Performance Metrics Masterclass – Lesson 5: Special Teams Efficiency (PP & PK)
By Coach Mark Lehtonen · IHM Academy
Special teams swing playoff series. In modern hockey, power play and penalty kill efficiency decide momentum, scorelines, and series outcomes. This lesson goes deeper than simple PP% and PK%, focusing on the metrics that explain why a unit is dangerous or vulnerable.
Zone entries, set-ups, and chance quality are at the core of elite special teams. Expected goals, entry success, clear rates, and shot maps reveal how a power play or penalty kill truly performs beneath the surface of raw conversion numbers.
You don’t need 60% possession to win. You need to be faster and cleaner in the moments that create possession and chances.
🎯 Primary Objectives
- Convert defensive stops into possession-driven exits and clears.
- Create controlled entries on the power play that evolve into structured attacks.
- Reduce stall points and slow recoveries during special-teams transitions.
- Build predictable support layers on both PP and PK.
- Measure individual and team contribution to puck-movement efficiency.
🧠 Key Metrics for Special Teams
1. Expected Goals For per 60 (xGF/60) on Power Play
This measures the shot quality and volume your power play generates per 60 minutes with the man advantage. High xGF/60 usually means:
- Shots from the middle of the ice and net-front.
- One-timers from prime shooting locations.
- Second-chance opportunities and rebounds.
A unit can have an average PP% but elite xGF/60, meaning the process is strong and results will usually correct over time.
2. Entry & Set-Up Success Rate on PP
Without clean entries, the power play never gets set. Entry & set-up success rate tracks how often the team:
- Gains the zone with controlled possession.
- Reaches its planned formation (umbrella, 1-3-1, overload, etc.).
Many failed entries equal two minutes wasted, no matter how good the in-zone structure looks on paper.
3. Shot Threat Map on PP
A shot threat map is a location-based model that shows where chances are generated on the power play. Elite units:
- Attack from the middle slot and net-front.
- Use cross-seam passes to create east-west movement.
- Avoid “harmless” shots from the boards with no net-front traffic.
4. Expected Goals Against per 60 (xGA/60) on PK
xGA/60 on the penalty kill measures how much quality your PK actually allows. A strong unit:
- Pushes shots to the outside.
- Limits seam passes through the box or diamond.
- Reduces second-chance rebound looks.
Even if a few goals go in during a short stretch, low xGA/60 tells you the defensive process remains solid.
5. Clear Rate & Failed Clear % on PK
Clear rate tracks the percentage of times the puck is successfully sent down the ice after a win or loose-puck recovery. Failed clear % tracks how often:
- Clears are fanned on.
- Clears are intercepted at the blue line.
- Clears roll off the stick without distance.
Good PKs win battles and finish clears. Poor PKs repeatedly fail to clear and get stuck defending tired.
💬 Coach Mark Lehtonen says
A dangerous power play scares opponents.
An organized penalty kill steals their confidence.
❓ Q&A – IHM Performance Metrics – Special Teams Analytics
Q1: Why isn’t PP% enough to judge a power play?
A: PP% only shows conversion, not process. A unit can score off a short hot streak while generating poor looks, or dominate with high xGF/60 but run cold for a stretch. Metrics like xGF/60, entry success, and shot threat maps tell you whether the power play is built on repeatable habits.
Q2: What makes a good penalty kill in analytics terms?
A: Strong PKs keep xGA/60 low, force shots from the outside, and win races to clears. They pressure at the right time, control the middle, and execute clears with a high success rate. They might still allow goals, but the underlying process is strong and sustainable.
Q3: How important are entries for power play success?
A: Without clean entries, the power play never has a chance to operate. Repeated failed entries turn a two-minute advantage into a non-event. Teams with elite PP metrics typically have high controlled entry rates and reach their set formation quickly after crossing the blue line.
Q4: Can a team be elite at 5-on-5 but poor on special teams?
A: Yes, and those teams often underperform in the standings. A strong 5-on-5 club with weak PP and PK leaves goals and points on the table. Masterclass metrics highlight when special teams drag down otherwise excellent even-strength play and show where to focus coaching time.
🧱 Summary
Special teams efficiency is more than PP% and PK%. xGF/60, xGA/60, entry and set-up success, clear rates, and shot threat maps reveal whether your units are truly built to win. Dangerous power plays and organized penalty kills change playoff series-because they control the most critical two minutes on the clock.