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Ice Hockey Diagram – Deke Technique

Explaining ice hockey techniques becomes much more easier and time saving with illustrations. The Ice Hockey solution for ConceptDraw PRO is designed as a tool that helps produce ice hockey illustrations of any complexity in minutes.

Basketball Court Diagram and Basketball Positions

ConceptDraw PRO software extended with the Basketball solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park provides libraries, templates and samples allowing basketball specialists and fans to draw the professional looking diagrams and schemas of any complexity in a few minutes. It’s very convenient way to explain the different basketball tactics, positions and rules using the visual illustrations.

Ice Hockey Offside Diagram

"Offsides" is a very basic sports term, which can be very hard to explain to a novice. The fundamental concepts in sports can be extremely difficult to convey without a drawing, that's why we included an Offsides Sample in the Hockey solution. Explaining with ConceptDraw in your playbook is easier than ever before!
"A deke is an ice hockey technique which a player uses to get past an opponent or "fake out" an opposing player. The term is a Canadianism formed by abbreviating decoy.
The deke may originally have referred to quickly pushing the puck forward or laterally with the forehand and catching it on the backhand (or vice-versa), but as hockey has evolved so has the deke and it is now used to refer to a wide variety of feints, fakes or skillful maneuvers to beat defenders or goaltenders. The position of the player performing the deke and the opponent determines where the puck will be moved and the speed. The deke can be used to move the puck out of reach of an opposing player, move the puck past the opposing player, or quickly change direction of the puck so the opposing player is caught out of position. Dekes are usually used in combination with either a change of direction or speed, or both; the deke may refer to the entire sequence of actions as well as the maneuver(s) made with the stick. Often a change in direction or a change in speed is enough to get past an opposing player, but dekes are used in combination with these to better protect the puck and get by a defender." [Deke (ice hockey). Wikipedia]
The ice hockey tactic diagram example "Deke (ice hockey)" was created using the ConceptDraw PRO diagramming and vector drawing software extended with the Hockey solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park.
Ice hockey tactic diagram
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Used Solutions

Soccer (Football) Formation

Using diagrams is the easiest way to explain the soccer formations. The Soccer solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park is designed as a tool that helps you produce the soccer diagrams in a few minutes. The predesigned samples of the Soccer solution for ConceptDraw PRO depict the most popular formation diagrams.
"In ice hockey, a play is offside if a player on the attacking team enters the offensive zone before the puck, unless the puck is sent or carried there by a defending player. When an offside violation occurs, a linesman will stop play. A faceoff is then held at a neutral ice spot closest to the infraction to restart play. ...
The National Hockey League (NHL) and International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) apply similar rules for determining offside. A player is judged to be offside if their skates completely cross the blue line dividing their offensive zone from the neutral zone before the puck completely crosses the same line. In both organizations, it is the position of a player's skates that are important. They cannot use their stick or other part of their body to remain onside. The lone caveat to this rule is that an attacking player's skates may precede the puck into the attacking zone when they are skating backwards and if they are in control of the puck." [Offside (ice hockey). Wikipedia]
The ice hockey tactic diagram example "Offside (ice hockey)" was created using the ConceptDraw PRO diagramming and vector drawing software extended with the Hockey solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park.
Ice hockey tactic diagram
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Used Solutions

Ice Hockey Diagram – Penalty Kill Forecheck Angling Drill

ConceptDraw Ice Hockey solution is a good tool to think about complex things. You don't need a software during hockey match, of course. Drawing software helps to plan strategy and tactics before a match, and then analyze mistakes and results.

Soccer (Football) Dimensions

The Soccer solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park is designed as a tool that helps produce soccer illustrations of any complexity in minutes. You can quick and easy design the professional looking plan of the soccer field with set up dimensions.
"Markings.
Lines.
The centre line divides the ice in half crosswise. It is used to judge icing, meaning that if a team sends the puck across the centre line (red line), blue line and then across the goal line (that is to say, shoots or dumps the puck past the goal line from behind their own side of the centre line) it is said to be icing. ...
Faceoff spots and circles.
There are 9 faceoff spots on a hockey rink. Most faceoffs take place at these spots. There are two spots in each end zone, two at each end of the neutral zone, and one in the centre of the rink.
There are faceoff circles around the centre ice and end zone faceoff spots. There are hash marks painted on the ice near the end zone faceoff spots. The circles and hash marks show where players may legally position themselves during a faceoff or in game play. ...
Spot and circle dimensions.
Both the center faceoff spot and center faceoff circle are blue. The spot is a solid blue circle 12 inches (30 cm) in diameter. Within the spot is a center, a circle 30 feet (9.1 m) in diameter, painted with a blue line 2 inches (5.1 cm) in width.
All of the other faceoff spots have outlines 2 inches (5.1 cm) thick, forming a circle 2 feet (0.61 m) in diameter measured from the outsides of the outlines, and are filled in with red in all areas except for the 3 inches (7.6 cm) space from the tops and bottoms of the circles, measured from the insides of the outline. ...
Goal posts and nets.
At each end of the ice, there is a goal consisting of a metal goal frame and cloth net in which each team must place the puck to earn points. According to NHL and IIHF rules, the entire puck must cross the entire goal line in order to be counted as a goal. ...
Goal area.
The crease is a special area of the ice designed to allow the goaltender to perform without interference. In most leagues, goals are disallowed if an attacking player enters the goal crease with a stick, skate, or any body part before the puck. For the purposes of this rule, the crease extends vertically from the painted lines to the top of the goal frame. ...
Goaltender trapezoid.
During the 2004-05 American Hockey League (AHL) season, an experimental rule was implemented for the first seven weeks of the season, instituting a goaltender trap zone, more commonly called the trapezoid in reference to its shape. Under the rule, it is prohibited for the goaltender to handle the puck anywhere behind the goal line that is not within the trapezoidal area. If they do so they are assessed a minor penalty for delay of game. ...
Referee's crease.
The referee's crease is a semicircle ten feet in radius in front of the scorekeepers bench." [Ice hockey rink. Wikipedia]
The diagram template "Ice hockey rink view from long side" for the ConceptDraw PRO diagramming and vector drawing software is included in the Hockey solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park.
Ice hockey rink diagram template
Ice hockey rink diagram template, hockey field, hockey field diagram, hockey field layout,
Used Solutions

Soccer (Football) Positions

Explaining soccer positions becomes much more easier and time saving with visual drawings. ConceptDraw PRO software extended with the Soccer solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park is very useful tool that will help you design the soccer-related drawings of any complexity in minutes.

Basketball Defense Drills

The Basketball solution for ConceptDraw PRO includes a wide collection of templates and samples to help you draw any basketball-related diagrams and schemas as quickly as possible. All templates are ready-to-modify. You can start from any of them, change positions, add vector clipart from the libraries, text and thus get ready diagram in some clicks.

Soccer (Football) Offside

It’s very convenient to explain the different tactics and positions using the visual drawings. ConceptDraw PRO software extended with the Soccer solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park provides libraries, templates and samples allowing specialists or soccer fans to draw the soccer-related diagrams and schemas of any complexity in a few minutes.

Create Soccer (Football) Positions

Explaining the soccer techniques and rules becomes much more easier and time saving with illustrations. The Soccer solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park provides the libraries, templates and samples that will help you produce the soccer illustrations of any complexity in minutes.
The vector stencils library "Hockey rinks" contains 4 templates for drawing ice hockey player positions diagrams. The symbols example "Design elements - Hockey rinks" was created using the ConceptDraw PRO diagramming and vector drawing software extended with the Hockey solution from the Sport area of ConceptDraw Solution Park.
Ice hockey rink templates
Ice hockey rink templates, hockey field, hockey field diagram, hockey field layout, ice rink layout, hockey field, hockey field diagram, hockey field layout,
Used Solutions

ice hockey field, ice hockey rink diagram, ice hockey rink layout, hockey rink, hockey rink dimensions, hockey tactic, ice hockey tactic Ice Hockey

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The Ice Hockey Solution extends the capabilities of ConceptDraw PRO v9.5 (or later) with samples, templates, and libraries of vector objects for drawing hockey diagrams, plays schemas, and illustrations. The Ice Hockey Solution can be used to make polishe