the first to expand.
Needing new shoes is the first sign.
Next, arms and legs grow longer, and even here the “outside-in” rule
applies. The shin bones lengthen
before the thigh bones, and the forearms before the upper arms.
Finally the spine grows. The
very last expansion is a broadening of the chest and shoulders in boys, and a
widening of the hips and pelvis in girls.
Early
and Late Maturers:
Early
maturers hit their growth spurts sooner than their peers.
They tend to have an advantage in sports like hockey that require speed,
power, endurance, and body mass. For
biological reasons, not necessarily because of greater talent or ability, they
are able to out-perform their peers. In
childhood, they may have had successes for which they received much
reinforcement and recognition.
Problems
arise during adolescence. Early
maturers who experienced success in their younger years get frustrated because
their peers suddenly catch up. They
no longer experience the same success as before.
Coaches may conclude it is because they are not working hard.
Part of the dropout rate around age fourteen is due to early maturers’
frustration. They don’t
understand that the physical changes that are occurring in their peers are
allowing them to catch up. Parents
and coaches could do a lot to shore up their self-confidence during this
difficult time.
Late
maturers have a different set of issues. They often experience failure at the
early ages because they are not as physically strong or developed as their early
maturing peers. Even though they may work as hard, they often can't keep up,
which is a huge source of frustration. Even as their physical maturity and
skills “catch up”, they may continue to have trouble getting coaches'
attention, encouragement, and recognition.
In other words, coaches may not give them a fair chance to “show their
stuff”. Some of these youngsters
drop out because of frustration. This seems to hit late maturing boys the
hardest because they are at a particular disadvantage. Parents and coaches need to figure out how to keep late
maturing kids interested and involved despite a lack of early success.
They may turn out to be the “stars”.
TRAINING CONSIDERATIONS
SKILL
(TECHNIQUE) TRAINING:
Skating
is an extremely complicated activity and hockey is an extremely complicated
sport. Skating moves are not
natural to the human body; in fact they’re the
opposite of natural. Skating
moves are numerous, intricate, and inter-dependent.
Each hockey maneuver consists of many
parts. Each part must be learned
separately and then integrated into the whole move.
Proper technique training is essential for players to become fast,
powerful, quick, and efficient skaters.
The
teaching/learning process is a long one. The
most effective teaching method is one that has a systematic and integrative
approach. I believe in the
“pyramid” method; a strong foundation must be built at the bottom of the
pyramid. Then work up from there to
integrate and refine each part into its “whole”.
No
one
can learn a new skill or skating maneuver “going fast”.
It's too much for the brain and body to accommodate. Here’s my
approach to teaching skating techniques:
1. Correctly.
4. Correctly-powerfully-quickly with the puck.
2. Correctly-powerfully.
5. Same as 4, now under lots of pressure and in game situations.
3. Correctly- powerfully-quickly.
6. At the end of each practice, players should be allowed to skate fast
and have fun without worrying about correct technique.
*Note:
It is imperative to learn “correctly” before worrying about
powerfully and quickly – no matter how long it takes.
And, when performing “powerfully” and “quickly”, “correctly”
is still number one. That’s what
makes explosive, efficient skating so difficult.
Skill
(technique) training programs for very young hockey players (and for beginning
players of all ages) should include basic and simple skating fundamentals done
at a comfortable level, with a concentration on understanding, smoothness and
efficiency.
Skating
technique needs to be combined with power and quickness at fairly young ages.
From ages eleven and up hockey players should engage in training that
includes some interval training (work:rest training).
Whether the workouts are for sprinting, strength training, agility,
skating, or for athletic attributes such as balance, rhythm, and coordination, they
should include some interval training.
Work
periods (sprint periods) for young players, including for adolescents, should be
short (maximum ten to fifteen seconds in order to avoid the accumulation of
lactic acid. In addition, there
must be enough rest time between each work (sprint) period for them to recover
fully. Many
coaches are unaware of this so they push their players into over-stressful
workouts that negatively affect skating technique and over-all performance.
While
still learning skating techniques, most quickness training can be done off the
ice so as not to interfere with skill development.
Developing players cannot learn, perform properly, or perform effectively
when they’re fatigued. The
quality of performance deteriorates quickly when fatigue sets in.
Quality
repetition is the key to learning any skill.
Long-slow
training, without quickness training teaches muscles to perform slowly, so
jogging alone will not train quickness. Interval
running (short work:rest ratios) is key. *Note: Long distance jogging should be
carefully monitored. When over-done
and when performed on hard and/or uneven surfaces it can result in injuries,
especially during AGS.
Strength
Training:
If strength training is to be done with pre-pubescent children, it should
involve sub-maximal resistance, such as one's own body weight, light dumbbells,
or medicine balls. Sophisticated and restrictive weight exercises, particularly
on machines, are harmful for strength-limited children. Whole-body activities
are the most important and beneficial, especially for improving core strength. For skating, kids should work on two-legged and one-legged
strengthening. The more they
strengthen their legs at a young age, the better chance they have to learn to
skate correctly. Learning to skate and developing leg strength (especially
one-legged) are synergistic, so they should be done at the same age. And
it should be fun.
The AGS has a negative
impact on the learning process in general.
During AGS kids lose coordination and skill. Core strength, postural
stability, concentration, technique, explosive power, and foot speed are also
affected.
During
growth spurts kids don’t have the biological base of one-legged strength or
the muscular endurance to get into a good skating position.
On-ice practices should focus on skill and technique rather than on
power. Off-ice work should include two legged and one- legged exercises
for coordination, balance, and agility. Exercises
to improve core strength and postural stability are critical.
Heavy strength/power workouts
should be postponed until the muscles are stronger.
Speed and explosive power
should become part of skating patterns around puberty.
The three to four years just after puberty are the most critical for
developing foot speed and explosive power.
Players can do on-ice and off-ice
exercises for foot speed and explosive jumping (power) – but always from a
position of good knee bend and good posture.
It
is very important to continue training
for technique, power, quickness, and foot speed during and after the AGS. Many players lose these qualities during their periods of
rapid growth. While patterns are
fairly well defined by puberty, the elements of explosiveness, quickness and
efficiency can be improved after puberty and for several years beyond, as long
as players have a solid base of skating mechanics and quick feet.
In
conclusion:
Competition
is an important part of a young person’s development.
Hockey is one of the greatest competitive sports.
Correctly managed it is a critical training ground for teaching
youngsters to compete successfully in life’s many competitive and challenging
situations.
But
its value depends on how it is conducted. Parents
and coaches have a very important role to play in ensuring that development
occurs in an intelligent, well-structured, well thought-out process that teaches
positive life-lessons, maximize each player’s inherent potential, and provides
a positive learning experience along the way.
Author:
Laura Stamm. Copyright, January, 2006
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