Mechanics of the Perfect Shot in Inline Hockey: Follow Through and Effective Practice
You applied the visualisation and goal-reading techniques from part 1 and noticed a 15–20% improvement in training. But under match pressure, that accuracy disappears. The problem isn't mental — it's mechanical. Your technique isn't yet automated.
The 4 phases of the perfect follow-through
Follow-through is the continuation of the movement after the puck leaves your blade. Your brain plans the entire motion, not just up to the contact point. Stopping it early destroys accuracy.
The blade strikes the puck with the right tension. Think of squeezing a tube of toothpaste without it exploding — enough firmness to direct, enough flex for the snap.
Arms fully extended towards the target. If you aimed for the top right corner, the tip of your stick must end up pointing exactly there. This phase lasts a split second but makes the difference between a goal and a save.
90–100% of your weight on the front leg. The back leg barely touching the floor. Players with a 50-50 split produce shots that are weak and inaccurate by definition.
Hold the position: stick pointing at the target, weight forward, body balanced. This freeze is what records the correct motor pattern in your muscle memory. Without it, the training session is wasted.
This mental technique guarantees your blade keeps moving towards the target even after contact. Instead of aiming "at the goal", you aim through the goal.
Quality over quantity: the system that actually works
90% of players arrive at the rink, fire 50 pucks as hard as they can and leave. They improve nothing — they only reinforce bad habits 50 times over. There is a fundamental difference between practising and practising well.
Correct follow-through and deliberate practice are the two pillars that convert your training accuracy into match accuracy. Without automation, technique breaks down under pressure. With it, the shot becomes a reflex.
Get on the rink. But this time, shoot with purpose.
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