I think I explained to you what a "dangle" was once before. Basically, it's when the puck carrier "dangles" the puck like he's got it on a string attached to his stick, like a cat's toy.
@ 5:04 the player was sliding to attempt to block the passing lane for the Oilers teammate (blue team) but it didn't work out. It is a defensive tactic so the goalie can focus on the player carrying the puck and a shot by them and not have to react to a pass across to someone else.
3:20 That was basically a "Foppa" move. Peter Forsberg made that move on a deciding penalty shot vs Canada in the Olimpics or World Championship in the 90s. It got so famous it ended up as a stamp.
As someone who has played a lot of both soccer and hockey they do have many similarities. I find stick handling and dribbling are both very satisfying and require a lot of skill and reflexes. The big skill that I find translates massively well between the two (and many other sports obviously such as ultimate frisbee and football) is passing vision. The key similarity with passing in hockey and soccer is the fact that the projectile starts low and is often kept low during the pass. Lob passes are used in both but low passing is the majority. Being able to pass into open space for a teammate to walk into is a powerful acquired skill in both sports and I love being a setup guy in both. Where they differ is the physicality and the speed. Hockey being played on skates can have players moving extremely fast compared to running sports. Open hitting (checking) and full blown fighting in hockey is legal when done within certain safety rules. Soccer is a physical sport don't get me wrong and due to the nature of the extremely long shifts coupled with cleats digging into the ground, impacts have a good chance of causing injury. Soccer gets a bad rep due to divers as being a painless sport but it is far from it. Hockey though has the toughest athletes that aren't in combat sports in my opinion. You can find videos of players taking sticks and pucks to the face and getting back on the ice a few minutes after getting stitched up. The list of injuries that players have played through in the playoffs is horrifying each year.
Canadian here, always love watching people discovering hockey and learning how intense and technical it is. Love your reactions! You should do a reaction on connor mcdavid, he’s the best player in the NHL right now (has been for awhile) he’s literally gretzky 2.0 and is on his way to surpassing his records and already has with some. He’s playing in the stanley cup final right now and has been going crazy. Alot of eyes and views with him, that video would probably be good with views because of whats going on rn
When you lose your stick, you can still play the body and can try to kick the puck with your skates. If you dropped your stick because it's broken, you have to get another from the bench, trying to play with a broken stick is an automatic penalty. If your stick isn't broken, you just pick it up on the fly and try to get back in the play
You should react to best goalie saves in NHL history. They will blow your mind with the reaction time and how agile the goalies are with all the equipment they have on, cheers
The funny thing about the deking at 3:50 when Datsyuk (guy in red and white) made Couture (Black and teal) fall, was that it was on Couture's birthday lol and he tweeted at Datsyuk that clip and said "you gotta do that to me on my birthday?" lol. Also at 4:41 is Crosby and MacKinnon, two are some of the best in the sport right now, and they are super competitive with each other lol. Crosby trips him up with that little stutter step. The move that Eberle did on the guy sliding on the ice to stop the pass across is what is called a "toe drag" where you'll see a player curl the puck back to their toes and drag it across their body in a dangle motion to avoid it being poke checked and/or move around a defender. The guys who lost their sticks were trying for a stick-lift. It's a penalty to throw your stick though, even though there's been people who have done it lol. My fav dangle was probably the Bobby Ryan one vs 2 defenders where one of them lost their stick and then wiffed on the hit lol. Piggybacking on your soccer comments, a lot of hockey players play soccer because it has similar puck/ball control and training of reaction time. Plenty of pre-game warmups of players messing around playing with a ball before going on the ice.
3:43 First, loved that reaction. Second, that's what you get when you watch "Best NHL Dangles." That, my friend, is Pavel Datsyuk (Dats-sook), undoubtedly the best ankle breaker in nhl history. 5:07 Yeah that's sort of a "last resort" tactic. If you succeed, it's at a cost: Tripping penalty. 5:45 It's not disrespectful, it was an accident. The player tried to hit the puck out of the opponent's control (That opponent was none other than Nathan Mackinnon, you should react to his dangles) and he lost his stick when it hit Mackinnon's stick and then his legs. 7:13 As a hockey player, I wouldn't say that hockey is even close to soccer. Yes, they both have goalies and they're both back and forth sports, but in hockey, you can hit someone hard and make them fly fifteen feet and A, they'll get back up, and B, it's usually not a penalty unless you charged at them from across the ice. There are also other differences. 9:10 If you lose your stick, you can play the body until you get the chance to get another stick or get your stick back.
Yes, sliding IS a strategy but not generally to get the puck or to poke it away from the Carrier. Defensive players sometimes slide to cover shots. It forces the shoter to aim high giving the Goalie an easy prediction of where the shot will come, significanty Increasing his chanse to catch it.
It kinda looks alot alike in many ways but as someone who has played both soccer and hockey, I can tell you that theyre very different Sports. I prefer hockey cuz Its ALOT faster, way more intense and way more physical. The physical part is two fold. 1) I like contact Sports, I love a game that gets rough, especially if Im the one playing. 2) its WAAAAY harder to cheat in hockey. Youre actually allowed to pummle eachother and falling over cuz someone grazed your elbow is more likely to get you ejected for filming than the other guy, if anything happens at all. Its not IMPOSSIBLE to cheat ofc. But in soccer Its borderline encouraged. Its actually the reason I stopped playing soccer, people actually comments in some one diving, complementing him on "How nice he made that dive look". Im a very "by the rules" person. The rules are there for a reason and if you dont follow them, you dont belong on the field, period. Maradona is imo the biggest disgrace in history to soccer as a sport. He knocked in the winning goal with his hand and it was ACTUALLY called "The Hand of God" in the media. Literally praising him for cheating his way to a World Cup Victory. Absolutely disgusting. No game is more riddled with cheaters than soccer. I used to absolutely love soccer, but the more I watched and the more prominent cheating became, the more of a bad taste it left in my mouth.
Just to clearify, Im not hating on soccer, the game. Im hating on cheaters, I hate them in any and all Sports. Unfortunatly, Soccer is the only sport in the world I can think of where cheaters are not the exceptions but the rule.
Been a hockey fan for 35 years and Ive never heard the word "Dangle" in my life. I kinda figure what it meant by just reading the title but I never heard anyone use it before. Maybe cuz Im Swedish. Hockey is absolutely massive here and pretty much all matches, even NHL ones, are cast in Swedish. Most of the lingo is just adapted into Swedish but some words just dont catch on over here. I guess this would be a Prime example.
Belly sliding on the ice would be closer to the guy on a free kick laying down behind the wall of guys jumping to prevent the ball being played underneath them rather than a slide tackle. Athleticism + skills +creativity is a universal recipe for entertainment across all sports 🤘.
Dangle can be replaced by feint or fake or juke. The sliding guy was faked by the attacking player, who lifted the puck over the stick before it could knocked away, so that it could be picked up and put into the net..... Check out best saves in NHL history for another satisfying video to watch. And also Hockey, the greatest game in the world. Dribbling in soccer (football) would be called stickhandling in hockey, handling the puck with your stick, literally.
In hockey if you get into a fistfight you sit out for 5 minutes and in football if someone fake falls around you, you could get taken out of the game not saying any sport is better or worse just saying thats the real difference between the two
Like I said, in one of your other videos. I'd played both hockey and soccer growing up from 5 to 20 Competitively and soccer is nothing compared to hockey.. Your eye-hand coordination has to be way higher when playing hockey. You have to be tough as nails also and able to skate while puck handling with your head up! Because If your head is down while looking at the Puck, when stick handling.. You're done. In soccer, there is basically no consequence for that same thing.. Most they could do is a slide tackle or something.. Hockey players will keep playing with broken bones and their face covered in blood.. Soccer players will fall down almost on purpose when the other team basically taps them and then they will continue to hold their knee like they were shot 10 times then pop-up right back up in 2 seconds once the ref gives them their call they wanted. 🤷♂️ That's the part of the game I didn't like so much but I played in the United States, not in Europe, where they play like little foot fairy weaklings lol. We were never taught to flop. Or fall down so easily when the other team made contact with us playing soccer. No one we played against in the United States did either. So I don't get why the Europeans do it? 🤷♂️ Bixby change to Sid up the overtime rules. Then it would be a much better game. There would be no such thing as draws if I had anything to do with it. I mean going to a Penalty kick shoot out In a major soccer tournament for the final game!? Why would they ever let that be allowed? In hockey, you would go to overtime and play until the first team scores. It doesn't matter how long it takes either. Could take ten hours.. You play until the first team scores. Can't believe they are doing major tournaments like the World Cup and they will go to penalty shootouts if it's tied. Even for the final game. Mind blowing! Anyways i'm done being a d*** again.. 😂 Both are great sports.. Hockey is just so much better though. I know it's hard for people to get it if they have never played it also. Just a lot more expensive, which is a downside. That's why soccer is the world sport. You don't need anything.
I think I explained to you what a "dangle" was once before. Basically, it's when the puck carrier "dangles" the puck like he's got it on a string attached to his stick, like a cat's toy.
It's essentially this.
Other word is deke. But dangle is usually used when it follows the stick more
Makes perfect sense!
2:30
The graceful guy is 6’9 lol about 7’ on skates
@ 5:04 the player was sliding to attempt to block the passing lane for the Oilers teammate (blue team) but it didn't work out. It is a defensive tactic so the goalie can focus on the player carrying the puck and a shot by them and not have to react to a pass across to someone else.
High IQ plays though respect 🤝
3:20
That was basically a "Foppa" move.
Peter Forsberg made that move on a deciding penalty shot vs Canada in the Olimpics or World Championship in the 90s.
It got so famous it ended up as a stamp.
Check out Pavel Datsyuk best hands in hockey
I mean he had a lot of clips here but you could essentially make this video with just what Datsyuk has done
As someone who has played a lot of both soccer and hockey they do have many similarities. I find stick handling and dribbling are both very satisfying and require a lot of skill and reflexes. The big skill that I find translates massively well between the two (and many other sports obviously such as ultimate frisbee and football) is passing vision. The key similarity with passing in hockey and soccer is the fact that the projectile starts low and is often kept low during the pass. Lob passes are used in both but low passing is the majority. Being able to pass into open space for a teammate to walk into is a powerful acquired skill in both sports and I love being a setup guy in both.
Where they differ is the physicality and the speed. Hockey being played on skates can have players moving extremely fast compared to running sports. Open hitting (checking) and full blown fighting in hockey is legal when done within certain safety rules. Soccer is a physical sport don't get me wrong and due to the nature of the extremely long shifts coupled with cleats digging into the ground, impacts have a good chance of causing injury. Soccer gets a bad rep due to divers as being a painless sport but it is far from it. Hockey though has the toughest athletes that aren't in combat sports in my opinion. You can find videos of players taking sticks and pucks to the face and getting back on the ice a few minutes after getting stitched up. The list of injuries that players have played through in the playoffs is horrifying each year.
What an awesome comment! Everything you said was on point 👌🏽
Canadian here, always love watching people discovering hockey and learning how intense and technical it is. Love your reactions! You should do a reaction on connor mcdavid, he’s the best player in the NHL right now (has been for awhile) he’s literally gretzky 2.0 and is on his way to surpassing his records and already has with some. He’s playing in the stanley cup final right now and has been going crazy. Alot of eyes and views with him, that video would probably be good with views because of whats going on rn
Yes the slide is defense tactic to block the passing lane. Or to get s desperate stick on the puck when you are out of body position.
A few of those dangle clips are Pavel Datsyuk, that's one player you should react to.
When you lose your stick, you can still play the body and can try to kick the puck with your skates. If you dropped your stick because it's broken, you have to get another from the bench, trying to play with a broken stick is an automatic penalty. If your stick isn't broken, you just pick it up on the fly and try to get back in the play
Thanks for comment!
You should react to best goalie saves in NHL history. They will blow your mind with the reaction time and how agile the goalies are with all the equipment they have on, cheers
Now this I want to watch!
The funny thing about the deking at 3:50 when Datsyuk (guy in red and white) made Couture (Black and teal) fall, was that it was on Couture's birthday lol and he tweeted at Datsyuk that clip and said "you gotta do that to me on my birthday?" lol.
Also at 4:41 is Crosby and MacKinnon, two are some of the best in the sport right now, and they are super competitive with each other lol. Crosby trips him up with that little stutter step.
The move that Eberle did on the guy sliding on the ice to stop the pass across is what is called a "toe drag" where you'll see a player curl the puck back to their toes and drag it across their body in a dangle motion to avoid it being poke checked and/or move around a defender.
The guys who lost their sticks were trying for a stick-lift. It's a penalty to throw your stick though, even though there's been people who have done it lol.
My fav dangle was probably the Bobby Ryan one vs 2 defenders where one of them lost their stick and then wiffed on the hit lol.
Piggybacking on your soccer comments, a lot of hockey players play soccer because it has similar puck/ball control and training of reaction time. Plenty of pre-game warmups of players messing around playing with a ball before going on the ice.
Thank you for this goated comment! It was so insightful
@@antwonandrew Only realized it was an essay after I got your notification lmao sorry.
3:43 First, loved that reaction. Second, that's what you get when you watch "Best NHL Dangles." That, my friend, is Pavel Datsyuk (Dats-sook), undoubtedly the best ankle breaker in nhl history. 5:07 Yeah that's sort of a "last resort" tactic. If you succeed, it's at a cost: Tripping penalty. 5:45 It's not disrespectful, it was an accident. The player tried to hit the puck out of the opponent's control (That opponent was none other than Nathan Mackinnon, you should react to his dangles) and he lost his stick when it hit Mackinnon's stick and then his legs. 7:13 As a hockey player, I wouldn't say that hockey is even close to soccer. Yes, they both have goalies and they're both back and forth sports, but in hockey, you can hit someone hard and make them fly fifteen feet and A, they'll get back up, and B, it's usually not a penalty unless you charged at them from across the ice. There are also other differences. 9:10 If you lose your stick, you can play the body until you get the chance to get another stick or get your stick back.
Yes, sliding IS a strategy but not generally to get the puck or to poke it away from the Carrier.
Defensive players sometimes slide to cover shots.
It forces the shoter to aim high giving the Goalie an easy prediction of where the shot will come, significanty Increasing his chanse to catch it.
It kinda looks alot alike in many ways but as someone who has played both soccer and hockey, I can tell you that theyre very different Sports.
I prefer hockey cuz Its ALOT faster, way more intense and way more physical.
The physical part is two fold.
1) I like contact Sports, I love a game that gets rough, especially if Im the one playing.
2) its WAAAAY harder to cheat in hockey.
Youre actually allowed to pummle eachother and falling over cuz someone grazed your elbow is more likely to get you ejected for filming than the other guy, if anything happens at all.
Its not IMPOSSIBLE to cheat ofc.
But in soccer Its borderline encouraged.
Its actually the reason I stopped playing soccer, people actually comments in some one diving, complementing him on "How nice he made that dive look".
Im a very "by the rules" person.
The rules are there for a reason and if you dont follow them, you dont belong on the field, period.
Maradona is imo the biggest disgrace in history to soccer as a sport.
He knocked in the winning goal with his hand and it was ACTUALLY called "The Hand of God" in the media.
Literally praising him for cheating his way to a World Cup Victory.
Absolutely disgusting.
No game is more riddled with cheaters than soccer.
I used to absolutely love soccer, but the more I watched and the more prominent cheating became, the more of a bad taste it left in my mouth.
Just to clearify, Im not hating on soccer, the game.
Im hating on cheaters, I hate them in any and all Sports.
Unfortunatly, Soccer is the only sport in the world I can think of where cheaters are not the exceptions but the rule.
Yeah brother you can break ankles if you good enough lol. I'm a goalie so I watch it almost like a fan all the time.
💯💯
Been a hockey fan for 35 years and Ive never heard the word "Dangle" in my life.
I kinda figure what it meant by just reading the title but I never heard anyone use it before.
Maybe cuz Im Swedish.
Hockey is absolutely massive here and pretty much all matches, even NHL ones, are cast in Swedish.
Most of the lingo is just adapted into Swedish but some words just dont catch on over here.
I guess this would be a Prime example.
A good hockey player makes a good soccer player. Usually the reverse is true provided they can skate. Different gladiator game but same idea.
good point
Belly sliding on the ice would be closer to the guy on a free kick laying down behind the wall of guys jumping to prevent the ball being played underneath them rather than a slide tackle. Athleticism + skills +creativity is a universal recipe for entertainment across all sports 🤘.
dangles.. >> control the puck..
you should watch Filthiest Goals of the 2021-22 NHL Season
Dangle can be replaced by feint or fake or juke. The sliding guy was faked by the attacking player, who lifted the puck over the stick before it could knocked away, so that it could be picked up and put into the net.....
Check out best saves in NHL history for another satisfying video to watch. And also Hockey, the greatest game in the world.
Dribbling in soccer (football) would be called stickhandling in hockey, handling the puck with your stick, literally.
In hockey if you get into a fistfight you sit out for 5 minutes and in football if someone fake falls around you, you could get taken out of the game not saying any sport is better or worse just saying thats the real difference between the two
Like I said, in one of your other videos. I'd played both hockey and soccer growing up from 5 to 20 Competitively and soccer is nothing compared to hockey.. Your eye-hand coordination has to be way higher when playing hockey. You have to be tough as nails also and able to skate while puck handling with your head up! Because If your head is down while looking at the Puck, when stick handling.. You're done. In soccer, there is basically no consequence for that same thing.. Most they could do is a slide tackle or something..
Hockey players will keep playing with broken bones and their face covered in blood.. Soccer players will fall down almost on purpose when the other team basically taps them and then they will continue to hold their knee like they were shot 10 times then pop-up right back up in 2 seconds once the ref gives them their call they wanted. 🤷♂️ That's the part of the game I didn't like so much but I played in the United States, not in Europe, where they play like little foot fairy weaklings lol. We were never taught to flop. Or fall down so easily when the other team made contact with us playing soccer. No one we played against in the United States did either. So I don't get why the Europeans do it? 🤷♂️ Bixby change to Sid up the overtime rules. Then it would be a much better game. There would be no such thing as draws if I had anything to do with it. I mean going to a Penalty kick shoot out In a major soccer tournament for the final game!? Why would they ever let that be allowed? In hockey, you would go to overtime and play until the first team scores. It doesn't matter how long it takes either. Could take ten hours.. You play until the first team scores. Can't believe they are doing major tournaments like the World Cup and they will go to penalty shootouts if it's tied. Even for the final game. Mind blowing!
Anyways i'm done being a d*** again.. 😂 Both are great sports.. Hockey is just so much better though. I know it's hard for people to get it if they have never played it also. Just a lot more expensive, which is a downside. That's why soccer is the world sport. You don't need anything.
Not at all..... your logic mean soccer, hochey, cross, rugby .. all the same wtf