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Scorecard Posted: Wednesday December 18, 2002 9:42 AMOut of the Woods Why so many hockey players are picking up high-tech sticks By Michael Farber
The passion for one-pieces, which began after Avalanche center Peter Forsberg used a Synergy in the 2000 playoffs, hasn't affected the dead-puck era: Scoring has slipped slightly since 1999-2000. Still, the new stick can make players trigger-happy. "Look at Mats Sundin," Devils goalie Martin Brodeur says of the Maple Leafs captain who swears by his Louisville composite. "He used to never take a shot beyond the circles. Ever. With the new stick he's shooting from everywhere." Naturally some traditionalists stamp their skates in protest: Blue Jackets goalie consultant Rick Wamsley, for one, laments that the game has become a technological arms race. A common complaint about one-pieces (which retail for about $150, or $120 more than a wood stick): "the puck seems to jump off the blade, making it harder to control in passing," says Sabres center Curtis Brown. That's why Brown and several others have begun using Easton's latest model, the Synergy Si-Core. The graphite blade of that stick contains silicone, which cushions the puck. The effect, he says approvingly, is to make the stick feel like it's made out of ... wood. Issue date: December 23, 2002 For more Scorecard see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, December 18. Click here to subscribe to SI.
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