The Best Ice Hockey Training Drills to Sharpen Every Skill

Practice doesn’t make perfect – deliberate practice does. Random skating around the ice won’t make you better. Targeted, intentional drills focused on specific weaknesses will. This guide gives you a bank of proven drills organized by skill, with coaching points to make each rep count.

Why Structure Your Practice Time?

Most recreational players skate 1โ€“3 times per week. That’s limited time. How you use it determines whether you plateau or keep improving. Structured drill work builds muscle memory efficiently. The goal: make skills automatic so you can execute under pressure without thinking.

Skating Drills

1. Figure Eight Edge Drill

Focus: Edge control, crossovers, tight turning
Setup: Two pylons 15 feet apart
Execution: Skate a figure-eight pattern around the pylons, alternating crossovers on each loop. Stay low, cross fully, and keep your head up.
Reps: 5 minutes at the start of every practice

2. Backward C-Cut Drill

Focus: Backward skating power and edge use
Execution: From a standing start, push backward using c-cuts only (no crossovers). Focus on digging in with the inside edge and generating power from each push.

3. Stop-and-Start Sprint

Focus: Explosive acceleration and quick stops
Execution: Sprint from one blue line to the other, stop hard, immediately sprint back. Do 6โ€“8 reps. Rest 60 seconds between sets.

Stickhandling and Puck Control Drills

4. Cone Weave

Focus: Handling in tight spaces, head up puck control
Setup: 6 pylons in a straight line, 4 feet apart
Execution: Weave through the cones while controlling the puck, alternating forehand and backhand. As you improve, look up rather than down at the puck.

5. Toe Drag and Release

Focus: Creating space and shooting off a deke
Execution: Move toward a defender or pylon, drag the puck back with the toe of your blade, then release a shot or make a pass. Great for power play situations.

Shooting Drills

6. Rapid Fire Wrist Shot

Focus: Quick release, shot accuracy
Setup: A pile of 10โ€“15 pucks positioned slightly behind the front foot
Execution: Shoot pucks in rapid succession, hitting a new spot each shot (top left, bottom right, blocker side, glove side). Focus on release speed over raw power.

7. Off the Pass One-Timer

Focus: Timing, weight transfer, one-touch shot power
Execution: Have a partner or rebounder feed you passes from various angles. Without stopping the puck, transfer your weight and fire a one-timer. This drill improves timing and mirrors real game opportunities.

Passing Drills

8. Give-and-Go

Focus: Passing accuracy, timing, receiving a moving pass
Execution: Pass to a partner and immediately skate into open space. Receive a return pass and shoot. Mimics the give-and-go play used constantly at all levels.

9. Bank Pass Off the Boards

Focus: Using the boards as a third player
Execution: Skate along the boards and bank passes off the wall to yourself or a partner. Learn to angle passes so they come out directly to a stick.

Defensive Drills

10. Defensive Gap Control

Focus: Angling attackers to the wall, maintaining gap
Execution: One attacker with the puck, one defender. The defender’s goal is to maintain a stick’s length of distance, skate backward at the attacker’s pace, and angle them toward the boards – not let them cut to the middle.

Building Your Practice Plan

A 45-minute ice session might look like:

  • 5 min: Skating warm-up (edges, crossovers)
  • 10 min: Stickhandling drill
  • 10 min: Shooting drill
  • 10 min: Passing or team-concept drill
  • 10 min: Game-situation scrimmage

The Bottom Line: Drill intentionally, coach yourself honestly, and target your weakest skill first – every session.

Internal Linking Suggestions:

  • Link “skating” to Post 1 (How to Improve Your Ice Hockey Skills)
  • Link “shooting drills” to a future post on hockey shooting technique
  • Link “defensive gap control” to Post 7 (How to Read the Ice Like a Pro)