-
Adams Division:
-
with the
Patrick Division
made up the Wales
Conference until the 1992-93 season; renamed the
Northeast Division of the
Eastern Conference starting with the
1993-94 season.
-
-
All-Star Game:
-
a mid-season
exhibition game
pitting selected stars of the
Campbell Conference against
selected stars of the
Wales Conference; beginning in 1993-94 games
will be between the
Eastern Conference and
Western Conference.
-
-
assist:
- the pass or
passes which immediately precede a successful scoring attempt; a maximum of
two assists are credited for one goal.
-
-
attacking
zone:
-
the area
between the opponents’
blue line and their
goal.
-
-
backcheck:
-
an attempt by
a player, on his way back to his
defensive zone, to regain the
puck
from the opposition by
checking or harassing an opponent who has
the puck.
-
-
backhand shot:
- a shot or pass
made with the stick from the left side by a right-handed player or from the
right side by a left-handed player.
-
-
beat the
defense:
-
to get by one
or both of the
defensemen.
-
-
beat the
goalie:
-
to outwit the
goalie
and score a goal.
-
-
behind the
net:
-
the area of
ice behind the
goal cage
is legal territory.
-
-
blind pass:
-
to pass the
puck without looking.
-
-
blue lines:
-
two blue,
12-inch wide lines running parallel across the ice, each 60 feet from the
goal; they divide the
rink into three
zones called
the attacking,
defending
and neutral (or center)
zones; defending
blue line
is the line closer to a player’s own
net; attacking
blue line
is the one farther from his net; used in determining
offsides.
-
-
boarding or board-checking:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player uses any method (body
checking,
elbowing or
tripping)
to throw an opponent violently into the boards; if an injury is caused, it
becomes a major penalty.
-
-
boards or board wall:
-
a wooden wall
3 1/2 to 4 feet high which surrounds the
rink to keep the
puck
and players from accidentally leaving the rink and injuring spectators; all
rinks have shatterproof glass that rises above the boards to provide
additional protection.
-
-
body check:
-
when a hockey
player bumps or slams into an opponent with either his hip or shoulder (the
only legal moves) to block his progress or throw him off-balance; it is only
allowed against an opponent in control of the
puck or against the last
player to control it.
-
-
break:
-
a chance to
start a
rush when the
opposing forwards
are caught out of position.
-
-
breakaway:
-
a fast break
in which an attacker with the
puck skates in alone on the
goalie,
having gotten past or clear of the
defensemen, trapping the
opponents behind the play.
-
-
breaking pass:
-
a pass to a
teammate who is trying for a
breakaway.
-
-
butt-ending:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when an opponent is hit with the top of a player’s hockey stick.
-
-
Campbell
Conference:
-
one of the two
conferences in the
NHL that
contained the
Norris
and Smythe Divisions
until 1992-93; the other conference was the
Wales Conference;
starting in 1993-94 these will be renamed the
Eastern
and
Western
Conferences.
-
-
carom:
-
a rebound of
the
puck off the
boards
or any other object.
-
-
center or center forward:
-
the center
player in the
forward line
who usually leads his team’s attack when they are trying to score a
goal; he takes
part in most of the face-offs;
he controls the puck
and tries to score or pass it to a teammate who is in a better position to
score a goal.
-
-
center
face-off circle:
-
a circle,
measuring 30 feet in diameter, at the center of the ice where the
puck is dropped in a
face-off
to start the game and to restart the game after a
goal has been scored.
-
-
center ice:
-
the area
between the two
blue lines,
also called the
neutral zone.
-
-
centering
pass:
-
a pass from an
attacking player towards the middle of the ice to a teammate with a better
angle at the
goal.
-
-
center line:
-
a red, 12-inch
wide line across the ice midway between the two
goals.
-
-
charging:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player makes a deliberate move of more than two steps when
body checking
an opponent; if serious injury is caused or blood is drawn it becomes a
major penalty.
-
-
check or checking:
-
any defensive
or guarding tactic used by hockey players accomplished by moving their bodies
against an opponent to get the
puck away; there are two main
types of checks:
stick check and body check;
these are only allowed against a player in control of the puck or against the
last player to control it; checking with too many steps or strides becomes
charging.
-
-
clearing
the puck:
-
getting the
puck out of one’s own
defensive zone.
-
-
clearing
the zone:
-
when a
defending player sends the
puck out of the
attacking zone,
all the attacking players must leave or clear the zone to avoid being called
offsides
when the puck reenters the zone.
-
-
cover:
- when a player
stays close to an opponent to prevent him from receiving a pass or making a
play on offense.
-
-
crease lines:
-
the red lines
that form the semi-circular area with a 6-foot radius in front of the
goal called the
goal crease.
-
-
cross bar:
-
the horizontal
bar that connects the top of the two
goalposts.
-
-
cross-checking:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player holds his stick in both hands and drives the shaft into an
opponent; a stick check
where a player has both hands on the stick and no part of the stick on the
ice; if serious injury is caused or blood is drawn it becomes a
major penalty
and a game misconduct.
-
-
dead puck:
-
a
puck that flies out of the
rink or
that a player has caught in his hand.
-
-
defensemen:
-
two players
who make up a team’s defensive unit usually stationed in or near their
defensive zone to help the
goalie
guard against attack; sometimes they lead an attack. The left
defenseman
covers the left half of the
rink,
the right defenseman plays to the right, but they can skate into each other’s
territory.
-
-
defensive
line:
-
consists of
two
defensemen.
-
-
defensive
zone:
-
the
zone or area nearest a team’s
goal
(the goal they are defending).
-
-
deflection:
-
causing any
pass or shot to stray from its intended course; a shot or pass that hits some
object such as a stick or skate and goes into the
net for a score or when a
goalie
hits the puck
away.
-
-
deke or deking:
-
a decoying or
faking motion by the puck-carrier; the art of making a defensive player think
you are going to pass or move in a certain direction when you are not. There
are
shoulder dekes,
stick dekes
and head dekes.
-
-
delayed penalty or delayed call:
-
when an
official raises his arm but
does not blow his whistle, waiting to see the outcome of a play before calling
a penalty;
this is done so as not to penalize the non-offending team by stopping its
momentum; a penalty that is delayed, and then not called, is waved off and
play continues uninterrupted; also a penalty against the team that has only 4
players on the ice, which is assessed only when one of its players gets out of
the penalty box.
-
-
delay of game:
-
a
minor penalty imposed on any
player who purposely delays the game in any way, such as shooting or batting
the puck
outside the playing area or displacing the
goalpost from its normal
position.
-
-
double minor:
-
a type of
minor penalty
given for certain accidental infractions that result in an injury to another
player; penalty time of 4 minutes is served, double the time of a normal minor
penalty.
-
-
drop pass:
-
when a player
simply leaves the
puck behind
for a teammate following him to pick up.
-
-
Eastern
Conference:
-
the renamed
Wales Conference
beginning with the 1993-94 season which contains the
Northeast
and Atlantic Divisions,
formerly called the
Adams
and
Patrick
Divisions.
-
-
elbowing:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player strikes his opponent with an elbow to impede his progress.
-
-
empty-net
goal:
-
a goal scored
against a team that has
pulled the goalie.
-
-
endboards:
-
the
boards at each end of the
rink.
-
-
enforcer:
-
also called
the
policeman;
is usually the most penalized player on a team; he has the job of protecting
his teammates from harm; generally a larger player who is not afraid of any
fight.
-
-
exhibition
game:
-
a game not
included in the regular-season schedule and which does not count in the
standings; the
All-Star Game
or other games generally played before the season begins.
-
-
expansion:
-
the addition
of teams to the
NHL.
-
-
expansion
draft:
-
a special
arrangement to assist new
franchises in obtaining
players, where
expansion
teams choose players from other teams’
rosters.
-
-
expansion
team:
-
a team that
has been recently added to the
NHL.
-
-
face mask:
-
the protective
mask worn by the
goalie.
-
-
face-off:
-
the method of
starting play; the dropping of the
puck by the
official
between the sticks of two opposing players standing one stick length apart
with stick blades flat on the ice; used to begin each
period or
to resume play when it has stopped for other reasons.
-
-
face-off circles and spots:
-
the various
circular spots on the ice where an
official and two players will
hold a face-off
to begin or to resume the action of the game; there are one blue and four
red face-off circles located in the
neutral zone; two red face-off
circles are found at each end of the ice.
-
-
falling on the puck:
-
a
minor penalty, which occurs
when a player other than the
goalie
closes his hand on the
puck,
deliberately falls on the puck, or gathers the puck under his body while lying
on the ice.
-
-
feeding:
-
passing the
puck.
-
-
fighting:
-
a
major penalty which occurs
when two or more players drop their sticks and gloves and fight; if a
referee
deems one player to be the instigator, that player gets a game misconduct;
the minor penalty
for a less severe pushing and shoving fight is called
roughing.
-
-
flat pass:
-
when a player
passes the
puck to a
teammate along the surface of the ice.
-
-
flip pass:
-
a pass by a
player to a teammate that lifts the
puck from the ice and sends it
through the air, usually for the purpose of getting it over an opponent’s
stick.
-
-
flip shot:
-
a shot in
which a player cups the
puck in his stick, then flips
it with his wrists up off the ice towards the
goal; this sometimes makes the
puck harder to block.
-
-
forecheck:
-
to
check
or harass an opponent who has the
puck in his
defensive zone and keep the
opponents in their end of the
rink
while trying to regain control of the puck; usually done by the
forwards.
-
-
forehand:
- a shot or pass
taken from the right side of a right-handed player or from the left side of a
left-handed player.
-
-
forward line or attacking line:
-
consists of
two
wings (right
and left) and a center;
these three players play nearer the opponent’s
goal and are responsible for
most of the scoring.
-
-
forwards:
-
the three
players who make up the attacking line or
forward line of a team — the
center and the right and left
wings.
-
-
foul:
-
any infraction
of the rules that will draw a
penalty.
-
-
franchise:
- a team; the
legal arrangement that establishes ownership of a team.
-
-
freeze the
puck:
-
to hold the
puck against the
boards with
the skate or stick in order to stop play briefly or gain a
face-off.
-
-
full strength:
-
when a team
has its full complement of 6 players on the ice.
-
-
get the jump:
- to move fast
and thereby get a good start on the opponents.
-
-
goal:
-
provides one
point; scored when a
puck goes between the
goalposts
from the stick of an attacking player and entirely crosses the red line
between the goalposts;
also the informal term used to refer to the area made of the goalposts and the
net
guarded by the goalie
and into which a puck must enter to score a point.
-
-
goal cage:
-
a 6 foot wide
by 4 foot high tubular steel frame consisting of a
cross bar and two
goalposts
to which a net
is attached.
-
-
goal crease:
-
a
semi-circular area with a 6 foot radius in front of the opening of the
goal; denotes the playing area
of the goaltender
into which no player without the
puck
may enter.
-
-
goal line:
-
the two-inch
red line between the
goalposts that stretches in
both directions to the
sideboards
- .
-
goalkeeper, goalie or goaltender:
-
the heavily
padded player who guards the
goal; prevents opponents from
scoring by stopping the puck
any way he can.
-
-
goalposts:
-
the metal bars
that frame the area to which the
net is attached which rests on
the center of the
goal
line and between which a
puck must pass to score a
goal.
-
-
hat trick:
-
three or more
goals scored by a
player in one game.
-
-
head deke:
- when a player
drops his head as though moving one way and quickly moves in another to fake
out the opponent.
-
-
high-sticking:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player checks
an opponent by carrying his stick above the normal height of his opponent’s
waist and hits, or menaces the opponent with it; if injury is caused it
becomes a major penalty;
if a referee
determines that the raising of the stick was unintentional and no contact
occurred, the penalty
is only against the team and results in a
face-off.
-
-
holding:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player grabs and holds onto an opponent (or his stick) with his hands
or arms to impede the opponent’s progress.
-
-
holding the
puck:
-
See
falling on the puck.
-
-
home team:
- the team in
whose arena the game is being played; the team wearing the lighter uniforms.
-
-
hook check:
-
a sweep of the
stick low to the ice to take the
puck from an opponent’s
stick.
-
-
hooking:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player attempts to impede the progress of another player by hooking any
part of the opponent’s body with the blade of his stick; an illegal use of
one’s stick.
-
-
icing:
-
a violation
which occurs when the team in possession of the
puck shoots it from behind the
red center line
across the opponent’s
goal line
into the end of the rink
(but not into the goal)
and a member of the opposing team touches it first; results in a
face-off
in the offender’s
defensive
zone; a
shorthanded team cannot be
called for icing.
-
-
interference:
-
a
penalty in hockey called when
a player attempts to impede the motion of another player not in possession of
the puck.
-
-
intermission:
-
a
fifteen-minute recess between each of the three
periods of a hockey game.
-
-
kneeing:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player uses a knee to hit his opponent in the leg, thigh or lower body.
-
-
lead pass:
- a pass sent
ahead of a moving teammate designed to meet the player at the location he is
headed.
-
-
lie:
- angle made by
the shaft of the stick and the blade.
-
-
line change:
-
the entire
forward line
and/or defensive line
will be replaced at once, which puts players on the ice who work well
together.
-
-
linesmen:
-
the two
officials on the ice, one
toward each end of the rink,
responsible for infractions of the rules concerning off-side plays at the
blue lines
or center line
and for any icing
violations; they conduct most of the
face-offs, sometimes advise
the referee
concerning penalties,
and separate players who are
fighting; they wear black pants and an official
league sweater, and are on skates.
-
-
major penalty:
-
a type of
individual
penalty
called for more serious infractions of the rules; of 5 minutes in duration
whether or not the non-penalized team scores.
-
-
match-up:
-
a pairing of
players on opposing teams who will
cover each other during the
hockey game.
-
-
minor penalty:
-
a type of
penalty lasting 2 minutes; if
the non-penalized team scores a
power play goal during this time, the penalty
ends immediately.
-
-
NHL:
- National
Hockey League, started November 22, 1917; currently contains 26 teams.
-
-
net:
-
the
goal; netting attached to the
goalposts
and frame of the goal to trap the
puck when a goal is scored.
-
-
neutral zone:
-
the area
between the
blue lines.
-
-
Norris
Division:
-
with the
Smythe Division
made up the
Campbell
Conference until the 1992-93 season; renamed the
Central Division of the
Western Conference starting with the 1993-94
season.
-
-
offside pass:
-
See
two-line pass.
-
-
offsides:
-
a violation
which occurs when both skates of an attacking player cross the opponent’s
blue line
preceding the puck
into the attacking zone
or when a pass crosses more than one line without being touched (two-line
pass); this is one of the most common calls made
in a hockey game.
-
-
officials:
-
one
referee and two
linesmen
on the ice calling infractions and handing out
penalties; up to five off-ice
officials
including two goal judges, the game timekeeper, the penalty timekeeper and the
official scorer.
-
-
on-the-fly:
-
making player
changes or
substitutions
while play is under way.
-
-
on the road:
-
when an
NHL team plays games away from
its home arena.
-
-
open ice:
- that part of
the ice that is free of opponents.
-
-
overtime:
-
an additional
period of play used to break a
tie; see sudden-death.
-
-
passing:
-
when one
player uses his stick to send the
puck to a teammate.
-
-
passout:
-
a pass by an
attacking player from behind his opponent’s
net or goal line
to a teammate in front of the net.
-
-
Patrick
Division:
-
with the
Adams Division
made up the Wales
Conference until the 1992-93 season; renamed the
Atlantic Division of the
Eastern Conference starting
with the 1993-94 season.
-
-
penalty:
-
punishment of
a player for a violation of the rules, resulting in suspension from the game
for a period of time; 6 types exist:
minor, bench,
major,
misconduct, match and goalkeeper’s penalties.
-
-
penalty box:
-
an area with a
bench just off the ice, behind the
sideboards outside the playing
area where penalized players serve their
penalty time.
-
-
penalty
killer:
-
a player
expert at
backchecking
and keeping or gaining control of a loose
puck under difficult
circumstances who is trained to break up a
power play when his team is
shorthanded.
-
-
penalty shot:
-
a free shot
awarded a player who was illegally interfered with, preventing him from a
clear scoring opportunity; the shot is taken with only the
goalie guarding against it.
-
-
periods:
-
three
20-minute playing intervals separated by two
intermissions.
-
-
points:
-
the left and
right positions taken by the
defensemen of the
attacking team, just inside the
blue line of the
attacking zone;
also the term used to describe the defensemen playing at this location; also
an individual statistic for players equal to their
goals plus
assists;
also a team statistic used to determine team standings (2 points for each win
and 1 point for each tie during the regular season).
-
-
poke check:
-
a quick jab or
thrust to the
puck or
opponent’s stick to knock the puck away from him.
-
-
policeman:
-
see
enforcer.
-
-
power play:
-
an attack by a
team at
full strength
against a team playing one man (or two men)
shorthanded because of a
penalty
(or penalties) which resulted in a player on the opposing team receiving
penalty-box
time.
-
-
puck:
-
a black,
vulcanized rubber disc, 1-inch thick and 3-inches in diameter, weighing
between 5 1/2 and 6 ounces used to play hockey; they are frozen to prevent
excessive bouncing and changed throughout the game; can travel up to 120 miles
per hour on a
slap shot.
-
-
pulling
the goalie:
-
taking the
goalkeeper
off the ice and replacing him with a
forward; leaves the
goal
unguarded so is only used as a last minute attempt to score.
-
-
ragging:
-
retaining the
puck by clever stickhandling;
often used by a shorthanded
team to kill time.
-
-
rebound:
-
a
puck that bounces off the
goalie’s
body or equipment.
-
-
red line:
- the line that
divides the length of the ice surface in half.
-
-
referee:
-
the chief
official
in a hockey game, distinguished from the other officials by a red armband; he
starts the game, calls most of the
penalties and makes the final decision in any
dispute; he is responsible for making sure the ice, the
nets and the clock are
in good condition; he wears black pants and an official league sweater; he is
also on skates.
-
-
referee’s
crease:
-
a
semi-circular area, with a 10 foot radius, marked in red on the ice in front
of the timekeepers’ bench into which players may not follow a
referee.
-
-
rink:
-
the iced area
inside the
boards on
which the game of hockey is played; it is 200 feet long by 85 feet wide with
rounded corners.
-
-
rockered
blades:
- used by
professional ice hockey skaters; the gentle curve in a very sharp blade of an
ice skate produced by rounding the toe and heel of the blade to make it easier
for hockey players to turn quickly.
-
-
roster:
- a list of the
players on a team.
-
-
roughing:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a fight between players is more of a pushing and shoving match; a less
severe penalty than fighting.
-
-
rush:
-
an individual
or combined attack by a team in possession of the
puck.
-
-
save:
-
the act of a
goalie
in blocking or stopping a shot.
-
-
scramble:
-
several
players from both sides close together battling for possession of the
puck.
-
-
screen shot:
-
a shot on
goal that the
goalie
cannot see because it was taken from behind one or more players from either
team standing in front of the
net.
-
-
shooting
angle:
-
the angle
determined by the position of the shooting player in relation to the
goal at the moment he shoots
the puck.
-
-
shorthanded:
-
a team with
one or more players off the ice in the
penalty box when the opponent
has its full complement of 6 players; also a
power play for the other team.
-
-
shot on goal (SOG):
-
a scoring
attempt that is successfully blocked or otherwise prevented by a
goalie; a
save.
-
-
shoulder deke:
- a quick move
of the shoulder in one direction and the player in another to fake out the
opponent.
-
-
sideboards:
-
the
boards along the sides
of the rink.
-
-
slap shot:
-
a shot in
which the player raises his stick in a backswing, with his strong hand held
low on the shaft and his other hand on the end as a pivot. Then as the stick
comes down toward the
puck, the player leans
into the stick to put all his power behind the shot and add velocity to the
puck; achieves an extremely high speed (up to 120 miles per hour) but is less
accurate than a wrist shot.
-
-
slashing:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player swings his stick from below the player’s shoulder at an opponent
to impede his motion, whether or not contact is made; if injury is caused it
becomes a major penalty
and a game misconduct.
-
-
sleeper:
-
an attacking
player who slips into the center or
neutral zone behind the
attacking defensemen;
same as a floater or a hanger.
-
-
slow whistle:
-
when an
official waits to blow his
whistle because of a
delayed offside or
delayed penalty
call.
-
-
Smythe
Division:
-
with the
Norris Division
made up the
Campbell
Conference until the 1992-93 season; renamed the
Pacific Division of the
Western Conference starting
with the 1993-94 season.
-
-
solo:
-
a
rush by a player without
assistance from a teammate.
-
-
spearing:
-
a
major penalty which occurs
when a player illegally jabs, or even just attempts to jab, the point of his
stick blade into another player’s body; one of the most serious infractions a
player can commit; results in an automatic game misconduct.
-
-
stick deke:
-
when a
player’s stick is moved as though for a shot, but instead the player moves the
puck past the defending
player; done to fake out the opponent.
-
-
stickhandling:
-
moving the
puck along the ice with
the stick blade.
-
-
substitution:
- occurs when a
player comes off the bench to replace a player coming out of the game; can be
made at any time and play does not need to stop.
-
-
sudden-death overtime:
-
an
overtime period that ends as
soon as one team scores a
goal,
determining the winner and terminating the game.
-
-
sweep check:
-
a
check made by a player
with one hand on the stick, and one knee so low it is practically on the ice,
with the shaft and blade of the stick flat on the ice to take the
puck
away from an opponent.
-
-
third-man-in rule:
- the third man
in a fight gets a game misconduct penalty and is out of the game for its
duration; created to discourage players from jumping into a fight, even if
they are only trying to break it up.
-
-
three-on-one:
-
a type of
break with three
attackers coming in on one
defenseman; this is a desperate
situation.
-
-
three-on-two:
-
a type of
break with three
attacking players skating against two defensive players.
-
-
trailer:
-
a player who
follows his teammate on the attack seemingly out of the action but actually in
a position to receive a backward or
drop pass.
-
-
tripping:
-
a
minor penalty which occurs
when a player places his stick or a part of his body under or around the feet
or legs of an opponent causing him to lose his balance; will also be called if
a player kicks an opponent’s skates out from under him, or uses a knee or leg
to cause his opponent to fall.
-
-
two-line pass:
-
a team
violation occurring when a
puck is passed across
two or more lines without being touched; play is stopped for a
face-off;
a type of offsides.
-
-
two-on-one:
-
a type of
break with two
attacking players skating against one defensive player.
-
-
two-on-two:
-
a type of
break with two
attacking players skating against two defensive players.
-
-
under-led
pass:
-
a pass behind
or to one side of a teammate, making it difficult for him to control the
puck.
-
-
waffle pad:
-
a large
rectangular pad attached to the front of the
goalie’s stick hand.
-
-
Wales
Conference:
-
was one of the
two confrences in the
NHL consisting of the
Patrick
and Adams Divisions
until the 1992-93 season. The other conference was
Campbell Conference.
These were renamed the
Eastern and
Western Conferences
respectively, starting with 1993-94 season.
-
-
wash out:
-
a
goal that is ruled invalid by
the referee
or the waving off of an infraction by the
linesmen.
-
-
Western
Conference:
-
the renamed
Cambell Conference
beginning with the 1993-94 season which contains the Central and Pacific
Divisions (formerly the
Norris and
Smythe Divisions
respectively).
-
-
wings:
-
two players
who flank the
center on
his right and left sides and, with him, make up the attacking unit or
forward line.
-
-
wrist shot:
-
a shot made
using a strong flicking of the wrist and forearm muscles, with the stick blade
kept on the ice; it is slower but more accurate than a
slap shot.
-
-
Zamboni:
- the brand of
machine used to clean the ice.
-
-
zones:
-
three areas
made up by the two
blue lines;
the attacking zone
is the area farthest from the
goal
a player is defending; the
neutral zone is the central area; the
defending zone
is the area where a player’s goal is (the goal where his team’s
goalie
is stationed)
|