Mastering
the Use of Drills for Your Practices
A Hockey Coaching Tool from Greg Siller of Pro
Learning Systems
Drills should be designed to teach and reinforce the
individual skills, positional tactics, and team strategies that your team needs
to employ; based on your Season Practice Plan as well as your recent competition. They should
enable the development and improvement of your team’s potential for consistently
playing their best in a competitive environment--my definition of a great
hockey practice. Drills should also allow players the opportunity to succeed
and fail in a safe environment; which is truly the foundation of winning.
Demonstration of the various drills by the players
allows coaches to observe whether the players understand the skills, tactics,
and strategies being taught to them and whether the players appear ready to
employ those concepts in future practices and games.
As a coach, you may be asking yourself, “What drills
should I use in our teams’ practices”? An easy answer is the right ones. The right ones are drills that enable you to
effectively execute your practice plan and teach your players appropriate
skills, tactics, and strategies. If you are not sure what needs to be taught to
your players, go back to the hockey basics. Teach them the Individual
Skills, Positional
Tactics, and Team
Strategies as well as make sure
that you teach them those attributes at the appropriate time during the season.
Types of
Drills
In terms of presentation, there are
three types of drills that can be used by coaches. While similar, all three
need to be introduced differently. The three types are;
1. Existing drills
2. Customizing drills, and
3. New drills
Existing Drills – If you are new to hockey or coaching in general, using
existing drills (drills that have been created and perfected previously) is a
great way to get started. Since the sport of hockey has been around for a long
time, coaches have already developed thousands of drills to use in practices;
at all levels of play—from beginner to pro. These drills can be found in books,
online as part of hockey or coaching websites (such as Sport Fitness Advisor), in
software packages, by talking with experienced coaches, and as part of hockey
leagues and sanctioning organizations such as USA Hockey
and Hockey
Canada. As an existing coach, you may already have a set of existing
drills that you have successfully used in the past.
Customized Drills - If you have some hockey, coaching, or teaching experience, it can be
more effective to use customized drills to get the most out of your practices.
Customized drills allow you to tailor the hockey learning around an existing
drill for your specific needs. Use your knowledge and creativity to modify
existing drills to ensure that your players are challenged, having fun,
learning, and applying both individual and team concepts in a variety of ways.
For example, if you begin using an existing ice hockey
breakout drill (using 5 skaters), you can customize that drill to be effective
for roller hockey (using 4 skaters). In this way, you are using the foundation
of the existing ice hockey drill and modifying it for your specific needs in
roller hockey. This was done just the opposite way (by customizing roller
hockey drills for ice hockey) by some NHL coaches to get their players ready to
play 4-on-4 hockey in the overtime period. Another example could be starting
with a stickhandling drill that is executed on the full playing surface. By
customizing the full-rink drill, you could create a half-rink drill that
utilizes half of the playing surface. This can enable your team to get through
the drill (if you utilize the same drill on both halves of the rink) in less
time.
New Drills - Creating drills specifically designed
for your team or individual players, takes both hockey and coaching knowledge.
Seeing the learning that takes place when properly executing a new drill can be
a very rewarding part of coaching. The inspiration for creating your own drills
can come from many sources; watching a pro game, viewing another teams’
practice, identifying areas for improvement from your last practice/game, or to
address new learning in a specific area of play. Creating your own drills
requires knowing what to teach your players, knowledge of how to teach them, as
well as some level of hockey experience. Once the new drill becomes well
understood, the coach can employ additional new drills that enable the learning
of more complex skills, tactics and strategies to improve the players and team.
Drill Example: Offensive Zone Attack Using a 5-on-2
The
following template shows the drill details for an Offensive Zone Attack. Use
the template below to help you develop your own drills.
1. Objective(s):
This drill focuses on attacking the offensive net to setup several scoring
opportunities.
2. Existing/Customized/New Drill: Existing drill.
3. Planned Time to Execute: 5-8 minutes
4. Execution: Once the offensive team has entered the zone, they continue their
progression toward the net. RW and C skate in their patterns hard to the net,
while LW positions near the high slot. LW needs to quickly survey the defensive
coverage (2 defensemen in this drill) to determine the various attacking
options; pass the puck to RW or C, shoot the puck, or continue skating with the
puck to buy time for teammates to get open. The outcome will be to execute one
of the options to put the puck in the net.
5. Number of Times to Execute Drill: 8-10 times.
6. Coach Positioning:
Near the blue line or goal line (see the 2 encircled C’s).
7. Variations of the drill: Run the drill as a 3-on-2, add more defenders, run
the drill up the right side, or have the drill executed at both ends of the
rink.
8. Competition/Fun: Working to get a shot on net or pass to the two attackers while being
defended.
9. Skater Feedback: Puck control, ability to have RW and C skate to the net and get open,
patience by LW to create time for RW and C to get open, ability of LW to
continue carrying the puck if the passing/shooting options are not immediately
available, accurate passes, and a hard shot on net, and working for any
rebounds.
10. Goaltender Feedback: Tracking the puck, tracking the three main
attackers, crease positioning, communicating with teammates, save techniques,
and containing any rebounds.
Drill: Offensive Zone
Attack Using a 5-on-2 G LD C LW RW RD XD XD C C
How to
Introduce Drills to your Team
Now that you have your drill designed and ready to go,
how do you introduce it to your team? When introducing drills to your team,
there are six elements that need to be addressed. These elements are, what I
call, the 6 D’s of drill introduction. These 6 elements are:
1. Define the drill – identify the skills, tactics, or strategies you want
to teach and the reason(s) why it is important for your team to learn this
information at this time during the season?
2. Design the drill – this step is only used for customized and new
drills. Create the actual drill in your mind, on paper, or with software. For
existing drills, you can skip this step. Use the following questions to help
with the design.
·
How does this
drill fit into the overall practice?
·
How will this
drill expose your players to game-like situations?
·
What part of rink
will be drill be executed on?
·
How will you
maximize rink utilization during each drill?
·
Who runs the
drill and where will they be positioned?
·
What players or
groups of players are you targeting this drill for (defense, goaltenders,
forwards, all)?
·
What are some
drill variations that could work as well?
·
At what point in
the practice will this drill be executed?
·
What is the pace
of the drill (stationary, slow, medium, or fast)?
·
How complex is the drill?
·
How much time is
required for the drill (time, repetitions)?
3. Describe and Diagram the drill – verbalize and illustrate the drill to your players,
defining what you want them to learn and accomplish. Use the information in the
previous steps above to help communicate pertinent information to your team;
what is to be accomplished, why it is important, and where on the surface
specific activities will be performed. How will you describe the drill
(verbally, whiteboard, other)? What information will be communicated and by
whom?
4. Demonstrate the drill – so that your players can see what is expected of
them. This is especially critical for new drills. Who will demonstrate the
drill (coaches, players)? How will you tie this demonstration into the
description of the drill so that players get a clear picture of what is
expected of them and why?
5. Do the drill – have the players perform the drill to demonstrate whether they
understand the drill concepts. By performing the drill, players demonstrate
their sense of learning (or not) to the coaches, which gives you feedback for
item #6 below. A couple of items to consider include:
·
How will you know
when learning has taken place?
·
If the players do
not understand the drill initially, how much time will you spend on the drill
over and above the planned time? This number will help bound the maximum amount
of drill time to plan for during this practice.
6. Deliver feedback on the drill – provide the players with information on how they
performed the drill compared to the goals of the drill and to your expectations
(how will they apply this information the next time your run this drill or
during the next game?)
·
Did the
appropriate learning take place? Compare what you observed against your goals
for the drill. Provide feedback on areas proficiency and discuss where opportunities
still remain for learning. Reinforce how this learning can be applied to games
and the various elements within a game.
·
Build in time to
effectively communicate with your players
·
Plan for some
individual attention for players who do not appear to understand the drills or
are not able to effectively demonstrate the drills. You may want to have an
assistant coach work with some players in a small group to ensure learning is
taking place.
Greg Siller,
founder of Pro Learning Systems (www.ProLearning.com),
has put his 25 years of ice and roller hockey experience into authoring
several hockey articles as well as two highly acclaimed hockey books;
The Hockey Practice Playbook and Roller Hockey: Skills and Strategies for Winning On
Wheels. These books contain many drill-related topics as well as
examples of hundreds of drills that you can use to help teach and improve your
team.