Core & Anti-rotation

Bear Crawl Variations

Anti-rotation coreshouldersquadship flexors Strength/neural
i.

How to Do It

From the bear position (knees hovering an inch off the floor, back flat, hips at shoulder height), perform crawling variations — moving laterally, backward, or adding a shoulder tap or reach between steps. Keep the knees low, hips level, and resist any twisting. Move slowly and controlled through each pattern for the prescribed distance or time.

ii.

Why It Works

Challenges anti-rotation core control and shoulder/hip coordination across multiple directions; varying the direction and adding reaches forces the trunk to stabilize against different rotary and shifting loads, broadening full-body stability.

iii.

Hockey Transfer

Builds the multi-directional coordination and trunk control that transfer to the varied directional demands of skating — forward, lateral, and backward — while keeping a strong, stable core in low contested positions.

iv.

Coaching Cues

  • "Knees hover, back flat"
  • "hips quiet in every direction"
  • "slow, controlled, no twist"
v.

Common Mistakes

Hips swaying or rotating; knees popping up high; rushing and losing the brace

vi.

Progression / Regression

Progression

add load, longer distance, or harder direction patterns

Regression

forward crawl only, slower, shorter distance

vii.

Primary Muscles

Anti-rotation coreshouldersquadship flexors
viii.

Energy System

Strength/neural

Ready to train?

Put it to work
on the ice.

This exercise is part of a fully periodized 12-week off-ice program — built by a sport scientist who coaches at the national level.

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