February 25, 2013

Swallowing a Little Pride

I was crushed.

I sat watching the video over and over. It was a scant 45 seconds of various saves made during my last I-League game (5-3 win) but I could barely believe what I was seeing. Over and over again I landed squarely on top of my pads with my feet stuck behind. Nothing even resembled the butterfly technique I have been working on for a few weeks.

Pads facing down at the ice and feet tucked nicely behind- the complete butterfly FAIL
I had come off the ice that night feeling really good about my progress towards the butterfly and in my mind I had executed it almost every time I dropped down. The reality was that I was still falling back to my old habits.

It was time to ask for some help.

I have been going out to our local rink's "Stick & Puck" each Sunday since my return to hockey and had noticed a young man working with a Pee Wee aged goalie. He was obviously working with a fresh recruit to the pipes and I was impressed with his teaching style and knowledge. I figured if he can teach a 10 year old kid the butterfly then he was a good choice to teach me.

At the appointed time last Sunday he and I began working on my butterfly and the various moves related to the style.


  • He helped me move my stick position into a slightly laid-back angle which allowed my blocker to move off my pad and to cover more net.
  • He helped me move my foot/knee/hip into the proper angles to lessen the strain on my knee and hip when recovering.
  • He showed me the proper way to execute the half butterfly (one pad down).
  • He got me started on the butter fly slide.


All of this work was done between frequent exhausted collapses onto the ice and a few ass-over-tea-kettle sprawls. The slides are really giving me problems. I think it's a combination of not having the flexibility needed along with my height and shaky balance.

After an hour with my new coach- whom I've dubbed THE PUNISHER, my legs were jello and my ego was deflated.

This is going to be a long road.

February 11, 2013

Learnin' to Fly Part 3

Learning can sometimes be a painful and humbling experience. Just ask me.

As I type this my knees are two lumps of hamburger and it hurts to wear pants of any kind. This is the result of some hard lessons learned over the past week in my transition to the butterfly technique.

How loose is too loose?


I have been operating under the mistaken impression that dropping down into the butterfly stance meant the pad was "rotating" around your leg as your knees made contact. After reading that many modern goalies strap their pads very loosely, I followed suit and basically had my new pads floating on my legs. This resulted in my knees completely missing the knee block of the pad and crashing directly onto the ice. After consulting with guru "Law Goalie" at ModSquadHockey, he corrected me on several issues.

Just to be clear, the idea that pads rotate is a confusion.  Watch any modern goalie demonstrating butterfly -- and almost any other -- save movements: the pads stay facing the puck at all times. What really happens is that the patella rotates 90 degrees behind the pad: from facing forward, through back of the pad, to facing down at the ice through the knee-block. 
 If your knees are missing the knee-block when you butterfly, it is probable that they are too loose *at the knee*.  The biggest mistake many people make in strapping pads is to tighten and loosen every strap proportionately.  The next time you're going on the ice, drop into the butterfly in the dressingroom and see if you can 'wiggle' your knee off the knee-block.  If you can, tighten those straps (Velcro elastic, leather, whatever) in various combinations until you can no longer 'fall off' the knee-block.

Armed with this knowledge and a new pair of Bauer goalie knee pads, I returned to the ice this past weekend and finally began to see some improvement in my technique.

Left: Old School drop down w/ Heatons    Right: Butterfly with newer Vaughns

I've also improved my stance by widening my skate position and loosening up my old back muscles and getting into a better (poopypants) crouch. I've still got miles and miles to go towards getting skilled in the butterfly but I can now report my first progress.

Left: Heaton pads too small, very little crouch   Right: Wider stance, better crouch



February 3, 2013

Learnin' to Fly Part 2

After waiting for USPS to get their sh*t together, I finally received my first set of "butterfly" style pads, snagged on Ebay for a good price.

vaughn velocity 7000
Vaughn Velocity 7000- front
I researched these pads and, though I cannot verify the age, I believe they're about 10 years old. If anyone has more information of the history of the 7000s in the "V" blood line, please let me know.

I immediately rushed out to a "drop-in hockey" session at my local rink- determined to begin my transition from "stand-up" to "butterfly"

It didn't go according to plan

I have been watching a lot of YouTube instructional videos leading up to this point but after getting on the ice and trying to execute some butterfly saves, I learned three things:

1. In my mind, my stance is widened out enough for a small bus to drive through. In reality, my stance is only slightly more open than my normal stand-up ready position. This is making it almost impossible to drop the pads into a position that is facing the shooter.

2. My mind simply isn't responding with an order for my body to drop down when a shot is headed towards me. I'm not talking about ear-whistlers, I mean blue-line shots at ice level. Instead of the butterfly, I continue to use the stick/pad kick drilled into me those many years ago. This brain malfunction really frustrates me.



Vaughn Velocity 7000- back
3. When I did force myself to drop to the ice, instead of landing on my knee stacks and turning the pad onto its side, I'm simply flopping the pads down flat with my skates behind me- perfectly exposing my knees and thighs to the incoming shot. This is hardly surprising since my stance isn't nearly wide enough for the top of the pads to drop down & line up.

Learning this new technique is going to take time and practice. Clearly the two biggest hurdles I'm facing are becoming confortable in what I now call "poopy-pants" stance and learning not to kick my skates behind me- instead "popping" my knees down and to the inside.

The week did end on a high note with my I-League team getting our first victory of the season in a decisive 6-2 score. I executed dozens of failed butterflys and it is a small miracle I didn't take a shot to my knees. In all honesty, I was sweating the 4 goal lead right through the last minute of the 3rd period.

Back to the rink this weekend to work on my "poopy-pants" stance!