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Reply To: | Mark J. Sonnier |
Date: | Tue, 14 Nov 1995 12:13:02 -0800 |
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At 03:30 PM 11/14/95 -0500, Todd Myrick wrote:
>If you are a "right-handed" person (ie, write, bat, throw, golf) right-handed
>and you play hockey, do you usually hold a hockey stick and shoot that way?
Yes and no. My natural tendency is told shoot right when armed with a
regular forward stick. Unfortunately, in goal I'm forced to shoot left, a
condition I've yet to master... In fact, there's nothing I envy more than a
goalie who can rip a precision pass the length of the ice or bank a clearing
shot high off the boards.
As for my opponents, I'd say there's a fair mix of both, which is a little
bit surprising. I seem to recall that less than 10% of the population is
left-handed. This jives with the number of lefty golfers I've run into.
Hockey players seem to approach 50-50, though, and I know a lot of left
shooters are really right handed. Could it be that left-curve sticks are a
lot more readily available to players for experimentation than left-handed
golf clubs? Or is it due to hockey players' innate creativity overcoming
instinctive handedness?
Hmm...I feel a PhD dissertation topic emerging... :)
Regards,
Mark
___________________________________________________________________________
Mark J. Sonnier, C.P.M. Voice (907)786-6505
Purchasing Agent Fax (907)786-6515
University of Alaska Anchorage e-mail: [log in to unmask]
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