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Why Nick Suzuki wins face-offs. It’s not speed it’s leverage. 🧠🏒 Period 1 Shift 5 Project Hockey IQ



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In this video, we break down Nick Suzuki’s fifth shift vs the Florida Panthers, focusing on one small detail that makes a massive difference: how elite centers win faceoffs.

This isn’t about quick hands.

We slow the clip down and show how Suzuki wins an offensive-zone draw by understanding where referees usually drop the puck, using body leverage, and attacking the highest-probability area of the faceoff dot with the strongest part of his blade. Even without seeing the puck, you can tell who’s going to win the draw just by watching his foot placement and balance.

The shift also highlights:

Why trying to “cover the whole dot” doesn’t work

How centermen should think in terms of leverage and probability

Smart F3 positioning after the faceoff

Subtle stick details that win possession battles

How small Hockey IQ habits keep your team on the right side of the puck

This is exactly how we teach the game — shift by shift, detail by detail, using real NHL clips you can actually apply on the ice.

#HockeyIQ #FaceoffIQ #NickSuzuki

2 Comments

  1. great video. in order for suzuki to reach bergeron level overall, this is the one area he needs to really work on — faceoffs.

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