Hold the stick low.Stand to the side with the puck blade length away from you, aligned with the center of both legs. Crouch. If on concrete, you might miss a few times, but hit a little higher so you get only the puck. On ice let the stick slide. Always follow through, swing until the stick points in front of you.
2006-12-09 12:39:24
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answer #1
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answered by sarkirk27 2
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Practice and watch players with great shots. Guys like, Al MacInnins, Brett Hull, etc, watch how they make contact with the ice first, then hit the puck, **** the force from your back foot to your front and finish like this, ( http://brady4heisman.com/images/bretthullretires1.jpg).
Aiming about a foot of the ice at the net makes it an easier shot for forwards to tip and help creat juicy rebounds too.
2006-12-08 18:10:31
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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lol well..heres the easy explanation : Make sure the pucl is at good hitting distance..hold ur stick back in the air as high as u can..bring it forward really fast moving the weight from your back leg to your front leg and BANG!!! follow through on ur shot too lol
2006-12-09 02:35:55
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answer #3
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answered by Ohkay 5
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Pracitice. and make shure you hit the ice only an inch or so away from the puck. on the follow threw aim at your target
2006-12-09 04:38:35
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answer #4
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answered by Joe32 2
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make sure your stick hits or slides on the ice before hitting the puck also shift your wieght too knee bent and shoulder widht apart and pactice make you good
2006-12-08 16:17:48
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answer #5
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answered by allstarshockey05 1
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lots to do with arm strenght and the stick but then practice lots.
2006-12-09 09:33:20
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answer #6
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answered by lcayote 5
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Practice, you'll find your sweet spot.
2006-12-09 10:04:16
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answer #7
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answered by Speed Of Thought 5
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buy a good stick
2006-12-09 04:08:02
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answer #8
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answered by xoxo 2
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