Why Has The Slap Shot Gone ‘Extinct’ in NHL Hockey?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2023
  • #nhl #hockey #torontomapleleafs
    The 'Slap Shot' is a dying art in NHL hockey. In this video, we break down why this is the case and how players like Connor Bedard, Auston Matthews, & others are evolving the game with their techniques.
    Thank you to our Sponsor Hockey Training:
    Check out Hockey Training here!
    Hockey Training RUclips: / hockeytraining
    Hockey Training Shop: shop.hockeytraining.com/
    Alex Ovechkin Erik Karlsson Connor McDavid
  • СпортСпорт

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @Childofbhaal
    @Childofbhaal 10 месяцев назад +1172

    I kind of miss the slap shots being more frequent. Nothing like seeing someone just absolutely laser a puck with perfect accuracy in the net. Watching the Hawks back when they won the cups they had very good defensemen who would throw slap shots from the points all day.

    • @SolidPain6624
      @SolidPain6624 10 месяцев назад +15

      Bobby hull was the ultimate example for the hawks

    • @johncassens1821
      @johncassens1821 10 месяцев назад +8

      Watch the video all the Devils goals 2022-2023 Watch Doug Hamilton Jasper Brat Zetterland, holtz etc. not just slapshots but the more difficult one timer slapshots ... I didn't count but its over 20 percent I believ

    • @TheRTD420
      @TheRTD420 10 месяцев назад +11

      As a Hawks fan I hate to admit this, but one of the best/most memorable slap shots for me was the one Stevie Y made in double OT against the Blues. He put an absolute laser high to the far side past John Casey from the blue line. Watch the replay at roughly the 3 45 minute mark of this video and you'll really appreciate what a snipe this shot was.
      ruclips.net/video/d8RdJrzNHHg/видео.html

    • @narsakucanada154
      @narsakucanada154 10 месяцев назад

      A few years ago I repented to God then begged for help, "I was until then an Atheist."
      I then had a dream of Jesus coming before God and he spoke of the Tabernacle in perfect context, "A word I didn't know existed.", and what I felt from Jesus when I held him was unlike anything I've ever felt before - A lifetime of Love every second - It brought me to sobbing and it changed my life, forever.
      I've had other experiences since, "Several witnessed", one was seeing a bright orb of light pass across my face in the dark, hours before a major surgery the second I gave up in my heart.
      Know that God and Jesus ARE real and that they Love us deeply. Let go of your hatred and Imagine yourself holding the people who've hurt you. Tell them you Love them.
      Always have hope, I believe that prayer, following God's laws & Love is the answer, and through that, Truly becoming humble, merciful, welcoming, giving, gentle, respectful and forgiving, To All.

    • @RomainFleuryWhatever
      @RomainFleuryWhatever 10 месяцев назад +2

      This is a bit sad because it is so silly and so cool to watch like it is a visible violent spectacle a clean slapshot 😅 but the newer drag-shot style is soo efficient and fast 😳

  • @pdog547
    @pdog547 10 месяцев назад +813

    We must mention Al MacInnis and Al Iafrate - two of the hardest shots in history (wooden sticks of course).

    • @franciscavallaro6356
      @franciscavallaro6356 10 месяцев назад +32

      Yup first two that came to my mind

    • @aqn1976
      @aqn1976 10 месяцев назад +12

      Funny I thought of this exact thing the other day and low & behold this vid lol... But oh yes, the two "AL's" will be in the Top 5 for sure!!!

    • @10.11.9
      @10.11.9 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@franciscavallaro6356 Mine too.

    • @10.11.9
      @10.11.9 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/VaDdTrNhsQc/видео.html

    • @ThePerpetualStudent
      @ThePerpetualStudent 10 месяцев назад +20

      Al MacInnis was my favorite.

  • @Josh-fg5if
    @Josh-fg5if 10 месяцев назад +291

    Gretzky had a great and tricky slap shot. He constantly changed the timing of his shot, which made it unpredictable and basically unstoppable.

    • @johnlawson523
      @johnlawson523 9 месяцев назад +32

      He'd also hover with space & time with a high windup, then sort of bring the stick down 30 degrees then hesitate again, then either deliver a slap pass or launch a bomb (his slapper had underrated velocity). In the 2-3 seconds he'd have glided 30-40 degrees of angle on the net that the goalie would be struggling to shuffle fast enough to keep up with him and still watch the pass option, so when he let a hard shot go they'd really struggle with it

    • @nobrainsnoheadache2434
      @nobrainsnoheadache2434 9 месяцев назад +8

      Mike Vernon is still looking for one shot . . .

    • @jmadratz
      @jmadratz 9 месяцев назад +7

      Gretzky didn’t have a great slap shot, he just used it a lot because he had an even worse wrist shot.

    • @zeroceiling
      @zeroceiling 8 месяцев назад +15

      @@jmadratz why do you say that?…have you actually seen him play?…or is it the grainy old video footage from the 80’s and 90’s?

    • @metalzonemt-2
      @metalzonemt-2 8 месяцев назад +39

      @@jmadratz Right...Imagine how many goals he could've scored if he was any good.

  • @user-sl3hn2ho8f
    @user-sl3hn2ho8f 10 месяцев назад +67

    Bobby Hull and Guy Lafleur were the best at scoring with the slapshot, combining power and accuracy.

  • @mattblom3990
    @mattblom3990 10 месяцев назад +409

    As a Canucks fan, I remember when Daniel Sedin suddenly developed a slap shot over an off-season and it was pretty lethal.

    • @CurriedBat
      @CurriedBat 10 месяцев назад +5

      Hopefully Boeser can do the same

    • @lukestone365
      @lukestone365 9 месяцев назад +9

      April 26th 1994,
      One of the best slap shots I remember, Game 6 against Calgary in Overtime, Geoff Courtnall coming in all alone against Trevor Kidd & just buried it! Great squad, Great memories, Go Canucks Go!!

    • @ninenine2438
      @ninenine2438 9 месяцев назад +14

      From 2010-2012 the Sedins really peaked. It was beautiful to watch. I don't think we'll ever see twins lead a sports team with such insane chemistry like that in sports ever again. Such a rare thing.

    • @coryryder9070
      @coryryder9070 9 месяцев назад

      micheal ryder my cuzin bruins that year :P dont hate me

    • @lukestone365
      @lukestone365 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@coryryder9070 Mad love for Boston! Only time I was there people were great, terrific scenery, especially the Cheers bar, Norm Peterson was my favourite on the show! Yep! Let's definitely skip any Bruins talk though!!

  • @romaliop
    @romaliop 10 месяцев назад +361

    The function of the slap is to bend the stick against the ice. With the old wooden sticks you simply had to do that to get the stick to flex, because they were so stiff. With modern sticks you don't need as much power to bend the stick so you can just do a snap shot instead.

    • @CalgaryDynastar
      @CalgaryDynastar 10 месяцев назад +4

      Ever heard of Shea Weber?

    • @007Hutchings
      @007Hutchings 10 месяцев назад +58

      No. I’m sure every hockey fan has never heard of Shea Weber.

    • @saschaganser9671
      @saschaganser9671 10 месяцев назад +19

      Very true, with modern sticks there`s so much power ins snap, wrist and 2 point shots, that you simply don`t need to wind it up that much anymore.

    • @johncassens1821
      @johncassens1821 10 месяцев назад +12

      The purpose of the Slap shot is to get your whole body into the shot arms shoulders chest core legs of course the stick will bend. Yes the stick will bend with a wrist or snap but you don't get all those muscle groups full strength together mainly arms and one leg for the snap / wrist

    • @1rtt1
      @1rtt1 10 месяцев назад +19

      Yeah that may be the result of a slap shot but it isn't the function. Especially during the wooden stick era's. Those sticks didn't flex much at all. Those shots were pure power shots done by the shooter not the stick. A proper slapshot will have more velocity and speed then any snap or wrister ever will regardless of the stick.

  • @GuinnessMichael
    @GuinnessMichael 10 месяцев назад +30

    That Kariya goal was iconic. Would’ve loved to have seen Stevie Ys clapper against the blues on here too

  • @HockeyTownHooligan5
    @HockeyTownHooligan5 10 месяцев назад +55

    Brett Hull was the Ben Hogan of slap shots. If you want to learn how to use proper form for a clapper, watch Brett Hull. I’d say Ovi is the top just because of how many goals he’s scored off a slapper. Nick Lidstrom had a very effective slap shot. Daniel Alfredsson, Stamkos, Yzerman, Mathew Schneider, all had awesome shots.

    • @Seriously_Unserious
      @Seriously_Unserious 9 месяцев назад +7

      All the ones you mention were great, but the King of Slapshots has to still be Al MacInnis. No one was as fast, hard or accurate as Al when it came to blasting it from the point. Heck, that guy's slapper was deadly enough he could score them from centre ice and still have it be one the goalie had little chance on. Who else in NHL history can claim that?

    • @JonLeejw
      @JonLeejw 7 месяцев назад +1

      Al Iafrate has entered the chat.

    • @thenationalparksguy.1718
      @thenationalparksguy.1718 6 месяцев назад

      wrong. His Dad Bobby, better yet, his uncle Dennis Hull. Both played for the Blackhawks. Look it up. Brett would agree.

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah his shot was legendary.....and he used a wooden stick. I remember reading an article about him in like 1989. At that point of season he had put like five guys on to the injured list because they got hit by his slap shot. Most of them were opponents but there were a few of his own guys I guess who are standing in front of the net trying to screen the goalie. That's pretty brave. I also remember back in the day playing hockey video games and he had an absolute blast even on those. Him and Ray bourque.

  • @DrBdan8
    @DrBdan8 10 месяцев назад +237

    I'd be interested in seeing stats on the average Slapshot speed vs wrist shot speed over the last 20-30 years. I wouldn't be surprised that with improved technique and stick technology the speed of wrist shots has gotten closer to slapshots

    • @seethe313
      @seethe313 9 месяцев назад +30

      That's an excellent point. I remember watching Joe Sakic's wrist shot in the 90s and early 2000s and how quickly he released it with accuracy and mustard on it. It seems like guys now all have that skill and the better sticks just amplify that.
      I also think goaltenders are too good if they commit to the shot. Without the element of potentially passing, they get aggressive and cut off the angles quickly. Plus, these goaltenders today seem to be much bigger guys.

    • @longlifetometal1995
      @longlifetometal1995 9 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@seethe313Goalies have grown bigger statistically, it's not only an impression.

    • @bltsammich9760
      @bltsammich9760 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@seethe313 the average height of goalies is around 6'2", with the shortest at 5'11", and the tallest at 6'6"

    • @poika22
      @poika22 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@longlifetometal1995 But goalie gear has become a lot less bulky to compensate.

    • @extragoogleaccount6061
      @extragoogleaccount6061 7 месяцев назад +4

      And perhaps the Bendy sticks that help increase the speed of a wrist shot or not as good for using on slapshots. So perhaps the wrist shot speed has gone up in the slapshot speed has gone down

  • @TheOriginalTuhat
    @TheOriginalTuhat 10 месяцев назад +101

    I’ll never forget Colton Parayko’s slapshot that hit Ben Bishop like a 12-gauge

    • @ThePerpetualStudent
      @ThePerpetualStudent 10 месяцев назад +5

      Yeah!! And the following goal. Love your logo

    • @TheOriginalTuhat
      @TheOriginalTuhat 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@ThePerpetualStudent RIP the fellas

    • @trinawhitener7753
      @trinawhitener7753 10 месяцев назад +3

      That was so lovely to see!! I wish Parayko would practice that and use it more often. More often than not he misses the net by a county.
      At least he made it count that night.

    • @TheOriginalTuhat
      @TheOriginalTuhat 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@trinawhitener7753 these days I’d like to see parayko do literally anything besides timid stick handling, avoiding all physical contact, and turning over the puck

    • @trinawhitener7753
      @trinawhitener7753 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@TheOriginalTuhat FUCK YES!!! THANK YOU!! He’s the softest big guy in the league. Or throw the puck over the glass for a delay of game penalty.
      I hate to say he’s become my least favorite player on the Blues because he’s so soft and just not that great defensively. Frequently a minus. I think he only got that ridiculous deal for sentimental reasons.

  • @HairyButWhole
    @HairyButWhole 10 месяцев назад +75

    Ovi is the modern era slapshot king, but I loved Weber's blueline slappers and Pasta has a beautiful onetimer too.

    • @CommieCat
      @CommieCat 7 месяцев назад +6

      Ova is still lethal at an age where even most Ironman retire. It is truly an art.

    • @Petersson69
      @Petersson69 6 месяцев назад +2

      Chara

    • @fajastata2
      @fajastata2 18 дней назад

      He'a also a supporter of a mass murderer.

  • @TheHoneyBadgerDUDE
    @TheHoneyBadgerDUDE 7 месяцев назад +11

    Paul Kariya's slapper vs the Devils was insane, especially considering he didn't even remember the game due to suffering the concussion right before.

  • @reaganharder1480
    @reaganharder1480 10 месяцев назад +197

    What I find interesting in this whole "slapshots are extinct" talk is that in that chart showing the decline of the slapshot, the reduction from 2012 to 2020 is only about 30%. That is definitely a statistically significant change, but far from extinct. All your points about why the viable use case has reduced were spot on though.
    I think an underrated element of slap shots is using that huge telegraph of "i'm going to shoot" to your advantage with a slap pass. I've seen it done to great effect, where a defenseman winds up for the big shot and then hammers the puck onto the stick of a teammate waiting 2 feet off the side of the net for an easy tip-in goal. Any time there is an expectation, there is also an opportunity to subvert that expectation, and that may be one of my favorite things in sports, seeing players deliberately use expectations to their advantage.

    • @dronlaa
      @dronlaa 10 месяцев назад +5

      Kuch makes slap passes perfectly

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 10 месяцев назад +4

      @@dronlaa there's a few players that do it well and do it often and I love to see it.

    • @janzy1980
      @janzy1980 10 месяцев назад +14

      100% agree, but surely you know that what is truly going extinct are RUclips videos without clickbait titles. ;)

    • @hockeypsychology
      @hockeypsychology  10 месяцев назад +9

      Great point. I scoured the Internet trying to find slapshot statistics specifically over the last 3 years also but couldn’t find any hard data like I did from 2012-2020. If anyone does have them, I’d love to see it. The inclination is to believe that decrease has continued but I don’t know for certain. Either way, I thought it was interesting to dive into why elite players in the game often opt for a snap/wrist… and so, that led us to this video lol

    • @a_coleman11
      @a_coleman11 9 месяцев назад

      I LOVE the slap pass especially on the PP. use the "im going to shoot" to your advantage. but I think again with how fast the game is and how quickly guys are getting challenged on the rush, blue line, etc., im sure they've been taught to get the shots off quick. plus stick technology allowing a good wrist shot to be almost as fast as a clapper with better accuracy too.

  • @robnotwicz7002
    @robnotwicz7002 10 месяцев назад +26

    The increasing rarity of the slapshot seems to have added a demoralizing factor to scoring with it. The way goalies slump down after getting beat clean with pure power is different than for other shots.

  • @icedo1013
    @icedo1013 10 месяцев назад +7

    One of my favorite moments of a hockey game as a kid was when bedlam broke out down in the slot and the puck jittered free slowly toward the blue line; those were the moments I was hoping some ambitious D-man would come out from off-screen to lay every ounce of weight in his body into the puck.

  • @teamground0229
    @teamground0229 7 месяцев назад +6

    Watching Blackhawks hockey in the 70's as a kid, the defenseman slapshot was big stuff.

  • @the1andonly759
    @the1andonly759 10 месяцев назад +93

    This breakdown was top notch dude. Ovi is #1 for me but Chara could literally kill a man

    • @hockeypsychology
      @hockeypsychology  10 месяцев назад +1

      ❤️

    • @Kariakas
      @Kariakas 10 месяцев назад +6

      Macinnis is up there also, he had a brutal shot with his old wood stick.

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 10 месяцев назад +2

      I seem to recall at least one instance where Chara almost did kill a man with a shot...

    • @dmun8508
      @dmun8508 10 месяцев назад +14

      Can’t forget about shea weber guys were scared to block his slap shot from the point

    • @10.11.9
      @10.11.9 10 месяцев назад

      @@Kariakas ruclips.net/video/VaDdTrNhsQc/видео.html

  • @sanaon7453
    @sanaon7453 10 месяцев назад +45

    When I think of an NHL player taking a slapshot, I think of former Canuck Sami Salo.

    • @Tacquito
      @Tacquito 10 месяцев назад +4

      The Finnish MacInnis!

    • @esperago
      @esperago 10 месяцев назад +2

      Speaking of Canucks, Elias Pettersson is one of the best new school kids with a snapshot. He's got a great bomb off the rush.

    • @WasteYuteeee
      @WasteYuteeee 10 месяцев назад

      balls of steel!

  • @illjhero
    @illjhero 4 месяца назад +4

    Ridley Greig sends his regards.

  • @tkyntola
    @tkyntola 10 месяцев назад +12

    Best slapshot of all time... I probably would like to say someone else for their shear power or for whatever other niche quality, but not saying Ovi here would just not be honest. He is so persistent and effective from the circle that it's just bonkers. Every goalie _knows_ exactly what's coming, yet a blistering fast pass from Carlson, Oshie or Bäckström and Ovi just keeps hammering them in, year after year.
    You're free say what you want, but I can't get past that.

    • @kashmoney2752
      @kashmoney2752 9 месяцев назад +4

      The goalie gets a piece of them a lot of the time too. His shot is remarkable because its so powerful, that combined with the curve on his stick, just creates this knuckling puck that goalies have a hard time reading in the air due the unique and unpredictable trajectory at the speed its traveling. So even the pucks the goalies get a piece of, it often trickles past them. I really don't know if we are ever going to see a player like Ovi again.

    • @bangyahead1
      @bangyahead1 5 месяцев назад

      Youre talking about a guy who just ended a 17 game goalless streak lol

  • @phhdvm
    @phhdvm 10 месяцев назад +7

    I remember Bobby Hull and maskless goalies. He said he’d send one in, around face high, early in the game just to get in the goalie’s head

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah and the next one he'd leave right on the ice

  • @BigBalls17465
    @BigBalls17465 9 месяцев назад

    This is an awesomely edited video and great and easy to understand. You my good man, deserve a sub.

  • @achannell362
    @achannell362 5 месяцев назад +1

    You mentioned stick technology...I'm an '84 birthdate, and I remember all of our coaches played with stiff sticks and shafts and preached the slap shot, so that's what we did too. Sticks with more flex just weren't popular back in the late 90s and 00s, regardless of how much you weighed. One day, we received some pro return Brett Hull Z-Bubble shafts at the hockey store I worked at. These things were probably the equivalent of a 65 flex. Guys flocked to buy them, only to break them on the first use. That was when I realized Hull was one of the first guys to let the stick do the work for him, and now you see that everywhere in the show, especially with guys like McDavid and Bedard. Modern sticks provide the flex and kick point to fire the puck now, so there is no need for a big clapper to get the puck going like there used to be with mega-stiff wood, aluminum, and composite shafts.

  • @alexpayne1364
    @alexpayne1364 10 месяцев назад +12

    ahh the good ole days when walking into a slapshot from the point was the meta play

  • @mrdeeds72
    @mrdeeds72 10 месяцев назад +69

    Al MacInnis has the best and most feared slapshot of all time.

    • @bluesbrother2383
      @bluesbrother2383 10 месяцев назад +4

      Looking at him you'd never suspect he had a bullet like he did

    • @joeshmow1583
      @joeshmow1583 10 месяцев назад

      Definitely wasn't the most feared that was shae Webbers and it had to do with the height. His shot was consistently just above the toes to just over the top of the skates where you have minimal padding. He was not allowed to use it in drills where there was a teammate between him and the net. Now if we are talking feared by goalies then ya the Al's take the cake no doubt about it. Wish they could have tried today's sticks they would no joke injure goalies on a regular basis.

    • @10.11.9
      @10.11.9 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@joeshmow1583 Al MacInnis once clapped one through Jocelyn Thibault's glove, breaking his ring finger in the process.

    • @joeshmow1583
      @joeshmow1583 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@10.11.9 Shae Webber literally blew a hole in the net in the Olympics. They went back to video review after iggy swore it went in. I would not have wanted to block either guys shot lol

    • @10.11.9
      @10.11.9 10 месяцев назад

      @@joeshmow1583 Ditto. Big Shea was just so damn strong. Tough way to end a great career.

  • @mrpibbyo
    @mrpibbyo 10 месяцев назад +15

    As a Habs fan, I already miss Weber's slapshot. This was deadly good!!

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah so many NHL guys have really hard slapshots especially the real big strong dudes like Weber. Didn't Sheldon Souray have a pretty hard slap shot too? Sorry if I misspelled their names

    • @DatCheeseCake
      @DatCheeseCake 5 месяцев назад

      As a hockey fan in general, I loved seeing byfuglien, weber, and ovi rip some solid slappers

  • @james.w
    @james.w 10 месяцев назад +7

    Brett Hull made me want to learn how to take a slap shot when I was playing hockey as a kid. Guy had a rifle of a shot.

    • @MartinAtanasu
      @MartinAtanasu 4 месяца назад +1

      Best one-timer of all time

  • @BlueFlash25
    @BlueFlash25 10 месяцев назад +25

    Chara, holder of the hardest-hitting slapshot.

    • @newfie1613
      @newfie1613 10 месяцев назад +3

      Martin Frk would like a word

    • @Gantzz321
      @Gantzz321 10 месяцев назад +3

      Al MacInnis laughs in your face with a wooden stick

    • @Desecrator6
      @Desecrator6 9 месяцев назад

      But only one is almost 7ft tall BIG Z

  • @jacobfilicetti5805
    @jacobfilicetti5805 10 месяцев назад +56

    I think one of the best slap shots was Shea Weber's. Dude had the HARDEST shot in the world

    • @Filip-xu5vb
      @Filip-xu5vb 10 месяцев назад +5

      what about zdeno chara

    • @WillTBDud
      @WillTBDud 10 месяцев назад +4

      Cap... It's Martin Frk but Weber is likely more consistent

    • @jacobfilicetti5805
      @jacobfilicetti5805 10 месяцев назад

      @@Filip-xu5vb True

    • @jacobfilicetti5805
      @jacobfilicetti5805 10 месяцев назад

      @@WillTBDud I said ONE OF, not THE best

    • @michaellamontagne6626
      @michaellamontagne6626 10 месяцев назад +2

      Souray fear a lot of player at his prime on power play with Markov

  • @AlexeyBeganov
    @AlexeyBeganov Месяц назад

    this is giving me massive Thinking Basketball vibes. I was looking for a channel like that for hockey, so glad I found you

  • @lynchmob72
    @lynchmob72 10 месяцев назад +5

    I have loved watching Stammer's one timers through the years, but Ovi is probably king of the Slapper.

  • @esteads2.010
    @esteads2.010 10 месяцев назад +13

    Al Macinnis, still the best clapper

  • @marc-antoinemarcoux697
    @marc-antoinemarcoux697 10 месяцев назад +4

    Love your channel ! Alwayhs goes deep in game analysis instead of focusing exclusively on players stats! That's what makes it special.

    • @amelielamothe467
      @amelielamothe467 10 месяцев назад +2

      I also appreciate the non-clickbait-y titles!

  • @mangrove
    @mangrove 9 месяцев назад +1

    I was sitting a few rows behind the glass in Florida when Brett Hull wound up a ripped a one timer over Luongo's shoulder in OT, 2003. That was a sight to behold.

  • @mrdcato
    @mrdcato 9 месяцев назад

    You do a great job explaining all of your videos. Very Nice!

  • @Quakes4R
    @Quakes4R 10 месяцев назад +7

    Hardest slap shot of all time - Dennis Hull. Best slap shot of all time - Bobby Hull.

    • @markkramer487
      @markkramer487 9 месяцев назад

      Hands down correct. I lived down the street from bobby hull when he played for the Hawks.

  • @Dahkeus3
    @Dahkeus3 10 месяцев назад +5

    I imagine the speed and power of wrist/snap shots has increased substantially as well, making them a higher value per time spent shooting than they used to be.

  • @user-vc7ps6tk8i
    @user-vc7ps6tk8i 10 месяцев назад

    Great video! You always bring up topics that I noticed but never really thought about. Speed and spacing is the biggest difference now for lack of slappers. Plus, when you miss, you generally lose possession.

    • @bangyahead1
      @bangyahead1 10 месяцев назад

      When you hit the goalie you also create rebounds and since slap shots bounce further, the goalie has less chance of recovering it, possibly allowing the shooter or his teammates to jump on the rebound..

  • @kevinmorrice
    @kevinmorrice 4 месяца назад +1

    that first one was not only an awesome slap shot, but considering that earlier the same game he was knocked out with a jaw shot and concust, people there didnt expect him to continue playing the match or even the season, but he came out and did that

  • @anonymous134y
    @anonymous134y 10 месяцев назад +9

    ovi has the best slapshot of all time and it's not even close.
    Every goalie and player know it's coming from the exact position but somehow the Rocket Richard Trophy, should be called the OVI, is always won by Ovi due to his lethal slapper.

    • @darylmorrison6598
      @darylmorrison6598 10 месяцев назад +3

      Ovi's shot for sure is lethal, but I'd define his as more of a one-timer, rather than a traditional slap shot. A slap shot is when you have possession of the puck already, wind up, and let it go. Ovi's shot gets fed to him, he never has actual possession of it before he winds up.

    • @wormsonline9507
      @wormsonline9507 10 месяцев назад

      they should make a new award called the ovi that's awarded to the player with the most disregard to others safety

    • @darylmorrison6598
      @darylmorrison6598 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@wormsonline9507 Ovi shoots hard and hits hard!

    • @trinawhitener7753
      @trinawhitener7753 10 месяцев назад +1

      Has Ovechkin ever sent a puck through a glove, broken a finger and scored a goal with a slap shot? No?
      That would be Al MacInnis. The true king of the slap shot. Ovechkin has nothing on him as far as slappers are concerned.

    • @darylmorrison6598
      @darylmorrison6598 10 месяцев назад

      @@trinawhitener7753 And MacInnis used a wood stick! Imagine his shot if he had a composite ….

  • @Lazarus294
    @Lazarus294 10 месяцев назад +10

    MacInnis, Iafrate or Ovechkin. Depends on the era and what kind (slap vs 1T), PP or on the rush?
    I’m a sucker for an on the rush slapper but Ovy is staring at Gretzky’s record with that usual, predictable 1T that teams have a hard time defending against for a multitude of years.
    It’s only a matter of time till we recognize that not only there’s a Gretzky’s office but there’s also an Ovy’s office that deserves that level of respect

    • @morrisalanisette9067
      @morrisalanisette9067 7 месяцев назад

      people forget though that ovi only started doing that half way thru his career. he was originally known for being a guy to skate down the whole ice and find some way to score through sheer force of will. but then teams learned how to play against that and he had two down years and struggled before discovering this new way which people all know him as doing. he wasn't really known for his slap shot in the early days

    • @benkeating3053
      @benkeating3053 4 месяца назад

      Fear the skullet!

  • @NWAWskeptic
    @NWAWskeptic 2 дня назад

    As a non hockey fan, the slick ninja like “wrist” shots look savagely lightning fast and to me is more satisfying to watch. They go from just pushing the pick along to rifling the puck at the goal in the blink of an eye. That has to take crazy skills.

  • @jena3566
    @jena3566 9 месяцев назад +2

    Honestly if modern hockey just means its more expensive while missing parts of the game that have been there since the beginning, then I don't think we need it. I've recently watched games from 10-20 years ago, so 2013-2003 and I can honestly say it's just a better version of hockey without a doubt

  • @bettingpicksandparlays8087
    @bettingpicksandparlays8087 10 месяцев назад +10

    Bobby Hull ( Black Hawks ) and Bill Goldsworthy ( MN. N. Stars ) Very Hard Shots. I Really enjoy your outlook on the game it's refreshing and with your allotted time straight to the point, Really Good Channel keep up the Great work.

    • @dourmoose
      @dourmoose 9 месяцев назад +1

      Not many of us still around that remember Goldsworthy 👍🏼😎

    • @stevenkirby4471
      @stevenkirby4471 9 месяцев назад

      @@dourmoose Bobby Hull or Goldsworthy are the obvious picks for me, too. One of my most cherished memories from my youth is Dan Kelly calling "a cannonading drive by Goldsworthy" on a CBS Sunday afternoon broadcast. If I see or hear the word slapshot, though, the first thought that pops into my head is "Bobby Hull".

  • @WilliamTheDestroyer.
    @WilliamTheDestroyer. 10 месяцев назад +16

    Awesome break down! Ovi is all time best, hands down. Brett Hull had the best slap shot prior to Ovi. Iggy was amazing considering his era and adding to the fact that his first 525 goals happened without a single future Hall of Famer on his team.

    • @d2c341
      @d2c341 10 месяцев назад

      Al MacInnis was the OG

    • @bradr539
      @bradr539 9 месяцев назад

      Brett Hull doesn't need a power play unlike Ovi to score...

    • @WilliamTheDestroyer.
      @WilliamTheDestroyer. 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@bradr539 Hull is 3rd over all with PPGs. Only 45 less than Ovi.

    • @davidreynolds6718
      @davidreynolds6718 9 месяцев назад +7

      @@bradr539 All-time even strength goals: Alex Ovechkin - 518 and counting. Brett Hull - 456.

    • @ClydeFrog13
      @ClydeFrog13 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@davidreynolds6718 And that gap widens even further when you consider era adjusted statistics.

  • @JackArctic
    @JackArctic 10 месяцев назад +4

    Buddy I love your videos, keep it up!

  • @bocogaming
    @bocogaming Месяц назад

    Very cool video breaking this down!

  • @KingQuate
    @KingQuate 10 месяцев назад +1

    i love seeing them, ekholm had a really nice one for his first as an oiler this season

  • @Khorney
    @Khorney 10 месяцев назад +13

    Gretzky actually talked about this as far as back as in the 80's. He mentioned having a quick release being more important than pure power slapshots, because what good is power when it takes an eternity to load up?

    • @kashmoney2752
      @kashmoney2752 9 месяцев назад +1

      Well unless you're Ovi apparently... Gretzy was such a smart player smh. GOAT of any player in the history of any sports league ever, no doubt.

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      I totally agree with that statement. As hard of a slap shot as I had, I hardly ever scored goals on it because once you wind up the goalie comes out, cuts down the angle and people try to stand in front of it or get a stick in the lane. When I used to play goalie, which wasn't very often it was just a fill in but I would always come out and cut down the angle whenever I saw somebody winding up

    • @WhatALovelyDisaster
      @WhatALovelyDisaster 4 месяца назад

      As someone just getting into hockey, could you explain the method you’re talking about re: coming out (of the crease maybe ???) cut down the angle(putting yourself where the puck is likely to go?) @@tommywallbanger

  • @grangerjung4129
    @grangerjung4129 10 месяцев назад +5

    Was Orr the only player to use the half-slapper effectively? I remember seeing him wind up for a slap shot, wait for the defender to flinch, move by him and only bring his stick back parallel to the ice, then let 'er rip, often into the net.

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      That's one Bobby or story I've never heard. I was born in 73 so he was a little bit before my time. I heard a lot of great stories about him, but never that he had that snapshot. Mostly hear about his skating

  • @Fallahh
    @Fallahh 10 месяцев назад +2

    When I was younger I went to go see a Lightning game in person and during warm ups Vinny Lecavalier ripped a slap shot that ricocheted off the glass and left an earth rumbling feel throughout the arena.

  • @ajconstantine3593
    @ajconstantine3593 8 месяцев назад

    I ain’t watched shinny since ‘99. No clue how this got in my feed. *BUT* … what a TALENTED writer/speaker this kid is, and I’m no cheap date! Great work, buddy! 👏👏🤘

  • @johnnewell4849
    @johnnewell4849 10 месяцев назад +5

    The slapshot took over in the early 60s with Boom-Boom Geffrion, Bobby Hull and Frank Mahovalich leading the way with the most booming shots using solid sticks, no flex. You had to connect squarely with the puck. Jamming your stick into the ice and hoping it wouldn't break didn't work. The most amazing slapshot ever taken was by Maple Leaf's Frank Mahovalich. Against Boston in the mid-60s, crossing the blue line facing goalie Eddie Johnston. Frank a tall guy, wound up as only Frank could, and let fly. Eddie knew what was coming, had time to get set and he caught the puck easily. But the shot was so hard, it knocked him on his ass and into the net. This was before there were face-masks. All slapshots were fearsome.
    It took real courage in those days to face a slapshot. no one knew whether the goalie would live if he stopped the puck with his face. They did too. when they did, there they'd be, out cold on the ice. they'd be hauled off the ice on a gurney. Everyone waited to hear whether he made it. Then we'd be told he was okay. Minutes later, he'd skate back out and keep playing like nothing happened.
    Johnny Bower was the most famous for that, but all NHL goalies in that era went through it. That aspect of life threatening danger made those slapshots an order of magnitude more exciting than any since masks came into play. By the end of Bower's career, his face looked like a road map from all the stitches.

  • @justinkrietemeyer8420
    @justinkrietemeyer8420 10 месяцев назад

    Awesome video buddy! Very well done!

  • @cameronsnyder1246
    @cameronsnyder1246 6 месяцев назад

    I know next to nothing about Hockey but that was fascinating, very informative, abd obviously well researched. 😊

  • @billkammermeier
    @billkammermeier 10 месяцев назад +612

    Best of all-time is obviously Ovechkin.

    • @WJV542
      @WJV542 10 месяцев назад +98

      Nah it’s Happy Gilmore

    • @Bird_playzYT
      @Bird_playzYT 10 месяцев назад +14

      At the slapshot only

    • @hockeypsychology
      @hockeypsychology  10 месяцев назад +22

      Best at blocking shots

    • @Kcman1827
      @Kcman1827 10 месяцев назад +11

      Thank you, go caps

    • @billboggs6641
      @billboggs6641 10 месяцев назад +18

      Bobby Hull

  • @pdog547
    @pdog547 10 месяцев назад +14

    Best all time with one-timers?
    Brett Hull, Ilya Kovalchuk, Steven Stamkos. Just lethal.

  • @bobbys5580
    @bobbys5580 Месяц назад

    St. Louisan here. I loved Hull's one-timers or his low slappers from right wing on a rush, but I remember cringing in fear almost every time I saw MacInnis load one up from in close. Frightening. Beating Osgood from center ice with an absolute laser is something I'll never forget. And his overall point totals say something as well. Lots of knuckleheads had big slapshots but weren't terribly productive.

  • @misterknightowlandco
    @misterknightowlandco 9 месяцев назад +1

    I remember watching the all star game as a kid and during the skills competition they’d have a slap shot contest. Watching iafrate and macinnis hit shots over 100mph was a hoot back in the day. I used to look forward to it.

  • @SirPotato72
    @SirPotato72 10 месяцев назад +5

    With goalies better than ever today (with bigger pads as well) , I think accuracy and quick release are much more important than power. Also, on average there is not really a ton of additional velocity provided by a slap shot vs a wrist shot IMO, at least with modern sticks.

    • @pena380
      @pena380 9 дней назад

      False the pads are smaller now they were biggest before 2017-18 rule changes. The game is made more open for scoring which especially helps good players.

  • @Based_D
    @Based_D 10 месяцев назад +6

    I've been tell my youth players for at least two or 3 years now to quit trying to take clappers for all the reasons that you laid out. I also learned that every tenth of a second you can get the shot off can be like adding 5-7 mph on that snap or wrister. I've spent a lot of time researching this and been
    coaching hockey for the past 8 years and as a full time job for the last 5. Good video, thanks

    • @johnlawson523
      @johnlawson523 9 месяцев назад +2

      I think that's a shortsighted "win now, develop later" mindset

    • @jena3566
      @jena3566 9 месяцев назад +4

      This type of maximization of perfection is killing hockey. Its a shame that many youth coaches seek to remove all individuality and personality from young players

  • @bigyt813
    @bigyt813 10 месяцев назад

    The last one i remember seeing is Malkin on a penalty shot or shootout. Can't remember but that was a thing of beauty

  • @patriciablank597
    @patriciablank597 День назад

    Thank you! I learned a lot here. The slap shot is not gone but rather overcome by the game's evolution. This happens with all sports so I'm OK with that. I'm old so I just love to see the game slow down momentarily just long enough to witness this almost-lost art. Can hockey have moments of nostalgia? I think so.

  • @YT-qj8nn
    @YT-qj8nn 10 месяцев назад +6

    I wish you had included video of "The Greatest Slap Shot (that didn't count)" - Patrick Kane's OT "Winner" against the Vegas Knights (Feb. 21, 2023) :
    ruclips.net/video/Cj594MlKltI/видео.html
    It's because of shots like Kaner's that fans love the game.

  • @benoitrobitaille5235
    @benoitrobitaille5235 10 месяцев назад +7

    Marc-André Bergeron
    Despite a small size he could make shots rivaling some of the greats 103-105/mph if i recall correctly, it was very impressive to see, sadly that small size if compared to other defenseman, or power forwards he had to deal with, visibly limited his abilities defensively which limited his ice time, so he became a 3rd pairing/7th defenseman power play specialists.
    Still 82 goals in 490 games with limited ice time is nothing to sneeze at.

    • @manitobamatt1554
      @manitobamatt1554 9 месяцев назад

      He could throw some pretty nasty hip checks too. Another lost art.

    • @MoonAtomic7
      @MoonAtomic7 9 месяцев назад

      I remember trading for him in NHL video games back then and liking him a lot

  • @googlestore4830
    @googlestore4830 3 месяца назад

    I absolutely adored Brett Hull's slapshot. Once I think he even injured an opposing goalie's hand with it.
    Then there is Chara's iconic slapshot shootout move. The guy had a monstrous release.
    And let's not forget Peter Bondra's Patented Power Play Point Blast - a worthy harbinger of Ovi's.

  • @pliskenmovie
    @pliskenmovie 10 месяцев назад +1

    Biggest bomb from the point? Shea Weber. It used to terrify me watching my team play the Preds when Weber was winding up a clapper...he could legitimately hurt people.

  • @themanhands5599
    @themanhands5599 10 месяцев назад +8

    I love the "time and space" hockeyism. That's all. That's my comment.

    • @hockeypsychology
      @hockeypsychology  10 месяцев назад +3

      We do seem to use that a lot.... eh? lol

    • @caseykalinowski1159
      @caseykalinowski1159 10 месяцев назад

      To be fair, I've heard this my whole sports career in lacrosse and basketball as well.

  • @mr_funkyface4811
    @mr_funkyface4811 10 месяцев назад +8

    good video

  • @FrankF.Y
    @FrankF.Y 10 месяцев назад

    the name of your channel do not deceive. another great in depth analysis!

  • @beefchief31
    @beefchief31 10 месяцев назад

    Great video man!

  • @jlalonde1000
    @jlalonde1000 10 месяцев назад +8

    The STICKS a flexible stick not so good a slapshot a hard stick won't bend for snapshot chara used a 130-150 and it still would bend where some guys use 70

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 10 месяцев назад +4

      The flex of the stick is actually a significant factor in getting good power in a slapshot. The flex of the stick allows it to load up like a spring and then release that stored energy, flinging the puck faster than the player is able to swing the stick. To maximise that power you do need to match the stiffness of your stick with how much force you're going to be putting into your shot of course, so guys using a 70 flex are gonna have a harder time firing big clappers, but they chose that flex because it suits their playstyle, they didn't adapt their playstyle to suit their stick. I would wager the flexiness of composite sticks are what allow smaller and lighter guys like Elias Petterson can match shot velocity with much bigger and stronger players.

    • @dzh1239
      @dzh1239 10 месяцев назад +1

      I believe Ovechkin uses a stiffer stick on powerplays for this purpose. I'm sure a lot of powerplay triggermen do this

  • @94champs
    @94champs 10 месяцев назад +6

    So ironic that the first goal you showed was Kariya scoring after he was knocked out by Stevens, and then asking "Do you remember?" because Kariya HIMSELF doesn't even remember that goal. He blacked out for days after the hit! I believe he also said he doesn't even remember Game 7!

  • @clyde6401
    @clyde6401 10 месяцев назад +1

    As a casual hockey fan, watching the caps set up ovi for a slapshot off the power play is always exciting!

  • @kevinkirklen
    @kevinkirklen 7 месяцев назад

    It’ll never get better than the late 90’s stars feeding Brett Hull clappers. Check out the Hullenimum. I was there - I remember the play where he snapped two sticks and kept getting back in the play and buried the third attempt. Legend.

  • @darkazon5343
    @darkazon5343 10 месяцев назад +4

    Zdeno Chara had a bomb of slapahot

  • @jasonfullerton7763
    @jasonfullerton7763 10 месяцев назад +3

    Yzerman's G7 OT slap shot to end the 96 series against the Blues might be one of the most lethal slappers I've ever witnessed.

    • @bobbys5580
      @bobbys5580 Месяц назад

      Ouch from STL. It was an absolute bomb.

  • @LoganReads
    @LoganReads 10 месяцев назад

    I have felt like is was missing something watching hockey the last few seasons. I think the slap shots, particularly from the blue line, are it. Thanks for pointing it out.

  • @anthonygreenwood286
    @anthonygreenwood286 10 месяцев назад +2

    Gosh so many amazing rifleman over my 40 years of watching the game! My personal favorite has been big John Leclair, especially during his Philly years. That massive back swing and his strength and accuracy was legendary and just so fun to watch!! 226lbs entering the left zone and full stride and just cranking it +100mph was always exciting! Honorable mention to Al M, Freddy Modin and about 50 others!

    • @seethe313
      @seethe313 9 месяцев назад

      Good example with LeClair! Also good example was when he faced Lidstrom and Murphy in the Finals with how it can be neutralized. They would get sticks out and poke the puck away quickly when they'd wind up.

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      Man, I'm a flyers fan and totally forgot about John LeClair's slapshot but he didn't use a slap shot much. He was usually in front of the net (with defenseman that couldn't move him cross-checking him in the back) or cycling down deep. But yeah he really had a Canon. Didn't use it much. I used to play, I forget what video game. It was back in the day and even he had a cannon on that thing. Probably NHL '99. There's a lot of guys like that that have a really hard slap shot but don't use it much, especially the guys that are grinders and do all the hard work in front of the net like John leclair. But I mean as big and strong as he was, he should have a hard slap shot. That guy was an ox

  • @severed111
    @severed111 10 месяцев назад +3

    For d-men....Sheldon Souray when he could play was devastating, look at the video of that season where he scored 26 with Montreal or 23 with Edmonton. From when I was younger....Brett Hull's and Al MacInnis' were the most impossible to see slapshots that also happened to be hella accurate....and lastly, as Nords fan, Owen Nolan's was BRUTAL.

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      I just made a comment about Sheldon Souray. Somebody brought up Shea Weber and immediately thought about Sheldon. I loved Owen Nolan. I only saw the end of his career but I don't really remember him having that awesome slap shot but I was young.

    • @severed111
      @severed111 5 месяцев назад

      @@tommywallbanger Cool! Look at old goals of his in the Nordiques/Sharks and you'll see what I mean.

  • @masonhooker9387
    @masonhooker9387 10 месяцев назад +3

    I I has the best of all time, but Thompson is the best today

  • @Seriously_Unserious
    @Seriously_Unserious 9 месяцев назад +2

    When talking about the most feared slapshot of all time, it has to be Al MacInnis. He could unload his epic cannon from the point with wrist shot accuracy and even do it with a quick 1 timer. Even as the NHL entered The Dead Puck Era in the mid to late 90s, he could still get those bombs through and goalies still had a hard time stopping them clean, leaving a lot of clean Al MacInnis point shot goals and juicy rebounds for those slot crashers to bang in there.

    • @gameburn178
      @gameburn178 8 месяцев назад

      Imagine him with one of these new synthetic sticks... lol
      MacInnis also had a really long stick... which is good for defending but it might make it trickier for shooting.

  • @marblox9300
    @marblox9300 6 месяцев назад +1

    The blazing slap shot is more fun to watch even if it is stopped but todays players are just on a different caliber than years ago. I played goal in the 1970s and the entire game today is faster and much more precise. Even the goaltending today is so much more advanced. These guys today are so good at finding the 4 corners of the net - it is amazing.

  • @ajbianchi85
    @ajbianchi85 3 месяца назад

    Always loved Chara’s devastating slapper but Ovi is just unreal. Those Gretzky goals are so funny with the goalie like 10 ft out of the net, Roy was such a game changer with the butterfly.

  • @ericepperson8409
    @ericepperson8409 8 месяцев назад +1

    I grew up in St. Louis when the Blues had Al McGinnis and Chris Pronger on their D Lines. How they never managed to win a Stanley Cup with those teams in the 90's is the single greatest mystery of my life.

  • @steamer1112
    @steamer1112 10 месяцев назад +2

    I watched Stan Smyl's whole career from his arrival to the New Westminster Bruins as a 15 year old to his retirement from the Canucks. Stan had a massive slap shot for a not very big man. I recall many, many times seeing him cross the blue-line and blast a shot past a goalie.

    • @zeroceiling
      @zeroceiling 8 месяцев назад +1

      Only to be outdone in that department by Wendel Clark from the Leafs. ..just as an aside…my brother played with Stan for 5-6 years…way back when..

  • @stephentraskos3130
    @stephentraskos3130 9 месяцев назад +1

    As a Caps fan... I can't help but enjoy the "This applies to everyone not named Alex Ovechkin"

  • @XaviRonaldo0
    @XaviRonaldo0 10 месяцев назад +2

    It's not just the speed of the game it's also stick technology making wrist/snap shots almost as powerful as slap shots and combine that with the fact they're far more accurate it makes them a better tool.

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      I never tried one of those new carbon shafts. I always use wood. Even though aluminum and carbon fiber were available. I always liked wood. Maybe I was too cheap to spend the money on the more expensive shafts, but I wonder if the new carbon shaft since they've been so much aren't as accurate when you're taking a slap shot. I don't know this. I'm just thinking that might be the reason. I remember some face-offs that guy's lost because they're stick broke. Years ago. That was another talking point that maybe guy should have a different stick on key face offs, but that's a whole different conversation

  • @StevenJohnson737
    @StevenJohnson737 7 месяцев назад

    You have to consider stick tech in this. Back in the “slap shot era” most guys were using sticks with flex between 100-110. Today it’s rare to see a guy use a stick with more than 85 flex. I believe Bedard uses a stick with flex in the 70s which is insane because 10 years ago that’s the flex a young kid would use. Also now that kick point is a newer option for players many are choosing low kick sticks over mid kick sticks. Both flex and kick point have their positives and drawbacks. Low flex is easier to preload having a more “whippy” effect for snap shots and wrist shots however it dampens the energy put into a slap shot. Low kick sticks allow a faster release but also takes a hit with slap shots. More guys are making a conscious choice to have a stick for snap shots at the expense of their slap shots sense they understand how much more they use snap shots over slap shots. Also with this stick tech the gap in speed between a snap shot and slap shot has closed dramatically. I was at the hawks/panthers game the other night. Bedard’s snap shot registered 89mph according to the Jumbotron, that’s on par with a lot of players slap shots. So when you can add deception in a release that is 10x quicker also change the angle with a TDR (toe drag release) scoring chance is significantly higher with a snap shot

  • @davidmills5286
    @davidmills5286 10 месяцев назад +1

    mackinnon is also good on the left wing for the "ovie" one timer set up.
    Ovi has the best clapper though, the stats dont lie.
    i wish they would implement a one timer competition in the all star events would be interesting to see speeds and accuracy. Its just a staple in todays game.

  • @bdubblemalone
    @bdubblemalone 10 месяцев назад +1

    A slept on slap shot is Tomas Vanek, legendary shootout slappers

  • @saschaganser9671
    @saschaganser9671 10 месяцев назад +2

    New composite sticks with the low kick points let you get so much power in the (snap)shot, that you don`t need to tee it up to the horizon anymore. You can get so much energy in that it`s almost a slapshot, while the quick release makes it way harder for the goalie to read.
    You can still see the slap shots but mostly one timers during PP.

    • @seethe313
      @seethe313 9 месяцев назад

      Do you think the new sticks might also be inclined to give less control over the slapshot? Like, maybe because they allow you to get so much power on a wrist or snapshot, perhaps it gets too out of control when you do the full windup?

    • @bumpin0
      @bumpin0 9 месяцев назад

      It's not less control. It is just almost no difference in power unless if your a defensemen with a high flex stick. Hard to justify using a slapshot when you can have a quicker release wrist/snap shot with the same power. @@seethe313

    • @tommywallbanger
      @tommywallbanger 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah I'm wondering the same thing. I've never used one of the new carbon shaft sticks. I mean when I played I used a wooden one piece stick. Maybe because I'm cheap and didn't want to spend the money on the carbon fiber or even back in the day aluminum shaft. My whole stick cost less than one of those replacement blades for either aluminum or carbon fiber. But I was wondering if the new shafts give less accuracy on the slapshot? I used to always bring like three sticks with me in case I broke one and this one guy was like man. You must have a million of those things at your house I was like. Yeah I do. I always like the Jagr model. I had a pretty hard slap shot and I just wondered if using the other sticks would give you more pop on your shot. I did try a carbon fiber once but I went with the real stiff one because I didn't want to break it and that thing had no flex whatsoever. It had less flex than the wooden stick. My carbon fiber stick days were just a phase

  • @nevarmaor
    @nevarmaor 4 дня назад

    Gotta remember too the slap shot did not exist for the first half century or more of the game. It came into being in the fifties with Boom Boom Geoffrion, reached mainstream in the sixties with Bobby Hull, and peaked with Ovechkin in the 2000's.
    Still there was nothing like the sight of Hull or Lafleur streaming down the wing and letting one fly from the top of the circle.

  • @ericmurphy447
    @ericmurphy447 10 месяцев назад

    One of the best slapshots of recent memory (at least for me) was Ilya Lybushkin vs Tampa in OT. Keep in mind this was short-handed and Booshers 4th ever goal to beat a team that dominated him every year

  • @-BUGZ-
    @-BUGZ- 6 месяцев назад +1

    Yee, Yzerman in 2OT about 1:30am in the playoffs hit a nice one from center ice and won the game (might have been a series winner but I can’t remember) I remember it was so quiet and he was just putting it on net and when everyone heard the clink of the bottom back pipe, it was CRAZY.

    • @-BUGZ-
      @-BUGZ- 6 месяцев назад

      Or basically any of Lidstroms slapshots from the blue line, redirections were beautiful to see back then, or using the defense as a screen. But you’re right, the game has changed so much over the years I feel like im getting too old to pay attention sometimes and im only 33.

    • @-BUGZ-
      @-BUGZ- 6 месяцев назад

      That hybrid is called a snapshot, homie lol it’s been around forever and after wrist shots, it was my 2nd go to.

  • @dstcoyote22rants
    @dstcoyote22rants 10 месяцев назад

    As a fan who was at the 2003 game 6 SCF, that slap shot by Paul Kariya had the loudest pop I ever heard at the Honda Center... even louder then when the Ducks won the Cup 4 years later.

    • @mattowens861
      @mattowens861 9 месяцев назад +1

      Honestly- that season was peak for me. It was such a Cinderella story, JSG being a brick wall in the net- I don’t care that they didn’t win- it was such a great run. And while I was happy they did win a few years later, I still feel 03 was a “better run”

  • @BahamutBreaker
    @BahamutBreaker 7 месяцев назад

    Great video; excellent analysis. There’s still opportunity for back-scratching slapshots in the NHL, but a lot of skaters (even All-Star caliber players) just aren’t accurate enough with the slapper. As mentioned in the video, precision has become more important than power. Deflections and rebounds are how a lot of goals are scored in today’s NHL. A big slapper might “put a dent in the end boards”, but as cool as that sounds, it’s a missed shot. If a wrister is instead on-target, there’s a decent chance for a stick-tip or a rebound, either of which is way more dangerous than a dent in the boards.

  • @matt-xe5km
    @matt-xe5km 6 месяцев назад

    I didnt watch the vid so idk if he mentions this but i was a professional hockey player (goalie) the reason why the slapshot isnt around anymore is a couple things:
    it just isnt that much faster of a shot anymore people can get hella fast wristers and snappers now
    its way less accurate
    but the biggest reason is the sound, goalies react to a slapper by going into butterfly when the stick hits the ice, when screening the goalie (the most important aspect of hockey scoring today as it is very very rare to score if the goalie has full vision) if a person shoots a clapper you can hear it hence the nickname clapper and a goalie can react by the sound if you wrist it thru the screen the goalie has to fight thru the screen to get vision on the puck.

  • @nicholasroberts3230
    @nicholasroberts3230 10 месяцев назад

    Claude Giroux breakaway slap shots come to find when I think of using slaps shots to score. Most recent being last season vs San Jose

  • @greyfox7468
    @greyfox7468 Месяц назад

    Ovi is undoubtedly the best slap shooter to ever play the game. He's hilariously renown for taking shots from the same exact spots all the time, his "office". Defending teams and goalies know where he is going to be, they know what he is going to do, and they just CANNOT stop it.