BRUUUUUUTAL!!!!!! His legs now feel somewhat as though they were made of jello that’s been set on fire.
@nathanh1949
10 ай бұрын
Do you have any videos of zellweger or are you gonna film some?
@nickalleye
11 ай бұрын
Thanks! are u planning to upload more of these?
@DerekLee27
11 ай бұрын
Yes, I will try to upload as many as I can throughout today and the rest of the week
@bsu88
11 ай бұрын
@@DerekLee27 W.
@nickalleye
11 ай бұрын
@@DerekLee27 Nice, subscribed
@jeremoose2000
11 ай бұрын
@@DerekLee27 You're doing God's work.
@anaheimducksfan2469
10 ай бұрын
@@bsu88 did you quit HF boards? It's better with you there.
@ezypzy2235
10 ай бұрын
Guy skates like a fridge, he’ll be running through people in no time
@user-my8eu1zw6x
10 ай бұрын
What is this test about?
@Michigan_Wolverine
10 ай бұрын
I hope he is faster than that
@ChristianKrillz
10 ай бұрын
He isnt lightning quick but he is deceptively fast, his large frame kinda makes it look worse than it is i can promise you. I live in Örebro where he plays in SHL and he doesnt seem to struggle with forechecking or backchecking speedwise. If i'd rate him i would give most of his attributes a 9/10 but skating a 7/10 which hopefully improves
@theharlequin2821
10 ай бұрын
I see what you are saying, but when you look at his highlights, Leo's skating actually quite closely, mimics Mario Lemieux's skating stride & style --long strides, with deceptive speed.
@tens9100
10 ай бұрын
@@ChristianKrillz he has a huge powerful stride. Reminds me of Zibanejad
@tens9100
10 ай бұрын
@@theharlequin2821 reminded me a bit of Zibanejad’s stride. Enormous and so powerful. Mackinnon couldn’t even catch Ziba on a breakaway
@ChristianKrillz
10 ай бұрын
@@tens9100 ziba is fast when he wants to! Sadly doesnt use it that often... same with Nylander... he is RAPID but only turns the burners on when he sees a breakaway lol...
@ismayil9047
9 ай бұрын
Slow AF 😂
@JNJ1014
10 ай бұрын
What a dumb test SMH 🤦 NHL players, on average, utilize the forward stride in less than 10% of a typical game. Yet skating coaches often spend 40-50% of all training time focused on improving the forward stride technique. Plus this test doesn't prove anything bc V02 max/cardiovascular conditioning can be tested off-ice. Not to mention the fact that NO players perform even 4 full length sprints in a given shift. At best you'd sprint the length of the ice 2x & call for a change. Kids, work on being EXPLOSIVE in your first 3-4 steps & developing maximum agility bc those skating skills are far more applicable. (And MASTER your outside edges, nothing is more important!)
@Jaymsie.
10 ай бұрын
“10% forward stride”? Now that’s not even remotely true. And BTW this test quantifies the players lactic acid threshold. I.e. how long they can go at full capacity before lactic acid buildup insists that they stop immediately.
@joellitt-jukes9715
9 ай бұрын
I work full time as a hockey skills and development coach up here in Alberta and do contracted scouting for 3 WHL teams and a boat load of Junior A teams. Your sentiment about change of direction and "first 3-4 steps" being important is correct but the numbers you are throwing out involving straight line skating are completely made up. You are right in saying that skating coaches typically focus too much on straight line skating and not enough on change or direction. I'm a skating coach myself I get what you are saying. Stride technique and edgework have been the bee's knee's for the last 10+ years. But your argument that players skate in forward lines for "10%" in game and that trainers spend "40-50%" time training straight line speed is not only wrong; you just blatantly made that up. I did testing on multiple NCAA college players where we tracked their skating patterns. We removed what we called "dead ice time" (gliding in the zones, skating to the bench, standing relatively still in space, etc). After collecting the data we found that most forwards spent roughly 30% of their time on the ice in a forward sprint that lasted LONGER than 15 feet, which is typically an average of 4+ strides. We saw that straight line sprints that lasted LESS than 15 feet was also 38% of their TOI. That means that 68% of the game is spent in a straight line. Of course, there is TONS of changes of direction in there too, so your sentiment about working on being explosive in the first 3-4 strides is absolutely correct. And I do agree with you that although first step explosiveness is a massive focus in the gym, on the ice not enough skating coaches train it with the volume it's needed. The other 3 areas of play we considered on top of "straight line > 15 ft" and "straight line
@JNJ1014
9 ай бұрын
@joellitt-jukes9715 I was quoting Darryl Belfry regarding the forward stride but OK, I guess he doesn't know what he's talking about either.
@joellitt-jukes9715
9 ай бұрын
I know exactly who he is. He's a brilliant mind. Definitely been in the game longer than me. All I'm doing is I'm telling you the results to the tests we ran on 13 different NCAA college players. We tested their movement patterns over the course of 3 games per player. That's 39 games of college hockey. Those were the results. Now of course, we studied movement patterns not the isolated technique of each skater, but still, my point stands. You are greatly exaggerating the frequency in which players skate in straight lines, as proven by our study. To your point though, movement technique is different than movement pattern, we studied the movement patterns of each player.@@JNJ1014
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