He's honestly pretty clueless and never played any real hockey. He's looked at as a joke by most members of the hockey community because he charges outrageous prices for sessions despite not being a great skater himself
@@swilliams9I mean although he’s clearly never played in a hitting league he’s still clearly better than any coaches I’ve had in Utah. Since I was 10 I’ve been better than most of my coaches and since I’ve been in high school I haven’t had a single useful coach. I asked for help on form with my shot when I was about 15 and my coach just told me I knew more about it than he did. I wish I’d had a coach that could have helped me not learn everything on my own
@WilliamDMunny it’s not presumptuous at all. As an A league player I can guarantee that I’m better than my coach who plays in D league. And my other coach who’s never even played. I’ve asked them for help with technique and they said they didn’t know. So I went watched videos on it and practiced on my own. I’m not good because my coaches taught me I’m good because of the thousands of hours I’ve put into the sport. Unless you’ve made a D1 team you can’t even begin to say I’m a bad player
Outstanding demo Sean. I'm trying to convince some of the late comers to the game on my men's league team to pitch in on a team membership. The concise explanation and skillful demonstration in these clips is top notch. And your instructional:motivational style is awesome. My dad ran the hockey school in Stratford for many years, and I really appreciate your passion for what you do. Keep it up!
That's just a stop and start. Probably slower with the cross overs after to come out of it and better served going back, but I can see a rolling stop into the cross overs on being alittle quicker.
It’s very easy to skate like this when you’ve skated your entire life, that isn’t the hard part. It’s the power he has that’s impressive, buddy must have dumb strong legs, ive been skating for like a good 18 years and that power looks nuts lol
Instead of stopping with both feet, a punch turn is usually better, it is using the outside edge of your inside fit when turning and punching it forward as you turn. So 1 fit just turns and the other foot kind of pushes into the ice
It's not in this video, but he started this session telling everyone: "I taught hockey in the inner city for 20 years, so don't even try to mess with me." 🤣🤣🤣
After decades of coaches mumbling like Charlie Brown's teachers in a giant reverb chamber, I think this one's starting to get it. Once he realizes that no one can understand him on the ice when his back is turned, he will graduate.
I wonder if you timed someone to compare a tight turn vs a hockey turn which one will be faster. My bet is on the tight turn because that's how physics work
Quin Huges как то мягче катается. И мне его катание нравится. Вот многие такое силовое катание как тренер показывают тренируют до седьмого пота но Хьюз катит по-другому. Плавнее что ли. И вот как такое катание натренировать?
Is this supposed to be real? I played for 30 years up to elite levels and never saw or heard about that "technique". You loose all of your "momentum" by doing that. Its not a turn, at best its a brake and go... i hope they dont pay for that...😅
How many clueless parents pay this man money? If you stop you loose speed, easy way to retain speed while making a tight turn is to lift the toe on your inner skate and press your outer skate hard in the ice. Doesn't look as flashy though as you can hardly see it.
@@xmarine73 I’ve been around hockey my whole life, I played until highschool. I’m 20 now. But this is the most stereotypical hockey coach I’ve ever seen every coach does this same thing and I thought it was funny