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2003 Fusion Player Meeting

2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

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Page 1: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

2003 Fusion

Player Meeting

Page 3: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

Expectations

Team Expectations

• The coaches want you to have fun, to work hard and to become the best person and the best player possible. Playing games, of course, is almost always fun, but remember that practice – the preparation to win – sometimes is not fun. Observing the simple three-word slogan listed below and following each of its guidelines will have a direct impact on both individual and team success.

POISE, PASSION, AND PRIDE

Page 4: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

Poise• Listen and learn in practice; react during games. Practice is the time to

work on elements of your game that need improvement, as well as time to perfect the elements of your game that already are strong. This is the time to make mistakes, to learn what to do during each specific situation you might encounter during a game. If you attempt to play beyond your means and outside the team concept during games, then wins will be sparse. Coaches at all levels look for BOTH hockey sense and talent.

• Never retaliate. If you get hit with a cheap shot, suck it up, and then the team will take advantage on the power play.

• No trash talk allowed. You have nothing to say to the referees or the other team other than “good game.” If anyone tries to engage you in trash talk, skate away. We do our talking on the scoreboard. No one ever won a game by committing the most cheap shots or by using the wittiest dialogue. Winning the right way is more important and rewarding than simply winning.

Page 5: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

Passion

• Play each shift as if it’s your last. Outworking the other team makes up for many shortcomings. Sometimes you can’t control the bounces of the puck or the calls the officials make, but you can always control the amount of effort you exert while playing. Max effort every time!

• Play under control. As John Wooden often said, “Never mistake activity for achievement.” In other words, skating around full of energy with no regard for your position on the ice or the particular system being used at that moment in the game results in chaos, and usually, goals against.

• Be ready at the drop of the puck. Different players need different amounts of time and use different methods to mentally and physically prepare for games. Respect each other’s process. Some players focus under pressure and some fold. BALANCING PASSION WITH POISE WILL DETERMINE WHICH TYPE OF PLAYER YOU BECOME.

Page 6: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

Pride

• Have pride in your abilities and your effort each and every day.

• Show respect to your parents, team members, coaches and officials. Disrespect to any of these people will have repercussions.

• Pay attention to detail. Winning is a habit built by developing a successful daily routine in the classroom, and in the locker room, not just on the ice.

• Place the team above yourself. Playing your position and staying within the parameters of the systems we utilize will result in both you and the team achieving their respective goals. Support your teammates and encourage them. We all succeed or we all fail. UNTIL YOU ARE PERFECT, NEVER YELL AT A TEAMMATE WHO MAKES A MISTAKE. Leave the criticism to the coaches.

Page 11: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

 

4. Feet Moving:• All over ice • Winger getting puck out – Forwards• Quickness through neutral zone• Go to the net and STOP if you want to score -

Forwards• On the back check• Work their defense; take puck to the net every

opportunity – Forwards• All the way to the bench if changing – RAISE YOUR

HAND

 

7 Great Hockey Habits

Page 13: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

6. Discipline:• On attack get it behind their D – Dump puck hard • Shift length 45 seconds • Don’t retaliate after the whistle • OWN the bluelines – chip it out D zone – get it deep

in theirs • Be positive all the time • Remain disciplined under ALL circumstances • Back-check as hard as can • Commitment to the team – do whatever it takes

7 Great Hockey Habits

Page 14: 2003 Fusion Player Meeting. Introductions Who are you? What school do you go to? Who is your favorite NHL player? What do you like to do outside of hockey?

  7. Great Decisions:• Supporting on breakouts• Changes – hard and be aware • Defensemen – when to jump and must get back

RIGHT AWAY – job is ‘’D’’! CAREFUL when pinching

• Forwards – hard fore-checking - 2 men ON THE PUCK! 3rd man stays high (top of circles)

• Getting the puck to the net or deep • React – trust your decision• A good hockey player plays where the puck is. A

great hockey player plays where the puck is going to be. – Wayne Gretzky

7 Great Hockey Habits