Hockey Canada to make smaller ice surfaces mandatory
Hockey Canada says it will make it mandatory that children getting their first introduction to the game play on reducedsize ice surfaces instead of fullsized rinks.
The organization which governs amateur hockey has been recommending half-ice, or cross-ice, for its initiation programs for five- and six-year-olds for more than three decades.
A number of provincial amateur hockey bodies already require rinks be partitioned into smaller surfaces for games for their youngest players.
But Paul Carson, Hockey Canada’s vice-president of membership development, said there are still holdouts where beginners play their games on full-sized rinks.
“We know statistically when you’re in a smaller playing area it increases the number of puck touches, it increases the number of battles for loose pucks, it increases the number of shots on goal, it increases the number of passes and pass receptions,” said Carson as he explained how smaller ice surfaces improve skills development. “We’ve coined the phrase, ‘Decrease the space, increase the pace.’ It does make all players better.”
The mandatory policy will take effect for the 2017-18 season.
Not everyone agrees reduced size is the best way to foster skill. Some online forums and blogs argue there are kids who are ready for full ice and that it’s wrong to hold them back. They argue it’s important to learn icing and offsides.
The Saskatchewan Hockey Association, which recently mandated smaller surfaces for beginners for the 2016-17 season, acknowledged on its website that some parents may want full ice because they want their child to “play like professionals do” and experience “real hockey.”
But the site also includes a link to a video showing adult hockey players on a rink with enlarged dimensions and giant nets to demonstrate what the experience of full-size ice looks like for kids.
Carson said Hockey Canada watched game videos of little players on full-sized rinks, which he described as one breakaway after another by the strongest player on each team.
Special boards and bumpers have been developed that allow for quick and easy division of a regular-sized rink into two half-ice surfaces or three cross-ice rinks.