Ice Hockey Glove

There are two styles of gloves worn by ice hockey players.

Skaters wear similar gloves on each hand, while goaltenders wear gloves of different types on each hand.

Ice Hockey Glove
A player's gloved hands

Types of gloves

Skaters' gloves

Skaters gloves help prevent the hands getting bruised and battered and stops them from getting burned from the ice. The top padding and shell thumb is designed to help protect the player from flying hockey pucks and opponents' ice hockey sticks.

In today's hockey game, gloves will generally fall into two types of categories, the first being the traditional four-roll style. These types of gloves have more room on the inside, giving it a looser feel on the hand than the natural fit gloves. Hockey players who choose the four-roll style have less resistance in their fingers and hands, so wearing the gloves feels less noticeable. The other category of gloves are the tighter fitting, natural or anatomical fit glove. These have a much tighter fit than the four-roll gloves, and are designed to become an extension of the players' hand. The tapered gloves are tight on the hand, but ergonomically designed for better wrist mobility and range of motion. Hockey gloves also range in sizes, and are generally available in three categories: Youth size hockey gloves run 8 inches (20 cm), 9 in (23 cm) and 10 in (25 cm); Junior sizes are 11 in (28 cm) and 12 in (30 cm); and Senior sizes run 13 in (33 cm), 14 in (36 cm) and 15 in (38 cm).

Goaltender's gloves

Goaltenders wear a different type of glove on each hand. While these gloves do offer the goaltender a measure of protection, their design is to aid the goaltender in performance of their duties. On the hand with which they carry their stick, often called the "stick hand", the goaltender wears a blocker with a large pad across the back of the forearm, usually extending just beyond the wrist. National Hockey League rules mandate that the blocking glove may be no wider than 8 in (20 cm) and no longer than 15 in (38 cm). The goaltender uses this blocker to deflect shots.

On the other hand, often called the "glove hand", the goaltender wears a catching glove called a trapper, which is similar to a baseball glove. In addition to using it to catch shots, goaltenders can distribute caught pucks by tossing them from the catching glove. National Hockey League rules limit the perimeter of the catching glove to 45 in (110 cm) and the widest part of the glove may not exceed 18 in (46 cm). Most goaltender's glove hands are their non-dominant hand like in baseball, but exceptions do exist.

References

Tags:

Ice Hockey Glove Types of glovesIce Hockey GloveGloveIce hockey

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Rise of the Planet of the ApesGoogle TranslateTaiwanSexual intercourseHamasSylvester StalloneJustin HubnerGmailArti SinghThe Ministry of Ungentlemanly WarfareJon Bon JoviMax HollowayDavid PeckerLeicester City F.C.Kolkata Knight RidersRageh OmaarBillboard Hot 100Spice GirlsBill ClintonMonica LewinskyVirat KohliAlien (film)Sigmund FreudRafael StruickTokugawa shogunateSoviet UnionRobloxCody RhodesCaitlyn JennerRinku Singh (cricketer)Mia KhalifaBarry KeoghanNullChelsea F.C.Bangalore North Lok Sabha constituencyTwitterBernard ArnaultBangalore Rural Lok Sabha constituencyAmber HeardArsenal F.C.The Beekeeper (2024 film)Aaron MotenJared GoffAtlanta FalconsKoningsdagSine and cosineElisabeth MossMark AltFascismMount TakaheJoel EmbiidOlu FashanuSlipknot (band)Murder of Junko FurutaBBC World ServiceStaff (music)Billie EilishNational Basketball AssociationPakistanQueen of TearsMark WahlbergEmma StoneRonan FarrowManchester United F.C.Generation XWatergate scandalPassover2020 United States presidential electionList of most-streamed artists on SpotifyQueens Park Rangers F.C.Scarlett JohanssonChicago BearsSteve JobsMS DhoniStephen Hawking🡆 More