Toughest stick of all time? | HFBoards - NHL Message Board and Forum for National Hockey League

Toughest stick of all time?

kohorevolution

Registered User
Apr 8, 2015
134
60
Rimouski
Hy guys, wanna know what's the longest lasting stick you ve had. I personnaly own a nike ignite graphite/kevlar shaft which went through about 10 blades without breaking! I own it since I was 12 years old and now am 23! I only use it to play ball hockey by now since there are better sticks out there but this one is like my eternal stick! Lol
What's your story?
 
I'm 33 and still have my aluminum shaft from when I played as a teen. I even found another one at a used sports store and picked it up for like $8. I haven't used them in 2-3 years now, but I used to before I made the switch to high end composites.
 
Tps response r8 by sher-wood. Had a bad game, tried smashing it off the wall multiple times, wouldn't break. Actually a great stick
 
I still have some ancient Montreal wood sticks that never broke. I just stopped using them because the blade rotted. Not bad as a dry land stickhandling stick though.

Looks like I stole it from a local sports bar :laugh:
 
The Z-bubble or rubber reponse. I still have one of each and they are like 10 to 15 years old.
I use them both for outdoor roller hockey in the summer.
 
I'm 33 and still have my aluminum shaft from when I played as a teen. I even found another one at a used sports store and picked it up for like $8. I haven't used them in 2-3 years now, but I used to before I made the switch to high end composites.

I also still have my aluminum shaft from PeeWee. Those things were built to last. The blades? Not so much.
 
Blades rotting, breaking, ect counts folks. Most durable stick, not the most durable shaft.

And I can't think of any answer but the ST. My current stick is a pro ST painted to look like an SE16. Love the thing.
 
I still have an Easton Ultra Light shaft. Was the last stick I used before calling it quits in college, but I only used it for like a season and half before I realized you could drink as much without having to practice by joining a frat. And also, much like my collegiate hockey career, I don't think that stick was particularly durable.
 
Pretty much any shaft made pre-2002ish. An Easton Ultra Lite is the only shaft I can think of from that era that I have broken... And that was only because of dry-rot from being in storage for an extended period.

I have three or four shafts from that era that are still very usable including the Nike Ignite shaft that the OP was talking about. They certainly don't make them like they used to.
 

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