Carrier-19 Admin, Simulateur et Fondateur
Nombre de messages : 4740 Age : 29 Localisation : Kingsey Falls Équipe : Washington Capitals Intouchable : Personne, même pas Ovy si bonne offre Date d'inscription : 02/08/2008
| Sujet: Lines tactics Jeu 19 Mar - 19:25 | |
| Run & Gun This style is all about challenging the opponent with fast skating and shooting the puck a lot. To use this tactic effectively, players need to have good skating and shooting skills. While the run & gun is all about scoring goals, your own end will have less protection as your defensemen will support the attack.
SKATING / SHOOTING / DEF SUPPORT
Passing plays In passing plays, the idea is to move the puck a lot and try to pass your way to the goal scoring sector. A playmaking center between two offensive minded wingers is a good combination to produce goals with this tactic. High ratings in playmaking and positioning are needful.
PLAYMAKING CENTER / TWO WAY OFFENSIVE WINGERS / PLAYMAKING / POSITIONING
Dump & Chase When the opponent is closing down the neutral zone and your forwards can’t get through with the puck, it’s better to dump in the puck and then chase it to the corners. You’ll need players who are quite fast and can take the punishment in the corners to get the puck. While this tactic won’t leave your own end unprotected, it can be very productive if you have the right combination of size and speed.
SPEED / SIZE
Hit & Grind Bring in the muscle. This is a tactic to be used with players who are high on hitting and strength. Whenever your players go out and make good bodychecks, it’s very likely that you can then take control of the loose puck. This creates turnovers in the neutral zone and can result in scoring opportunities altough the tactic is more of a defensive minded.
HITTING / STRENGTH / BODYCHECKS
Neutral zone trap When everything else fails and you have players who don’t have finesse skills, it’s time to apply the trap. Blocking the opponents in the neutral zone by defending intensively with all 5 players can keep the score low even tough you don’t match the opponent in overall skill.
INTENSE DEFENSE (ALL THE WAY DEFENSE)
For special teams, there are different tactics
PP – Shooting With this tactic, your players will try to shoot whenever possible even without proper traffic in front of the net. You’ll have lots of shots but you’ll need top snipers to score.
SHOOTING
PP - Screen & shoot It’s easier to score goals if there is traffic in front of the net and the goalie can’t see the puck when fired. This tactics needs some muscle as the area in front of the net is protected by the defensemen in violent ways.
MUSCLE / SHOOT
PP - Passing plays If they have good hands and can move the puck around, why not let them do it. By moving the puck a lot, you can tear apart the defense and create better scoring chances. The goalie will have more difficulties stopping shots that come from onetimers after cross-ice passes.
PLAYMAKING / STICK HANDLING / POSITIONING
PP - Crash the net Once again, muscle is needed. Get the puck to a power forward and let him force his way towards the net. With some luck, he will knock some defensemen with him and you can score dirty goals with all the traffic blocking the goalie.
MUSCLE / POWER FORWARD
PP - Shot from point The very basic tactic of powerplay. Get the puck to the blueline and fire it in. You’ll need defensemen with big shots (shooting and strength) to score. Shorthanded tactics When shorthanded, you’ll need forwards that are good skaters and have good endurance. Defensemen should be big and mean to clear the crease from opposing forwards.
SHOOTING / STRENGTH / SKATING / ENDURANCE / BIF DEFENSEMAN
The tactics basically vary with the movement of the SH players and the size of are on which they move. The aggressive tactic will tire the players most and gives opportunities for turnovers while tight box will make it harder to score on PP and is less tiring.
You can also make a difference by adjusting the icetimes of the different lines. For even strength lines, the icetime value states the approximate amount of seconds the line will stay on ice during a shift. For special team lines (PP & SH), the value is a percentage on how the coach uses the line on the occasion. Setting 1st PP line’s icetime value to 90 will result the line being on ice most of the time when the team is playing on the powerplay. | |
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