Recoil Effect of the Ice Hockey Stick during a Slap Shot
Author(s) -
Alejandro Perez Villasenor,
R. Turcotte,
David J. Pearsall
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of applied biomechanics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1543-2688
pISSN - 1065-8483
DOI - 10.1123/jab.22.3.202
Subject(s) - recoil , ice hockey , shot (pellet) , deflection (physics) , accelerometer , acceleration , engineering , structural engineering , physics , simulation , materials science , optics , physical medicine and rehabilitation , nuclear physics , medicine , classical mechanics , quantum mechanics , metallurgy
The purpose of this study was to examine the "recoil" effect of the ice hockey stick shaft during a stationary slap shot. Nine male adult subjects (four elite and five recreational) were tested. Their performances were evaluated by simultaneously recording stick movement and internal bending from high-speed digital video (1,000 Hz) and puck acceleration from a triaxial accelerometer positioned inside the puck. In addition, an electrical circuit measured blade-puck contact time. Data were analyzed with a one-way MANOVA for several dependent variables, including final puck velocity, puck acceleration, maximum stick shaft bending (angle and distance deflection), stick shaft angular velocities, blade-puck contact time, and corresponding time events. The results indicate the following. First, blade-puck contact time was greater for the elite than for recreational players (38 +/- 9 ms and 27 +/- 5 ms); however, measures for puck acceleration were essentially the same (63.8 g +/- 9.9 and 61.8 g +/- 19.5). Two, the elite players were able to generate greater puck velocities (120 +/- 18 km/h and 80.3 +/- 11.6 km/h). Three, the recoil timing was found to be reater for elite players (59.8% of blade-puck contact).
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