0 What a year it has been.
Since April, I’ve had the pleasure of serving as strength & conditioning coach for a youth hockey organization. This includes working with numerous young hockey players between the ages of 14 and 20 each week.
Nothing makes me happier than watching an athlete put in the work and gaining another step towards fulfilling their potential. And several of our guys have certainly done that.
Urho Vaakanainen, Joonas Niemelä and Samuli Rasilainen have already made their debuts with Blues Espoo in the Finnish Elite League. Vaakanainen cracked the lineup at age 16 and was the first ´99 born in the entire country to play in the top Finnish professional league.
Contrary to many pre-tournament predictions, Kasper Björkqvist played his way into the Finnish roster at WJC 2016 and scored a goal in last night’s 8-3 victory over Slovakia.
Many others went on to don the Finnish national team jersey with the U17, U18, U19 and U20 national teams in international tournaments over the past few months.
While the individual success of our hockey players delights me, this has also been a continuous learning process on a personal level.
I’m always pondering how I can tweak our training system so that the athletes get even better results faster.
Here are 15 things I learned (and re-learned) in 2015…
1. Staying Healthy Is #1 Priority
What’s the best way to win games?
Having your best players healthy and able to play.
That’s what former Boston Bruins and Boston University strength coach, Mike Boyle, said in one of his Functional Strength Coach DVDs and this thought really resonated with me.

3 Cups in 6 years… You want to keep these guys healthy and producing on the ice
Losing your top goal scorer or starting goalie to an injury chasing arbitrary numbers in the weight room doesn’t help you win.
Keeping the guys healthy and ready to perform when it’s go time does.
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