Tag: Entry Denial

IHM Academy Performance Metrics Masterclass - Lesson 3

IHM Academy · Performance Metrics Masterclass – Lesson 3

Performance Metrics Masterclass – Lesson 3 : Zone Entry Efficiency & Controlled Breakout Success

By Coach Mark Lehtonen · IHM Academy

Elite teams don’t just skate fast – they move the puck through pressure with structure.
Zone entries and zone exits are the engine of modern hockey possession.
If you win these two phases, you control the game’s rhythm.

Lesson 3 walks you through the two most important possession metrics:

Performance Metrics Masterclass - Lesson 3 : Zone Entry Efficiency & Controlled Breakout Success

1️⃣ Controlled Zone Entries (CZE%)

A controlled entry = carrying the puck over the blue line or completing a pass to a teammate who crosses with possession.

Why it matters:
Carried or passed entries produce 3-5× more scoring chances than dump-ins.

Key components of a strong controlled entry:

Entry spacing – the puck carrier must have a passing lane AND a skating lane.

Width support – the weak-side forward stretches the gap.

Middle-lane drive – F2 pushes defenders back.

Timing – you attack when defenders’ feet are turned, not squared.

Deception – shoulder fakes, weight shifts, eye deception.

Elite players don’t attack the blue line –
they manipulate the gap until it breaks.

2️⃣ Breakout Success Rate (BO% – Controlled Exits)

A controlled breakout = exiting the defensive zone with puck control (carry or completed pass).

Why it matters:
Teams with a BO% above 48% spend significantly less time defending and generate +6-9 extra shots per game.

Core principles:

D1 escape deception – shoulder check → mislead → attack space.

D2 as a hinge – always behind play angle, never flat.

Center low support – early read, slow down to open the middle.

F1 wall timing – arrive at the boards with speed, never stationary.

F2 slash support – cut diagonally for high-percentage passing lanes.

Breakouts aren’t plays –
they’re pressure-management systems.

Entry → Exit → Entry Loop

Great teams maintain “momentum chains”:

Win breakout → controlled entry → offensive zone time → force tired defenders → repeat.

Bad teams break their own momentum by:

Throwing pucks away at the blue line

Forcing east-west passes under pressure

Using wingers standing still on the walls

Possession is not talent –
it’s structure, spacing, and timing discipline.

🧱 Summary

Zone entry efficiency = how you start the attack.
Breakout efficiency = how you survive pressure and restart the attack.
Together, they form the possession backbone of elite hockey.

💬 Coach Mark says

You don’t beat teams with rushes – you beat them with layers behind the rush.
Breakouts are chess. Entries are checkmate.

❓ Questions & Answers | IHM Performance Metrics

Q1: What is a controlled zone entry?
A1: Carrying or passing the puck over the offensive blue line with full puck control.

Q2: Why are controlled entries better than dump-ins?
A2: They generate 3-5× more scoring chances and allow immediate offensive structure.

Q3: What defines a good breakout?
A3: Clean, controlled puck exit using spacing, deception, and layered support options.

Q4: Which position is most important in breakouts?
A4: The center – their low support unlocks all passing lanes.

Q5: What is the biggest mistake during entries?
A5: Attacking defenders too early instead of manipulating the gap first.