Tag: timing lanes

IHM Academy - Lesson #7 Neutral Zone Face-Off Win - Lane Activation & Speed Release

IHM Academy - Lesson #7 · By Coach Mark Lehtonen

Neutral Zone Face-Off Win – Lane Activation & Speed Release

A neutral-zone draw isn’t a reset – it’s an opportunity to strike. At the higher levels, possession off the neutral-zone face-off is one of the most efficient ways to enter with speed and catch opponents in transition. We don’t simply “win it back” – we build lanes and stretch pressure instantly.

Coach Mark Lehtonen explains how to turn neutral-zone face-offs into fast-break scoring opportunities through lane timing and structured release.

Objective

Create confusion for defenders by sending forwards into pre-planned lanes with speed, opening passing seams for a fast controlled entry.

Structure & Timing

  • C wins the puck back with a strong pivot to the inside shoulder.
  • Weak-side wing explodes up-ice into the far-side lane immediately on the drop.
  • Strong-side wing delays half a beat before cutting middle to force defensive switches.
  • D-man receives and scans early – head up, deception, freeze forechecker.
  • Second D supports underneath to reset if pressure comes.

Why It Works

Defenders hate indecision. By sending forwards into different predetermined lanes, we force hesitation:

  • Coverage confusion – who takes the middle cut?
  • Weak-side defender breaks structure
  • Passing seam opens before defensive rotation completes
  • Speed advantage – we move first

Key Teaching Cues

  1. Head up by the D – sell middle, release wide.
  2. Forward timing – first fast, second late cut.
  3. Staggered depth – avoid stacking lanes.
  4. Middle ice threat first – it opens the flank.
  5. Commit to pace – hesitation kills the play.

What Players Must Feel

Neutral-zone face-offs are not “neutral”. We are attacking. The first three strides determine whether we enter with speed or dump and chase. This system punishes slow defensive recognition – we sprint into space before they organize.

Coach Mark Lehtonen says:

“Speed isn’t straight-line – it’s timing. If one forward runs and one delays, the defense has to guess. Every guess we force is a lane we create.”

Summary

Win, separate, stretch – that’s the formula. Controlled entries start with structure. Set lanes, clean timing, strong pivot on the draw, and a defenseman scanning early. Every neutral-zone face-off is a runway – build speed and attack.

Study more tactical entries and timing principles at IHM Academy.