Forum Discussion
@couture2fat2fly wrote:
https://youtu.be/lrmiM8Qs5mA?si=HuSOCn4IbQQp7yl4
1. Teal hits the brakes and initiates a poke check, which negates any chance of intercepting

2. Teal initiates a backskate away from the net. I'd like to see puck disruptions added while the backskate initialization sequence plays out, so I'm kinda on your side here:

3. Finally, here's green - activley skating AWAY from the shooter as he scores

@couture2fat2fly wrote:
https://youtu.be/9yTjcDUGuyQ?si=4pN2TEB-yimn2Xuc
Green is constantly hustling, changing direction - essentially in a frantic state - which lowers the chances of intercepting

@couture2fat2fly wrote:
https://youtu.be/gYmSmmSYPlI?si=d-_IXkyML6OopdyA
You're just lying on the ice. When you do that, you have to expect the puck might find a way under you, and it did:

@couture2fat2fly wrote:
https://youtu.be/txvV8s1_HI8?si=rB6tgusiJaCfdkyU
Not sure what the issue is here. Red on the other team could've gained possession, but it's possible the pass was charged up quite a bit. Either way, they disrupted the play and I don't see anything wrong here.
when I played D in college, laying down usually resulted in pucks hitting my solid body...thats just me though..
- KidShowtime18672 years agoHero
@Limp_KidzKit wrote:when I played D in college, laying down usually resulted in pucks hitting my solid body...thats just me though..
Watch it again, The puck goes under his body on the way down. When you laid down while playing D in college, was your body instantly flush with the ice the moment you decided to lay down? Or was there a period of time between when you decided to lay down and when your body was flush to the ice, that the puck could've travelled under your body?
- 2 years ago
@KidShowtime1867 wrote:
@Limp_KidzKit wrote:when I played D in college, laying down usually resulted in pucks hitting my solid body...thats just me though..
Watch it again, The puck goes under his body on the way down. When you laid down while playing D in college, was your body instantly flush with the ice the moment you decided to lay down? Or was there a period of time between when you decided to lay down and when your body was flush to the ice, that the puck could've travelled under your body?
Not really since we wear pads when we play hockey so you dont go to the ground like an eldery man falling and trying to not get hurt...you just drop drop down and become flush with the ice...he initiated the fall right before release...more than enough time to become flush from that far out