The Standard (St. Catharines)

Multiplyin­g by division

Making half-ice games mandatory for tyke players will increase hockey developmen­t

- COREY LEBLANC SPECIAL TO POSTMEDIA NETWORK

In Timbits tykes hockey, the ice surface isn’t exactly what you would call bite-sized.

That will all change following Hockey Canada’s decision to make cross-ice games — essentiall­y, using just half the rink — mandatory for players six and younger.

As a result, players won’t be biting off more than they can chew.

Corey McNabb, director of hockey developmen­t programs at Hockey Canada, said while the half rink is mandatory, all the technical changes will be based on the discretion of league executives. One of the goals of the transition is to increase the speed of the game, so there will be no faceoffs after goals are scored, which is just the icing on the cake.

“We’re recommendi­ng that leagues don’t use the offside,” McNabb said. “We’d prefer to see them spend less time on faceoffs altogether.”

He said the change will bring about a quicker developmen­t process for players. Splitting the ice in half makes it possible for two games to be played at the same time. That means more ice time for players at an age when developing fundamenta­ls needs to be the focus.

“We really just want the kids to have fun,” McNabb said. “That’s what is most important.”

The Niagara Falls Minor Hockey Associatio­n implemente­d crossice games in 2013, and the program has been a success. Tykes coach Brandon Boone said he has seen players progress from playing at the single A level to triple A in just four years.

“The first graduating class from the new program started in the tyke three loop (single A) and crushed everybody,” he said. “Then they moved up to the tyke one loop (triple A).”

A smaller ice surface, among other things, increases body contact, puck touches, shots on goal and passes. The speed of game increases and more players become engaged as a result.

“They put a bunch of hockey dads on a rink the size of a football field and they ask them to play a fullice game,” Boone said. “That’s the equivalent of asking a four-, five- or six-year-old to play a full-ice game on a standard sized rink.

“If you’ve ever watched a tyke’s full-ice game, each shift is dominated by two or three players. The other seven or eight are just skating around. With cross ice, you reduce the playing surface and generate more touches and make sure everybody stays in the game.”

Across the region, other minor hockey associatio­ns will be forced to follow suit.

Welland Minor Hockey Associatio­n president Hank Borgatti thinks the program should increase developmen­t and give players more of a competitiv­e edge.

“We usually try not to play games until mid-December,” he said. “You get them on a big ice surface and they all crowd to the same area.

That’s a huge step up from the single-hour practices conducted in years past. Combine that with more touches and better developmen­t and you’ve got a hat trick of reasons to get on board with cross-ice hockey.

 ??  ??
 ?? BERND FRANKE/POSTMEDIA NETWORK ?? Increasing practice time, focusing on fundamenta­ls and getting more players involved are the goals of using only half the ice surface.
BERND FRANKE/POSTMEDIA NETWORK Increasing practice time, focusing on fundamenta­ls and getting more players involved are the goals of using only half the ice surface.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada