Power Play Overload → Umbrella Rotation
The best power plays don’t stand still.
They start in one structure and evolve as pressure shifts.
Overload creates pressure on the weak side and forces the PK to collapse and rotate.
Umbrella opens the high ice and shooting lanes once you stretch their shape.
The goal is simple:
Win numbers low → pull the PK in → strike high with layered traffic and deception.
Bad PP units run a formation.
Elite PP units run an evolution.
🎯 Objective
Use an overload entry and low-side manipulation to force the PK into coverage stress, then rotate into an umbrella to create:
- 1-timer lanes up top
- Slot seam plays
- Net-front rebounds and tips
- Extended zone control
We don’t chase a shot –
we manufacture the breakdown.
🧠 Core Concepts
| Phase | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Overload Set (3 players on one side low) | Force PK into collapse, outnumber battles |
| Low Support + Quick Touches | Freeze the weak-side PK forward |
| Bumper Delayed Move | Drag middle PK defender down |
| Rotation Up Top | Stretch box → convert into umbrella |
| Middle Shooting Threat | If they collapse again → seam pass option |
This is three-dimensional PP thinking – puck, spacing, and timing.
🧩 Player Roles
Quarterback (QB-D)
Reads pressure
Buys time through deception
Initiates umbrella shift
Half-Wall Playmaker (F1)
Drives defender down
Low-high touch options
Goal-Line / Below-Goal Playmaker (F2)
Quick touch passes
Bait PK into switching coverage
Net-front (F3)
Screens → pops → high slot bumper timing
Battle positioning
Weak-side flank (F4)
Hidden shooter lane
Arrives as play swings high
🔧 Key Cues
- Eyes up overload → attack the backside
- Freeze PK feet before rotation
- F3 always inside dots
- QB never stands still
- Bumper timing > bumper location
- Use double fakes before high return pass
💬 Coach Mark says
“Standing PP dies.
Moving PP kills.”“You don’t force shots.
You force panic.”
❌ Common Mistakes
| Mistake | Why it kills the PP |
|---|---|
| Static formation | PK reads easy, no breakdowns |
| Bumper too early | Middle lane disappears |
| Weak-side player watching | He must arrive, not wait |
| Goal-line player passive | Needs to be the bait engine |
| No net-front timing | Shots without layers = saves |
🎓 Micro-Drills
Overload Touch Triangle → High Kickout
3 low players quick-touch
Kick puck low-high
Umbrella set → one-timer
Bumper Delay + Screen Switch
F3 screen
Pop high late
Return pass into seam
🧱 Summary
Overload earns gravity.
Umbrella weaponizes space.
We don’t pass for looks –
we pass to bend the PK shape
and fire when they’re stretched.
Elite PP isn’t a pattern –
it’s pressure, timing, deception, and structure discipline.