@@jakepapa6516 Nah, your lack of ability to read is the reason for your misunderstanding... I didn't say I Don't skate... I said keeping me from skating MORE!! I skate often on flatland around the bay and speed skate the stadium parking lot... Just not downhill yet on my speed skates so... nice try keyboard bully but who's got egg on their face now?
Your advice is absolutely correct about the heel brake, or stopper. It's a very effective way to stop. What's not very clear from your demo is that if your skates are next to each other, it won't work. You need to first scissor one skate forward (the one with the brake on) and the other one backwards. Then you'll be able to use the brake. Maybe for an experienced skater this is so obvious that it's not worth mentioning, but trust me, many beginners will miss this detail, and struggle because of it.
Thanks for the feedback. I didn’t mention it because I felt that if you lift the toe of the braking skate it will automatically move forward into a scissor. But you’re right that I didn’t think that this might not be natural for beginners!
@@RomyRF you can even put your both hands on your kneels while breaking. This will give you more strengh and a better posture or safer posture while breaking
This is definitely the hardest thing I have been trying to learn. When at a public skating session, there are a lot of speed skaters and beginners mixed in, so the chances of running into someone are high. I have to try to avoid them all the time because I can't stop at higher speeds. When I'm at a low speed, I can pull a 180 turn to stop but annoying because I end up facing the other way. Thank you for this tutorial
These videos are awesome, thank you. Can you do a tutorial for pivots on inline skates for hockey situations ? Perhaos run thru some game situation type turns / pivots? That would be amazing!
Hi Marcell. Good to see that the tradition of teaching inline stopping techniques continue on RUclips. There must be a couple of thousand videos by now. Many RUclips skaters have developed a common terminology for stopping techniques, and I would like to ask you to adhere to that terminology. What you call "the stopper" is usually referred to as "the heal break". And what you call "the leg drag" is usually referred to as "the T-stop". If we strive to use the same terminology, in stead of re-inventing the wheel every few months, we can help each other search out the good stopping videos. Best regards, Tommy.
Hi Tommy, Thank you for your information. I will unfortunately not be able to abide by your request. There are often many different terms for the same skill. What is called a Mohawk in North America is called a hip-opener in Germany. Both terms are correct. What used to commonly be known as a simple tight turn is now for whatever reason called a punch turn. The list could go on. Nobody is trying to reinvent the wheel. Just to teach people how to stop, regardless of what the stop is called.
Hi Marcell I have never heard of the Mohawk. Or the hip-opener. And I have been inline skating for 20+ years and watched RUclips for as long as I remember. Please respect the terminology that has developed in the skating community. Try to search for "inline skating mohawk" and see how many hits you get as opposed to a search for "inline skating t-stop", you see the difference and why it matters?
4:00 I've been trying to do that stop, but every time my wheels contact the pavement even Slightly while turned, it's like someone just Yanked my leg from behind, which is Really hard to balance.
Turn your foot completely, and experiment with the angle of your stopping foot. More angle might be smoother (exactly the opposite of on ice where more angle is a much more abrupt stop)
I started skating a little while ago, but the surfaces I'm on are very uneven, and I quickly found that the heel stop would catch on the surface... not good. It's necessary, I think for any potential urban skater to learn more versatile stops.
I've been ice skating for about six months and have been playing hockey for about four months. My skating ability is increasing and I can hockey stop without any trouble. Yesterday, I bought a pair on inline skates so I can train outside during the Summer. However I must say this video did not fill me with confidence about stopping on inline skates while near traffic or going down the street or on sidewalks. You mentioned you feel as though you would not crash while stopping using the three techniques. It's not crashing per se that concerns me. It's moving objects crashing into me because I can't stop in time to avoid them that concerns me. Inline skating outside near cars and bikes and people doesn't seem practical.
It's all about muscle memory, practice, practice, practice. I have just started inline again after over 20 years and I'm slowly improving. I wouldn't dream of taking on street skating in traffic on the roads and pavements just yet. Work on the fundamentals in an open area like a car park on an evening where traffic is minimal to none. This was the barrier to me putting in practice, it took me a long while to find a spot. Once I found a place I started working on drills in relative safety. it makes all the difference. Maybe look at other tutorials by aggressive/street inline skaters such as Shaun Unwin or Bill Stoppard. The later is a master of the power stop, a variation of the hockey stop.
I think then, with your fear, it’s important to learn to turn quickly, not to stop, because honestly, you are not going to learn to do a full hockey stop on inline skates after only skating for about a year. Bill Stoppard is a phenomenal skater and his sideways stopping tutorial is great, but that’s an extremely advanced skill, nothing for a beginner inline skater. I fully recommend getting a stopper put on (you can stop very quickly with one), and learning how to do quick sharp turns like a showed in the one version.
I think being agile and having quick reactions is just as important as stopping and being able to jump, dodge, roll on one foot, both ways etc etc are all good skills for traversing busy places. Keeping your speed sensible for where you're skating is a good idea as well. Things like stepping, pushing your feet out etc are good for shaving off speed as well.
One of the useful Vids at all ! I believe, the best scater is'nt one who can accelerate and run fast, but that one who can break and stop fast...better to say - can forsee and avoid the dangerous situations.✋ Thanks, Marcel... Just have a brand new pare of Graf Supra for that Saison...ready to bake🤣🤣🤣🤣✋
Hello Marcel! What I most like of this channel is that you take time to answer all of our questions 😃👍 I'd like to know why you call It ”semi" hockey stop? What's the difference? Thanks so much!
Hi, It’s not really a full hockey stop because a full hockey stop puts a lot more weight on the back leg. Here we‘re using pretty much just our front leg.
@@MarcelsHockeySchool German is my second language, and I may not have expressed my thought properly. I used “mittlerweile” to mean “in the meantime” to say until you’re able to make and release that video, if NZ wants to get a head start, he can have a look at those. Did I botch that? I didn’t mean to suggest an inline backwards skating video would have no value because they’re the same.
Thanks! Yeah they're the Marsblade R1s, but I've used the O1s before as well. They're both good but different. The R1 comes with 2x 80mm and 2x 76mm 74A hardness wheels. I'll switch to harder wheelsnext cuz I usually skate out on the street
For the T-stop, some tutorials I watched applies the pressure on the leading foot instead of the one dragging behind. Your technique applies it on the dragging foot, am I correct?
I'd say that although a fair amount of my body weight is over my front foot, I do need to be pushing down with as much force as possible with the back foot in order to stop quickly. So front foot is more body weight, while back foot is active pressure.
Marcel thank you for the tutorial. I watch a lot of stopping techniques from other channels, but you explained it the best. This video helped me understand stopping concepts on rollerblades. Like you said, you don’t have to always put all your body weight into 1 full stop. You can stop other ways too. I think this is the most important concepts for beginners. T stops is great for flat surface, but i think it’s too risky on long steep downhills. Thank you again. I would not be the rollerblader I am today without this video. 😊 ❤
You're most welcome! Yeah I totally agree- for beginners just coming to a stop is the most important thing- it doesn't really matter how (as long as it's not a crash). And for people coming from ice skating, stopping on rollerblades is actually quite hard because it's one of the few skills where the technique is totally different compared to on ice.
Check out acid slid, t- stop to the Front, soul solide, magic slide.... As a Skater hockey Player the hockey stop on Sport court or concrete is easy for me. If you can do it on concrete you can do it on ice but not the other way around, lol
Hy just follow your channel, i just got my new in line skate. Am a beginner.. I have crack my bones and fell many times... Is that part of the drills for a new skatters
Man check out Bill Stoppard! He is the master of ice hockey stop on all hard surfaces. (Also your country man Canada) Basically get harder wheels above 85A and practice and practice and ....
@@MarcelsHockeySchool Exactly! He used to use Adapt 90A wheels and I was sliding all over the place with them. He toned down now to 88A but I still use 85A on Asphalt and 78A in hall. The stock wheels on all street roller hockeys are 82A but majority of the roller hockeys come with indoor 78A wheels and they stick too much to the asphalt and throw you over. Also you need to replace them more often.
nice video! Curious about can we hockey stop in a rainy day on a wet road? You indicated we cant shave the ground, but if it is smooth enough, maybe shaving becomes applicable?
Good stuff. The stop is keeping me from skating more! The more confident I am in stopping, the more I'll be skating! Thank you!
You’re welcome!
good one
Nah, being a scaredy-cat for lack of a better and different cat is the reason you don't skate... or lazy.
@@jakepapa6516 Nah, your lack of ability to read is the reason for your misunderstanding... I didn't say I Don't skate... I said keeping me from skating MORE!!
I skate often on flatland around the bay and speed skate the stadium parking lot... Just not downhill yet on my speed skates so...
nice try keyboard bully but who's got egg on their face now?
@@MrIzzy4real w.e helps you sleep
Your advice is absolutely correct about the heel brake, or stopper. It's a very effective way to stop. What's not very clear from your demo is that if your skates are next to each other, it won't work. You need to first scissor one skate forward (the one with the brake on) and the other one backwards. Then you'll be able to use the brake. Maybe for an experienced skater this is so obvious that it's not worth mentioning, but trust me, many beginners will miss this detail, and struggle because of it.
Thanks for the feedback. I didn’t mention it because I felt that if you lift the toe of the braking skate it will automatically move forward into a scissor. But you’re right that I didn’t think that this might not be natural for beginners!
Omg that's why I can never do it with the brake... Thank you, I'm going to try again now!
@@RomyRF you’re welcome and good luck!
@@RomyRF you can even put your both hands on your kneels while breaking. This will give you more strengh and a better posture or safer posture while breaking
@@BlackyRay_Patrick That's a good tip, thank you!
This is definitely the hardest thing I have been trying to learn. When at a public skating session, there are a lot of speed skaters and beginners mixed in, so the chances of running into someone are high. I have to try to avoid them all the time because I can't stop at higher speeds. When I'm at a low speed, I can pull a 180 turn to stop but annoying because I end up facing the other way. Thank you for this tutorial
You’re most welcome! Glad I could help!
it’s better to go during the day when there are less speed skaters and rink rats there. at least in my area
I’m sitting indoors on a cold wet English autumn day, watching you outdoors on a nice warm summers day. Good video.
@@StillAliveAndKicking_ Haha, it’s colder and wet now in Germany too.
Thanks!
These videos are awesome, thank you. Can you do a tutorial for pivots on inline skates for hockey situations ? Perhaos run thru some game situation type turns / pivots? That would be amazing!
Thanks! I’m planning something like that but not until next summer. In the Winter I stick with the on-ice stuff
Awesome Marcel! Been following your off ice videos, really enjoying the Marsblade.
Thanks! Glad you liked it!
What drills would suggest for t stops or how to gradually practice it?
one of the most practical video out there
@@shifuugincii glad you liked it!
Anything can stop me. Thx for tips
You’re welcome!
Nice improvement
Hi Marcell.
Good to see that the tradition of teaching inline stopping techniques continue on RUclips. There must be a couple of thousand videos by now.
Many RUclips skaters have developed a common terminology for stopping techniques, and I would like to ask you to adhere to that terminology. What you call "the stopper" is usually referred to as "the heal break". And what you call "the leg drag" is usually referred to as "the T-stop".
If we strive to use the same terminology, in stead of re-inventing the wheel every few months, we can help each other search out the good stopping videos.
Best regards,
Tommy.
Hi Tommy,
Thank you for your information. I will unfortunately not be able to abide by your request. There are often many different terms for the same skill. What is called a Mohawk in North America is called a hip-opener in Germany. Both terms are correct. What used to commonly be known as a simple tight turn is now for whatever reason called a punch turn. The list could go on.
Nobody is trying to reinvent the wheel. Just to teach people how to stop, regardless of what the stop is called.
Hi Marcell
I have never heard of the Mohawk. Or the hip-opener. And I have been inline skating for 20+ years and watched RUclips for as long as I remember.
Please respect the terminology that has developed in the skating community. Try to search for "inline skating mohawk" and see how many hits you get as opposed to a search for "inline skating t-stop", you see the difference and why it matters?
Danke für die tollen Tipps.
Sehr gerne!
4:00 I've been trying to do that stop, but every time my wheels contact the pavement even Slightly while turned, it's like someone just Yanked my leg from behind, which is Really hard to balance.
Turn your foot completely, and experiment with the angle of your stopping foot. More angle might be smoother (exactly the opposite of on ice where more angle is a much more abrupt stop)
Thank you so much for showing examples on hills! Super helpful.
You’re welcome! Glad I could help!
Nice tips salute idol
Thank you!
I started skating a little while ago, but the surfaces I'm on are very uneven, and I quickly found that the heel stop would catch on the surface... not good. It's necessary, I think for any potential urban skater to learn more versatile stops.
Great video, thanks! I'm learning along with the kids, and yup, came to the point where I have to admit that they just learn faster and outrun me 😅
Haha yep! They always end up faster than us at some point!
I've been ice skating for about six months and have been playing hockey for about four months. My skating ability is increasing and I can hockey stop without any trouble. Yesterday, I bought a pair on inline skates so I can train outside during the Summer. However I must say this video did not fill me with confidence about stopping on inline skates while near traffic or going down the street or on sidewalks. You mentioned you feel as though you would not crash while stopping using the three techniques. It's not crashing per se that concerns me. It's moving objects crashing into me because I can't stop in time to avoid them that concerns me. Inline skating outside near cars and bikes and people doesn't seem practical.
It's all about muscle memory, practice, practice, practice. I have just started inline again after over 20 years and I'm slowly improving. I wouldn't dream of taking on street skating in traffic on the roads and pavements just yet. Work on the fundamentals in an open area like a car park on an evening where traffic is minimal to none. This was the barrier to me putting in practice, it took me a long while to find a spot. Once I found a place I started working on drills in relative safety. it makes all the difference. Maybe look at other tutorials by aggressive/street inline skaters such as Shaun Unwin or Bill Stoppard. The later is a master of the power stop, a variation of the hockey stop.
@@liambennett9966 Thanks for the recommendations. I know of a spot where I can practice and I will check out the skaters. Thanks again.
@@liambennett9966 Update: I just checked out a Bill Stoppard video. Wow, the dude can skate. It was inspiring!
I think then, with your fear, it’s important to learn to turn quickly, not to stop, because honestly, you are not going to learn to do a full hockey stop on inline skates after only skating for about a year. Bill Stoppard is a phenomenal skater and his sideways stopping tutorial is great, but that’s an extremely advanced skill, nothing for a beginner inline skater. I fully recommend getting a stopper put on (you can stop very quickly with one), and learning how to do quick sharp turns like a showed in the one version.
I think being agile and having quick reactions is just as important as stopping and being able to jump, dodge, roll on one foot, both ways etc etc are all good skills for traversing busy places.
Keeping your speed sensible for where you're skating is a good idea as well. Things like stepping, pushing your feet out etc are good for shaving off speed as well.
One of the useful Vids at all ! I believe, the best scater is'nt one who can accelerate and run fast, but that one who can break and stop fast...better to say - can forsee and avoid the dangerous situations.✋ Thanks, Marcel...
Just have a brand new pare of Graf Supra for that Saison...ready to bake🤣🤣🤣🤣✋
Thx Marcel. Much obliged Sir. I’ll give it a whirl.
You're welcome! Have fun!
How would you skate if there is alot of bumps
The same as without bumps just more careful
@@MarcelsHockeySchool thanks! In my country there is alot of bumps
Hello Marcel! What I most like of this channel is that you take time to answer all of our questions 😃👍
I'd like to know why you call It ”semi" hockey stop? What's the difference? Thanks so much!
Hi,
It’s not really a full hockey stop because a full hockey stop puts a lot more weight on the back leg. Here we‘re using pretty much just our front leg.
best technic tutor. i have try first drill and turn from him and it's work.
like they said. German always work🤣🤣
I’m glad it helped you!
Könntest du vielleicht bitte ein Video zum Rückwärtsfahren auf inlinern machen. Gerade für skaterhockey Anfänger?
Werde ich definitiv machen! Nur weiß ich nicht ob diesen Sommer oder nächste
Rückwärtsfahren auf Inlinern ist im Grund der gleiche als auf Schlittschuhe. Du kannst mittlerweile die Videos darauf von Marcel schauen.
@@michaeljuliano8839 schon, aber viele interessieren sich nicht fürs Schlittschuhlaufen, was ein Video auf Inliner sinnvoll macht
@@MarcelsHockeySchool German is my second language, and I may not have expressed my thought properly. I used “mittlerweile” to mean “in the meantime” to say until you’re able to make and release that video, if NZ wants to get a head start, he can have a look at those. Did I botch that? I didn’t mean to suggest an inline backwards skating video would have no value because they’re the same.
@@michaeljuliano8839 ah ok. No worries👍
Hey Marcel, excellent video! Im interested in your setup, are these marsblade holders and if, which ones? What kind of wheels do you use?
Thanks! Yeah they're the Marsblade R1s, but I've used the O1s before as well. They're both good but different. The R1 comes with 2x 80mm and 2x 76mm 74A hardness wheels. I'll switch to harder wheelsnext cuz I usually skate out on the street
In skating team the hockey stops actually know as a power stop speaking as a skater
Hey Marcel, will inline skating improve my ice skating? I’m pretty new to skating overall
Hi, yes it will!
Slaloming is a great way not to gain too much speed. My number 1 way to control speed on a hill.
Yes for sure 👍
Is there any thing to practice to make a hockey stop easier.
Not really. Just the actual movement itself
7:17 😂 😂 the scoff
Wow thats great❤
Thank you!
how do you do a frontflip on skates
For the T-stop, some tutorials I watched applies the pressure on the leading foot instead of the one dragging behind. Your technique applies it on the dragging foot, am I correct?
I'd say that although a fair amount of my body weight is over my front foot, I do need to be pushing down with as much force as possible with the back foot in order to stop quickly. So front foot is more body weight, while back foot is active pressure.
@chaios Can you please give a link to a tutorial that apply T-stop pressure on the front foot? Very interesting!
Marcel thank you for the tutorial. I watch a lot of stopping techniques from other channels, but you explained it the best.
This video helped me understand stopping concepts on rollerblades. Like you said, you don’t have to always put all your body weight into 1 full stop. You can stop other ways too. I think this is the most important concepts for beginners.
T stops is great for flat surface, but i think it’s too risky on long steep downhills.
Thank you again. I would not be the rollerblader I am today without this video. 😊 ❤
You're most welcome! Yeah I totally agree- for beginners just coming to a stop is the most important thing- it doesn't really matter how (as long as it's not a crash). And for people coming from ice skating, stopping on rollerblades is actually quite hard because it's one of the few skills where the technique is totally different compared to on ice.
beginner here ,😃helpful video
Glad I could help!
How do you like the R1 chassis? I went with the O1 because everyone raved about it in online reviews, but I couldn’t find much on the R1.
The R1 is very smooth. I had the O1 for four years before that. It’s also very good. If you want more rocking, go with the O1. The R1 rocks less.
Check out acid slid, t- stop to the Front, soul solide, magic slide.... As a Skater hockey Player the hockey stop on Sport court or concrete is easy for me. If you can do it on concrete you can do it on ice but not the other way around, lol
I will definitely check them out👍Those are something for a much more advanced tutorial.
Hy just follow your channel, i just got my new in line skate. Am a beginner.. I have crack my bones and fell many times... Is that part of the drills for a new skatters
No you need to be doing beginners drills. Stopping is advanced
How do like the R1 chassis? Are they too heavy at all? Or is not too noticeable? Thank you.
They are super light. In terms of the „whippyness“ of a Marsblade chassis though, I liked the O1 better. The R1 doesn’t rock as much
@@MarcelsHockeySchool that’s good they’re light, I was going to use them for competitive roller hockey so don’t need too much rocking. Thank you!
What is the best bearing and its name sir . Pls sir
Best will be the ABEC 9
Thanku sir
Thankyou 🧡
You’re welcome!
Great video!
thanks a lot!
Ty
you're welcome!
what hardness u using?
I think they were 82 in the video. Little harder would make stopping easier.
It doesn’t hurt the skates to drag em like that?
The wheels a bit. Not the skates.
It hurts the wheels, but you should rotate them periodically then replace them as needed.
Hi Coach, those skates need an E-Brake...
Haha yes!
Super Video ist echt schwer als Anfänger einen Hockey Stop zu können
Danke, Ja gar nicht so einfach!
Man check out Bill Stoppard! He is the master of ice hockey stop on all hard surfaces. (Also your country man Canada)
Basically get harder wheels above 85A and practice and practice and ....
Yes, Bill is amazing. Not a big fan of super hard wheels though- I play a lot of inline hockey and they just don’t have the grip.
@@MarcelsHockeySchool Exactly! He used to use Adapt 90A wheels and I was sliding all over the place with them. He toned down now to 88A but I still use 85A on Asphalt and 78A in hall. The stock wheels on all street roller hockeys are 82A but majority of the roller hockeys come with indoor 78A wheels and they stick too much to the asphalt and throw you over. Also you need to replace them more often.
Schade, dass es solche Videos noch nicht vor 20 jahren gab. Ich konnte / kann keine Inliner fahren und fand es früher voll peinlich.
Ja, vor 20 Jahre wusste ich nicht einmal dass es RUclips gibt 😃
nice video!
Curious about can we hockey stop in a rainy day on a wet road?
You indicated we cant shave the ground, but if it is smooth enough, maybe shaving becomes applicable?
Thanks! For me it’s easier on a wet road because you get more slide….but everything else is more difficult😃
I appreciate this, but when i say "beginner", i mean i dont haven't good balance trying the stops in this video
I have many beginners inline skating tutorials, just check out my inline skating playlist
cool
Thanks!
What happens if my skates 🛼 are too tight to my leg 🦵
Nothing, they should be fairly tight
Is this Video made in Germany ?
Yes it is!
Are you a native speaker? Your English is very good for a German.
I’m Canadian 😉
@@MarcelsHockeySchool Ah, OK, I see. :) It's pretty good for a Canadian too. ;)
@@zsombi77 😂😂😂
Hey guys. I was watching skate videos . Then made my own xD . Views tho . Why not
Sir pls help me sir pls
Wenn man den Hockey Stop mal drauf hat, ist er ne echte Waffe im Inline Hockey weil man damit vielen Spielern etwas voraus hat!
So ist das! Allerdings spielt Belag und rollen da auch eine große Rolle.
@@MarcelsHockeySchool Ist natürlich so! Ich spiele auf einem Indoor-Plastik-Belag mit 76A Rollen, was das Bremsen ungemein erleichtert.
Nicht nur wertvoll im Hockey, das ist der effektivste Stop im Urban Skating, ich brauche keinen Platz dafür, funktioniert ansatzlos.
@@jakehaubschueh1872 für draußen Under Cover in 88, passt. In der Halle die Labeda x- soft gripper, die quietschen so schön.
How to stop on inline skates, feat Bill stoppard
I swear my rubber stopper doesn’t stop
Jetz nochmal auf Deutsch 🤣
Untertitel einschalten 😉