Aces89
Registered User
- Apr 22, 2020
- 184
- 88
Had to play catch up of my mens league videos. Been slacking.
I love that stuff for the most part.4:33 is why I hate Beer League. 21 on white (Aces?) getting a little too serious about trying to jockey for position in front of the net...shaking my head.
I play every Saturday 10pm and tonight I pull on my jock shorts only to have the elastic legs bands tear away from the cup pouch. So it's there but just hangin loose. I tell everyone and joke around and they say don't get tagged
I play every Saturday 10pm and tonight I pull on my jock shorts only to have the elastic legs bands tear away from the cup pouch. So it's there but just hangin loose.
I play every Saturday 10pm and tonight I pull on my jock shorts only to have the elastic legs bands tear away from the cup pouch. So it's there but just hangin loose. I tell everyone and joke around and they say don't get tagged
Play D. Tagged TWICE there in the one game but both times the cup there was still enough in place to protect.
Second one was clapper and smoked right off it. Little rim rash even with the gel rim of the cup. Junk is fine
I came back to the bench and we all talk about it. WTF are the chances the one time your jockstrap is dangling and you get tagged there TWICE in the game? Is this some cosmic hockey shit?
Then later another dman on our team takes a slapper off his skate toe and the toe cap cracks wide open and off. Old Ultra Tacks though haha End of his night 3D rest of the night but we still win 7 - 5.
Guess I NEED new shorts befor next Sat night
You know I've played without a cage once when I forgot it at home. I'd probably play without elbow pads if I had to. I played once with borrowed shin pads that were 3" too long and came up halfway my thigh.
But I'm pretty sure that if my cup wasn't functional I'd be sitting in the stands...
Yeah it was. Don't remember it ever happening before. But it was still in position enough to do its job but it was kinda freaky for sure. Htf does that happen twice in a game when it probably hasn't happened in many many years the first time it does I get shots there twiceThat is such an awkward feeling skatin around with the cup dangling
You know I've played without a cage once when I forgot it at home. I'd probably play without elbow pads if I had to. I played once with borrowed shin pads that were 3" too long and came up halfway my thigh.
But I'm pretty sure that if my cup wasn't functional I'd be sitting in the stands...
I got a new pair of compression shorts with built in jock strap straps…. I love them
My tonight at the rink story centers around being forced to move back to play defense. I’m blown away by how playing defense has helped me play forward. This session I played in our D and C leagues. I’m 42 and this is like my 8th year of playing hockey. Traditionally my improvement curve has been disappointing. Despite getting a driveway shooting pad, despite trying to train or work on something each offseason, despite watching YouTube instructors or just trying to absorb hockey… nothing has jump started my improvement like playing defense in our lower skill league every so often. It’s opened my vision up on the rink, it’s helped me get a better feel for presenting myself as open for a pass. Just in so many ways it’s broadened my experience with hockey.
Makes me kind of want to try goalie
My team has taken to swapping the Fs to D and vice versa whenever we play a team that's well below our skill level. It does a lot of good for everyone involved, including the other team by making the game more competitive. I usually play forward, so moving back to D has given me a chance to do a lot more puck handling and working on my vision.
Could not agree more.
I used to play forward, switched to d recently, love it!
More ice time, puck on your stick, i feel like a conductor.
The only downside is when i play left wing occasionaly, i tend to think too much about the defence.
The hardest thing for me is getting used to literally just standing there sometimes. At forward that sends off alarm bells.
I have found the transition of going from a goalie mindset to a defensive mindset to a forward mindset to be very difficult. After playing goalie through highschool I started skating out at D and the hardest thing to learn was letting the goalie see the shots from the point. I would consistently try to block the shots and end up screening my goalie. Sometimes our bench is so short that I have to go up to play wing and I struggle to find that attacking mindset, I constantly drop back and end up sabotaging a lot of our O-zone cycling and chances. Good luck to you if you can make that transition, if I have my druthers I will be back on the blue line...So I'm a pretty new player, started playing 4 years ago in my 40s. I took a "learn to play hockey" course, rolled with a bunch of the guys from the course into a team. I started playing defence for the simple fact that I could actually skate backwards, compared to some of our guys.
But after those 4 years, we've lost some of our beginning players, and recruited new players who all had experience. So now our most experienced players are on defence by deliberate choice, and I'm now on the wing. I can't argue that decision - having skilled D-men definitely helps our game. But I felt pretty lost out there.
It's hard to shed the notion I need to get back, that I should just trust our defence to protect the puck. After 2-3 months I have improved though, and it is kind of fun to just hang out and wait for that spectacular break-out pass from the D (that I never could have managed). And at least when a D does pinch in I can recognize it and cover for them.
Only forgot my cup once. Went out to lost-and-found bin in lobby and jerry-rigged a kids elbow pad into a temporary cup, was still a very nerve wracking game...
My team has taken to swapping the Fs to D and vice versa whenever we play a team that's well below our skill level. It does a lot of good for everyone involved, including the other team by making the game more competitive. I usually play forward, so moving back to D has given me a chance to do a lot more puck handling and working on my vision.
Got a warning from a ref last night for aggressively skating towards a player stopping on my edge in front of him while poke checking his stick and stealing the puck. He said he could give me a penalty because it looked like I was going check him but I did not touch anything but the puck with my stick. It isn't my fault he thought I was going to hit him and I picked his pocket for the puck. I never heard of skating hard stop in front of a guy and stealing a puck with stick on puck contact as a penalty. I just never have heard that before. It was a tie game with like 15 seconds left and I got the puck and passed it to the point. He took a clapper and missed the net and game was over. The ref came over and warned me for aggressively skating towards a player but even said i never touched him with any part of my body but he could still give me a penalty. I just okay I never heard of that and didn't make any body contact him and just stole the puck. The other guy was mad and trying to chirp me . I just ignored him. Has anyone ever heard of this before ?
That's pretty clearly not a penalty. The only context where this would make any sense to me is if you're playing down against new-to-hockey players.