If you are new to inline hockey and you are getting skates to use on outdoor surfaces then make sure you get harder outdoor wheels! I have been spending more time on inline skates than on the ice for the last 4 years and this is a very good breakdown of how to stop while playing inline hockey. The skates used in this video are high end roller hockey skates that come with soft indoor surface wheels making it even harder to stop outdoors on asphalt but Sean is so good he has nailed the technique. A harder density wheel is better for outdoor use and will make stopping like this easier on asphalt.
I’m ordering my first pair of in-line hockey skates for outdoor use for exercise and I’ve only ever skated on ice and with hockey skates. Skated for years and got really good / comfortable on ice. I’m looking at ordering a pair of Bauer skates but could you answer a question I’ve been having and can’t find anyone to explain it? I see there are “off ice” chassis made by marsblade.. my question is : if I’m new to roller skating and only ever ice skated, should I order the off ice chassis to go with my Bauer skates or just use the standard chassis that comes with them? It says the off ice will feel more similar to ice so that makes me think it might be the best option. Any advice is super appreciated!
@@GiDD504 congrats! Start with the skates as they come. Marsblades are very specific training tools for those wanting to get better for ice hockey. They are intentionally unstable. You may want that eventually but to start out on inline skates you want stability. So wait for marsblades until you feel comfortable. There are many similarities between inline and ice but there are also so many differences to get used to. Good luck!
@@2wheels1guy25 Hey, outdoor wheels usually start around 80A hardness. Some guys use 78A but you can also go up to 85A depending on your weight, the temperature outside and the roughness of the surface they are playing on. Usually, indoor wheels are in the low 70A range.
Excellent tutorial! I’ve always said the most important thing is to absolutely commit to the maneuver! If you don’t, you’re“ going over” and mentally, it gets tougher to execute.
Здравствуйте, знаете ли вы, что клипы, загруженные на Youth, являются лишь проблеском полных тренировочных видео для участников на iTrainHockey.com? Зарегистрируйтесь с бесплатным 7-дневным трейлом.
Wheel hardness is critical to your surface too! Good video, stoping on asphalt is way different than the ice. I can’t believe u are doing it w those soft wheels though 😮
I used to skate for years with hockey skates on ice and got really good. Now I am ordering some Bauer street hockey skates and I’m nervous about the stopping part. Gonna reference this video a bunch so I wanted to say thank you for making it! I’m 28 and don’t want to break anything while I’m trying to just get some exercise lol. Thankful I’ve got good health insurance :P
I used to play inline roller Hockey for England under 18s - great tutorial but once you’ve mastered this technique, you can stop faster with both feet parallel at the same angle - also faster to generate speed again with out having your legs split apart.
Played ice my whole life and a great skater, playing inline now first time ever and cant find the comfort to stop. It feels so weird and frustrating that I cant do what Im used to. This is video has great insight, thanks!
Pro tip. Start by dragging the stopping foot behind you and swing out front almost as a straight leg but at a steep angle relative to ground, with weight mostly on the stabilizing foot. Not starting with the behind drag is otherwise very touch and go.
I dig your vid’s something about your style is very easy to pick up. I’m a righty and I noticed that you’re a lefty. I can do a hockey stop on my Mission blades to the left but I can’t really do it on the right. Lol. I’m always afraid to scrap up my blades. I have the inhaler WM03’s and they are all white and I don’t want to mess them up. I have old Mission Proto VS’s that are 20+yo and I can do hockey stops on those easily too the left but never really good doing it from the right. Weird thing is I’m a righty but I can only do it to the left. Any advice would be much appreciated. I am a defenseman so I can skate better backwards than I can forwards. I can do cross overs on both the left and the right skating backwards but it’s awkward to do it to the right but it’s natural for me to do crossovers to the left. Lol.
The way he turns around at 0:46 to 0:48 with back leg further out, whats the name of that technique of turning if you wanma learn to do it? Can anyone answer please?
The sharp turn when u turn right. He is leading with his right foot and leaning it to the outside. His left foot is behind and is being leaned to the inside. It’s very easy to try it on ice first in my opinion.
So after switching to ice hockey 7 years ago, after 18 years of inline hockey, I still can't get this out of my system and fail to do a proper hockey stop (I can only do inside/outside edge left skate properly). Even with all the videos, coaching and everything, it still doesn't stick. Do you have any tips? I keep using that c cut, absolute muscle memory, really hard to get rid of...
This was an old comment so maybe you've gotten it down by now, but I figured I'd give my 2c, in case it helps! One thing you want to do when stopping on ice skates is really push down into the ice. One thing that might help to learn is doing a bit of a jump into the stop, and really focus on the motion of driving the skate down into the ice. No need to even jump all the way off the ice, just get that jumping motion, then *drive* the skate blade into the ice. Make sure you turn about 90° from the direction you're moving as you stop. It's a sharp turn and push down, not a cut like inline skates. And, as stated at the start of this video, you want to put your weight over the front skate
Hey Sean, how do they feel comparing to previous vapor models (inline or ice). I tend to Supremes mostly as Vapors were always too tight to me, esp. in the heel. I'm planning to buy me new roller skates and it seems that they redesigned this a lot and it terms of feel as well. So any info is appreciated as we don't have them in stock to try them at first place before ordering.
Those are expensive soft wheels, which will be fast, but they will be torn to pieces on tarmac. Incidentally, I was on ice for the first time for five months last week, my crossovers were better, but my edge control was appalling. I couldn’t even skate on an arc on one leg, a very basic simple drill. How long does it take to regain ice skills?
It'll come back if you skate enough on ice. I had the same issue...got very used to rollerblading during the pandemic and picked up habits that made my ice skating worse. After a bunch of sessions on ice I was back to normal and I make sure to go back and forth as much as possible so switching doesn't feel weird. I've started to like roller hockey and blading as much as ice hockey and skating...
@@nortexoid Thanks, you were right! It took me three sessions to get back my ice skills, although backwards crossovers had improved thanks to inlines. It took me many hours to get back my inline skills during the next lockdown. Hi ho.
Try Bauer's website that's where I bought mine. www.bauer.com/en-US/street-roller-hockey/roller-skates/roller-skates-bauer/bauer-rh-vapor-2x-pro-skate-senior-683745.html
Hello. Quick question, I just received my Bauer RS senior Hi-lo (yellow wheels). I do freestyle ice hockey, but with these bauer rs, I can’t seem to do a hockey stop (parallel glide). Are the wheels that came with this skates can possibly do the Parallel glide at least? Given that the skates are just a day old? (Can it slide after a few wears?) Or do i need a special wheels to power glide? (I really can’t afford at the moment) so I’m trying to check the possibilities. Cheers!
Killed me to watch these skates used outdoor!! If you buy these to play outdoor, expect to replace in less that a year... for $1200 bucks I would never use those skates outdoor
Can I ask you a question? Are those calves real, or are they implants? Okay... keep it to yourself. But if you tell me they're real, I ain't buyin' it.
If you are new to inline hockey and you are getting skates to use on outdoor surfaces then make sure you get harder outdoor wheels! I have been spending more time on inline skates than on the ice for the last 4 years and this is a very good breakdown of how to stop while playing inline hockey. The skates used in this video are high end roller hockey skates that come with soft indoor surface wheels making it even harder to stop outdoors on asphalt but Sean is so good he has nailed the technique. A harder density wheel is better for outdoor use and will make stopping like this easier on asphalt.
Those wheels will be chewed to pieces on tarmac. And they are expensive ones too.
I’m ordering my first pair of in-line hockey skates for outdoor use for exercise and I’ve only ever skated on ice and with hockey skates. Skated for years and got really good / comfortable on ice. I’m looking at ordering a pair of Bauer skates but could you answer a question I’ve been having and can’t find anyone to explain it?
I see there are “off ice” chassis made by marsblade.. my question is : if I’m new to roller skating and only ever ice skated, should I order the off ice chassis to go with my Bauer skates or just use the standard chassis that comes with them? It says the off ice will feel more similar to ice so that makes me think it might be the best option. Any advice is super appreciated!
@@GiDD504 congrats! Start with the skates as they come. Marsblades are very specific training tools for those wanting to get better for ice hockey. They are intentionally unstable. You may want that eventually but to start out on inline skates you want stability. So wait for marsblades until you feel comfortable. There are many similarities between inline and ice but there are also so many differences to get used to. Good luck!
What density wheels would you recommend for outside skating?
@@2wheels1guy25 Hey, outdoor wheels usually start around 80A hardness. Some guys use 78A but you can also go up to 85A depending on your weight, the temperature outside and the roughness of the surface they are playing on. Usually, indoor wheels are in the low 70A range.
One positive in all of this is a whole new generation is learning about inline, while older ones rediscover it.
It's a soft wheel...... Oh, my heart hurts. ㅠㅡㅠ
R.I.P wheels😭
Excellent tutorial! I’ve always said the most important thing is to absolutely commit to the maneuver!
If you don’t, you’re“ going over” and mentally, it gets tougher to execute.
Show more roller skating exercises! Thanks🙂
Здравствуйте, знаете ли вы, что клипы, загруженные на Youth, являются лишь проблеском полных тренировочных видео для участников на iTrainHockey.com? Зарегистрируйтесь с бесплатным 7-дневным трейлом.
Wheel hardness is critical to your surface too! Good video, stoping on asphalt is way different than the ice.
I can’t believe u are doing it w those soft wheels though 😮
I used to skate for years with hockey skates on ice and got really good. Now I am ordering some Bauer street hockey skates and I’m nervous about the stopping part. Gonna reference this video a bunch so I wanted to say thank you for making it! I’m 28 and don’t want to break anything while I’m trying to just get some exercise lol. Thankful I’ve got good health insurance :P
@@okinnivlek imo stopping is part of the fun so it wouldnt hurt to make it a priority to learn
I used to play inline roller
Hockey for England under 18s - great tutorial but once you’ve mastered this technique, you can stop faster with both feet parallel at the same angle - also faster to generate speed again with out having your legs split apart.
I've been doing it wrong this whole time thank you for the video help a lot!
This is the most succinct explanation of how to stop on inline skates I've ever seen. Great job!
Can you do a tutorial on how to do cross over backwards motion
Thanks for this! Wheels are terrifying, but this is incredibly succinct and helpful.
Played ice my whole life and a great skater, playing inline now first time ever and cant find the comfort to stop. It feels so weird and frustrating that I cant do what Im used to. This is video has great insight, thanks!
Search power stop and power slide, the latter is shown here. You’ll pick it up in minutes. Or find someone to demo it.
Its CrossFit, in the end it'll make you a better ice skater.
Great, concise explanation. More inline videos please.
i can tell hes a great coach very detailed !
Awesome! Great relevant info for all those trying to switch over during the shut down.
LET'S GO SPRING SEASON
thank you!
You are welcome.
Beautiful. Thank you.❤
Great lesson!!! 👍
This was very helpful thx
awesome , in facts to me it was like finding a secret. thanks a lot.
He’s ripping up the tarmac now :)
Im guessing this would wear the wheels more depending on road conditions. But thanks for the tip.
thanks, i might break my leg, but thanks. ill try it.
I just busted my ass trying this 🤣.....🥴.... picked up my first ever skates yesterday rsx....
What skates are you wearing
Pro tip. Start by dragging the stopping foot behind you and swing out front almost as a straight leg but at a steep angle relative to ground, with weight mostly on the stabilizing foot. Not starting with the behind drag is otherwise very touch and go.
I dig your vid’s something about your style is very easy to pick up. I’m a righty and I noticed that you’re a lefty. I can do a hockey stop on my Mission blades to the left but I can’t really do it on the right. Lol. I’m always afraid to scrap up my blades. I have the inhaler WM03’s and they are all white and I don’t want to mess them up. I have old Mission Proto VS’s that are 20+yo and I can do hockey stops on those easily too the left but never really good doing it from the right. Weird thing is I’m a righty but I can only do it to the left. Any advice would be much appreciated. I am a defenseman so I can skate better backwards than I can forwards. I can do cross overs on both the left and the right skating backwards but it’s awkward to do it to the right but it’s natural for me to do crossovers to the left. Lol.
Could you answer my question please: what skates are you wearing in the video
Hey Justin, these are Bauer Vapor 2X Pro inline skates
@@itrainhockey thank you
Can i use hockey skates for urban skating?
You can! IMO if you are already playing with them, you won't regret, just use the proper wheels, 82a or 85a maybe
Hi What a hardness for the wheels? 76A or 82A? Okey in asphalt works perhaps both of...but indoor inline rink...which A do you prefer?
nice skates XD
What’s the hardness of the wheels you are using?
76A
Bauer H3 old school my favorite skates
The way he turns around at 0:46 to 0:48 with back leg further out, whats the name of that technique of turning if you wanma learn to do it? Can anyone answer please?
The sharp turn when u turn right. He is leading with his right foot and leaning it to the outside. His left foot is behind and is being leaned to the inside. It’s very easy to try it on ice first in my opinion.
So after switching to ice hockey 7 years ago, after 18 years of inline hockey, I still can't get this out of my system and fail to do a proper hockey stop (I can only do inside/outside edge left skate properly). Even with all the videos, coaching and everything, it still doesn't stick. Do you have any tips? I keep using that c cut, absolute muscle memory, really hard to get rid of...
This was an old comment so maybe you've gotten it down by now, but I figured I'd give my 2c, in case it helps!
One thing you want to do when stopping on ice skates is really push down into the ice. One thing that might help to learn is doing a bit of a jump into the stop, and really focus on the motion of driving the skate down into the ice. No need to even jump all the way off the ice, just get that jumping motion, then *drive* the skate blade into the ice.
Make sure you turn about 90° from the direction you're moving as you stop. It's a sharp turn and push down, not a cut like inline skates. And, as stated at the start of this video, you want to put your weight over the front skate
Do you have any spots for this bauer vapor 2x pro inline plz
Is it better when my wheels are harder?
yes try 88 A Wheels, thats pure Fun Outdoor www.der-rollenshop.de/Powerslide-Inlineskate-Rolle-Spinner-76mm-4er-Pack they are great
What types of wheels do u have
hi sean
not the wheeeelllsss😭😭
I know how take break because iam a national player
So cool. Can you show us how to do a hockey stop on the in-line skates?
tigerwoods418 tougher on concrete, but it’s pretty easy on a roller hockey floor
Well when you have quads and calves like diamonds - it’s easy
Hey Sean, how do they feel comparing to previous vapor models (inline or ice). I tend to Supremes mostly as Vapors were always too tight to me, esp. in the heel. I'm planning to buy me new roller skates and it seems that they redesigned this a lot and it terms of feel as well. So any info is appreciated as we don't have them in stock to try them at first place before ordering.
I made a review about it! Link: ruclips.net/video/spp3AVXLHwU/видео.html
@@itrainhockey Great! Thx a lot for the video!
хороший урок, круто!
Spasibo!
Those are expensive soft wheels, which will be fast, but they will be torn to pieces on tarmac. Incidentally, I was on ice for the first time for five months last week, my crossovers were better, but my edge control was appalling. I couldn’t even skate on an arc on one leg, a very basic simple drill. How long does it take to regain ice skills?
It'll come back if you skate enough on ice. I had the same issue...got very used to rollerblading during the pandemic and picked up habits that made my ice skating worse. After a bunch of sessions on ice I was back to normal and I make sure to go back and forth as much as possible so switching doesn't feel weird. I've started to like roller hockey and blading as much as ice hockey and skating...
@@nortexoid Thanks, you were right! It took me three sessions to get back my ice skills, although backwards crossovers had improved thanks to inlines. It took me many hours to get back my inline skills during the next lockdown. Hi ho.
Where can I buy these skates during COVID? I am in Toronto?
Try Bauer's website that's where I bought mine.
www.bauer.com/en-US/street-roller-hockey/roller-skates/roller-skates-bauer/bauer-rh-vapor-2x-pro-skate-senior-683745.html
how to destory a high end pair of inline wheels in 1.2 minutes
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It hurts to watch those beautiful skates and Labeda Addiction wheels being used outside.
what kind of wheels are those?
Expensive wheels not meant for the asphalt!!
They are labeda addiction wheels
Hello. Quick question, I just received my Bauer RS senior Hi-lo (yellow wheels). I do freestyle ice hockey, but with these bauer rs, I can’t seem to do a hockey stop (parallel glide).
Are the wheels that came with this skates can possibly do the Parallel glide at least? Given that the skates are just a day old? (Can it slide after a few wears?)
Or do i need a special wheels to power glide? (I really can’t afford at the moment) so I’m trying to check the possibilities. Cheers!
Killed me to watch these skates used outdoor!! If you buy these to play outdoor, expect to replace in less that a year... for $1200 bucks I would never use those skates outdoor
2x pro inline skates on concrete😭😭
Класс!!!!!!
Вы не можете тормозить на роликах как в обычных коньках на льду - чувак из ITH : "Подержи моё пиво".😀
If that was only that simple...
Go onto a court, the poor wheels
NOOOO not the labeda addictions on asphalt 😫😫 my wallet would be crying
Will you teach the hockey stop on inline?
You didn't buy those skates, did you? How does one become a brand evangelist?🤔🤔
why the soft wheels, dude if you're gonna hockey stop on the road then atleast use hard wheels like dude im 13 and even i know that
Can I ask you a question? Are those calves real, or are they implants? Okay... keep it to yourself. But if you tell me they're real, I ain't buyin' it.
Hahaha all #real
Dommage les roues étaient toutes neuves 😱