2 v 1 Situations
Practice Notes
Drills
Rondo Circle Passing to 2 on 1
2 vs 1 Rebound Battle Drill
Double Gates Activation Game
Quick 2 vs 1 Attack Situational Drill
Angling Transition 1 v 1 to 2 v 1
Use The Net 2 vs. 1 Drill
2 V 1 Quick Strike Game
2 on 1 Tips for Defenders
Additional 2 on 1 Resources
Please Note: The Practice of the Week is designed to be utilized across multiple age levels. With that being said, we highly encourage you to adjust the drills based on your team's age and skill levels. These drills and practices can be modified to become more basic or more advanced.
The drills and games in this practice are designed to help your players work on attacking and defending in various 2 v 1 situations.
Focus Points
Below are the main focus points for all 3 players involved in a 2 v 1 situation. Remember the importance of the player without the puck when creating offense in 2 v 1 situations. Finding the open ice and become a scoring threat is critical
Puck Carrier
- Awareness - the puck carrier is the final decision maker, they need to have awareness to read their teammate and the defender
- Duel threat - when on a rush, the puck carrier should remain a duel threat (to pass or shoot) by staying in the attack position and not skating themselves out of a shooting angle
- Use Deception (older ages) - when the basics of 2 on 1's are grasped, this is a great time to add deception with fake shots/passes to open up more lanes
Player without the Puck
- Create a passing lane - it is crucial for the player without the puck to find the open ice to creating a passing option for the puck carrier
- Open yourself to the play - the player without the puck needs to be ready to accept a pass and open themselves up to the puck carrier to become a scoring threat
Defending an incoming rush
- Hold the middle ground - don't chase the puck carrier
- Maintain good stick position on the ice - never have your stick fully extended
- Never let the puck carrier cross in front of the goalies eyes - keep him/her to the outside
Practice Logistics
*make sure players get reps at both offense and defense
- Rondo Circle Passing to 2 v 1 should be done at opposite corners of the ice - with 2 v 1 heading the length of the ice
- Use 2/3's of the ice for the Angling Transition Drill while using 1/3 of the ice for the Quick 2 v 1 Attack
- Use the Net 2 v 1 should be ran out of both ends of the ice
- Finish with 2 v 1 Quick Strike Game (if time permits)
Drills
Set this up out of two lower circles diagonal from each other - have the 2 v 1 go down the ice away from the other cricle
Move this up a bit so that we don't go across the blue line into the other drill (quick 2 v 1 attack)
Run this out of both ends
IHS Member Resources:
- 2 v 1 Tips for Defenders - a short video by Ben Eaves with simple tips
- 2 v 1 Offensive Rushes - a detailed breakdown by Greg Revak from Hockey Arsenal on creating scoring opportunities on the rush
- Creating Opportunities without the Puck a skills breakdown by Ben Eaves on finding the open areas of the ice
- Attack Position with Puck - Make sure you are a duel threat when attacking
- IHS Members can create their own practice plans that look like this. Learn how here.