Not every great save comes from a perfect position.
This rebound save from a goalie circulating online is a great example of how strong habits can bail you out when a play breaks down. The situation is chaotic — a rush play, a strange recovery, and a one-knee-down position with rotation going the wrong way. It’s hard to even tell exactly how the play develops in real time.
But what happens after the rebound is worth studying.
The Situation: Scramble Hockey
As the play unfolds, the goalie ends up in an awkward spot:
- One knee down
- Poor rotation direction
- Behind the play instead of square
- Possibly reacting late or getting fooled
From a technical standpoint, this isn’t a position you want to live in. The setup creates the scramble — and without a strong recovery habit, this likely turns into a goal.
That’s what makes the save impressive.
The Save: Push, Don’t Reach
When the rebound kicks across the crease, the goalie makes a critical decision.
Instead of:
- Reaching with the leg
- Flicking the foot in desperation
- Falling backward and hoping
He pushes hard and explodes across the net.
That push allows his body to move with the save instead of stretching away from it. The toe save works not because of flexibility, but because he moves his center of mass to the puck.
That’s the difference.
Why “Push, Don’t Reach” Matters
Reaching feels faster — but it usually makes goalies late.
When goalies reach:
- Weight stays behind
- Balance is compromised
- Saves rely on luck or flexibility
When goalies push:
- The body arrives together
- Edges create power
- Saves are controlled, not hopeful
Even from a bad position, pushing gives goalies a chance to arrive on time.
Good Save, Honest Breakdown
This is an important distinction.
The rebound save is excellent.
The setup that led to it is questionable.
That doesn’t make the breakdown negative — it makes it valuable.
Great breakdowns show both:
- What worked
- What could be cleaner earlier
Elite goaltending isn’t about never scrambling — it’s about having habits that still work when you scramble.
Watch the Full Breakdown
This post introduces the concept, but the full lesson happens in the video. Inside the Goalie Assistant Academy, this save is broken down frame by frame to show:
- Why reaching would have failed
- How the push creates time
- How explosive edge use saves the play
- What could prevent the scramble earlier
It’s a great example of how one habit can turn chaos into a save.
Final Thought
Sometimes the game gets messy.
That’s inevitable.
What matters is whether your habits hold up when it does.
This save is a perfect reminder:
Push to the puck. Don’t reach for it.
That’s how desperation turns into execution — and why breakdowns like this matter.
