Strong-Side Press & Weak-Side Collapse
Elite defensive teams win by applying pressure on the strong side while securing the middle and far post with a disciplined weak-side collapse. We attack the puck where it lives and protect the ice that matters. This lesson builds a repeatable framework: press hard without opening the slot, pass off checks early, and collapse from the weak side only when danger requires it.

🎯 Objective
- Create 2v1 pressure on the strong side (corner/wall) to force turnovers.
- Keep inside body position and sticks in lanes through the slot.
- Collapse weak-side support only on danger triggers (net drive, seam threat, backdoor).
- Convert recoveries into clean exits with middle support.
🧠 Core Principles
- Inside first: body between your check and the net; blades angle the seam.
- Press to contain: F1 and D2 drive the puck to the wall, then seal; no fly-bys.
- Weak-side anchor: D1 + F3 hold middle/backdoor; collapse only on a real threat.
- Early talk: “Hold / Switch / Bump” – switch before you lose inside position.
- Reload fast: after the press, F1/F2 recover to the top of the box; gaps stay tight.
🧩 Roles & Responsibilities
F1 – Strong-Side Press
- Angle toward the wall; stick on puck, body on hands.
- Drive the carrier into D2; press → contain; no chase behind the net without a call.
- On chip/reverse: arrive first, then reload high to restore the box.
D2 – Strong-Side Corner/Wall
- First contact; steer plays outside the dots.
- Close the wall; ride-and-release on switch; never open the middle.
- Head up for low-to-high – be ready to front shots or deny the point lane.
F2 – Strong-Side Support
- Seal the inside lane above the battle; deny slot pops.
- Be the second stick in the trap (F1+D2+F2 triangle).
- First outlet after recovery if puck kicks up the wall.
D1 – Net-Side / Weak-Side Safety
- Own the crease side; box out and tie up sticks.
- Read for backdoor threats; collapse only when the far-post attacker becomes live.
- On possession: middle support pass → quick up or reverse.
F3 – Weak-Side High Anchor
- Protect middle seam and far-post lane.
- Collapse on triggers (slot pop, net drive, diagonal seam) – otherwise hold high.
- Be the first middle option for exit when we win it.
🔁 Collapse & Switch Triggers
- Collapse: far-post net drive • slot pop into the dots • diagonal seam with time.
- Switch: carrier crosses the back of the net • set pick/pinch on the wall • D2 is pinned and F1 arrives inside.
- No-switch rule: never switch off a live net-front without inside coverage.
❌ Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why it breaks coverage |
|---|---|
| F1 over-pursues below goal line | Top of box opens; high slot shot |
| F3 collapses without a trigger | Diagonal seam becomes available |
| D2 rides outside and releases late | Inside lane opens to the net |
| No inside body on switch | Attacker beats the hand-off to the crease |
| Weak-side watches puck | Backdoor tap-in |
🧪 Micro-Drills
- 2v2 Wall Trap – F1 angle + D2 seal; F2 above; turnover → middle exit.
- Weak-Side Read – coach activates far-post stick; F3 collapses on trigger, otherwise holds.
- Switch Behind Net – ride-and-release on reverse; D1 holds net; rebuild box in two strides.
🧱 Summary
Strong-Side Press & Weak-Side Collapse lets you hunt the puck without surrendering the slot. Pressure where the puck is. Protect where goals are scored. Communicate early, keep inside, and reload together.
📣 Coach Mark Lehtonen says
Strong-side wins the puck; weak-side protects the game.
If you chase on the strong side and sink on the weak side, you give the slot for free.
❓ Q&A – Defensive Zone Coverage
When should the weak side collapse?
Only on danger triggers: a live far-post net drive, a slot pop inside the dots, or a diagonal seam with time. Otherwise F3 stays high to protect the middle.
Who calls the switch behind the net?
D1 is the primary voice near the crease; F1 or D2 can initiate, but the release happens only when the receiving player has inside position.
What is the difference between press and chase?
Press contains with inside body and stick-on-puck, steering into help. Chase follows the puck and loses the middle-don’t chase.
How do we avoid giving up the low-to-high shot?
F2 owns the strong-side point and seals the wall release; on kick-out, recover to the box and front the shot lane.
What is the first pass on recovery?
Middle support. If the middle is closed, reverse to the weak side; never force the strong-side rim under pressure.