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Maple Leafs at forefront of NHL?s biomechanics movement

GhostofPotvin29

New member
Thought this was really interesting.  I was wondering when we would start to see this technology being used in the NHL.

The perch above the Toronto Maple Leafs practice rink was once a spot where executives could stand and watch what was going on below.

Not now.

When training camp shifted back home from Halifax, the balcony was occupied by a laptop and some high-tech equipment designed to give the organization an entirely different view of what is happening on the ice.

The Leafs are one of the NHL?s early adopters of the Catapult Sports tracking technology, which sees GPS units placed inside or below shoulder pads that transmit approximately 300 pieces of data per second ? per player ? in real time.

There are a whole host of different ways to use that mountain of information and the Leafs naturally declined to elaborate on what exactly they have planned. However, the mere fact they?ve invested in the pricey technology suggests that biomechanics is now an area in which the organization hopes to use its financial might to gain an edge.

Full article: http://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/maple-leafs-at-forefront-of-nhls-biomechanics-movement/
 
CarltonTheBear said:
I'm almost positive that the Leafs will have the first robot hockey player.

Wasn't that David Clarkson?
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It sounds pretty neat. I'll definitely be interested to hear about how they get to a point where they can implement any of that data or how it will influence any actual strategic decisions.
 
I think they been using this stuff in rugby union and league in Europe. One of the interesting stats I've seen has been the speed and power of collisions in the tackle. Be interesting if similar info about hits etc will come out.

There's a video on this report of some of the stuff it does:

http://www.the42.ie/collision-analysis-scrum-statsports-1447691-May2014/

There's a tackle just under a minute into the video that produces 33.5Gs of force, for example
 
Arn said:
I think they been using this stuff in rugby union and league in Europe. One of the interesting stats I've seen has been the speed and power of collisions in the tackle. Be interesting if similar info about hits etc will come out.

There's a video on this report of some of the stuff it does:

http://www.the42.ie/collision-analysis-scrum-statsports-1447691-May2014/

There's a tackle just under a minute into the video that produces 33.5Gs of force, for example

That's impressive.  It'll be interesting to see what a hockey hit generates, etc. 

Information like this can only help and in some ways. improve decision-making or even implement change.
 
http://www.tsn.ca/talent/maple-leafs-employing-fresh-approach-to-82-game-grind-1.388903

After each and every Maple Leafs practice, a figure, mostly unknown to the public, stalks around the team?s dressing room and scoops up palm-size devices that look like beepers and blink both green and red.

He?s Jeremy Bettle, the club?s director of sports science and performance, and he?s picking up the individual GPS units players wear at practice ? there?s also a vest ? that provide all kinds of data on health and fitness.

With Bettle on board, the Leafs are taking a different approach to managing the health and fitness of their players, most prominently in the recent alliance with Catapult Sports, responsible for those funky new devices.

There appears to be a better effort to keep players fresh throughout the season.

On Thursday, for example, after games on Monday and Wednesday and with a back-to-back coming up this weekend, the team was held off the ice. Practice had been originally scheduled for noon, but was cancelled.

[...]

?We chose today to get better through our video process, through individual meetings, through our strength training and we stayed off the ice,? Babcock said of his decision for Thursday. ?We hope to have good energy.?

He added his aim to have the sports science division ?as involved as you possibly can.?

?Energy?s real important and rest is a weapon,? Babcock said, ?But so is keeping the motor running and skating and getting better.?

[...]

There?s apparent change, too, in the eating habits of the team. Historically in Buffalo, for example, boxes of pizza and greasy chicken wings would sit in the centre of the visiting dressing room post-game. Earlier this month, the spread, in striking contrast, included various berries and other fruit, but no wings or pizza.

[...]

Already catching the eye of players is the team?s approach to injury prevention. According to forward Brad Boyes, the idea is to be pro-active rather than reactive.

?This is the first team I?ve seen that?s really taken a step into doing preventative treatment versus treating injuries and it makes so much more sense,? said the 33-year-old.

Boyes, for example, has had groin and back troubles over his 11-year career and though they?ve not acted up this fall, he?s still getting treatment there to make sure nothing pops up.

?It?s like getting your oil changed all the time versus getting it [done] only when it breaks down,? he said.

It's what people have been doing for horses for thousands of years (except for the GPS distance tracking stuff).

Edit:
While this is very awesome, this makes me quite curious about Robidas.
 
Bullfrog said:
They're proactively preparing him for retirement.

Fortunately, that's all in your head.  ::)

I applaud the preventative, nutritional, and fitness approaches taken.  About time, too.
 

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