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    Friday, February 10th, 2012
    1:59 am
    A brief history with the Hockey Puck
    A standard hockey puck is constructed of six ounces of black vulcanized rubber. It is round, using a three-inch diameter
    and it is one inch thick. Youth players (Mite level, or 8-years-old and under) sometimes use blue pucks which weigh
    four ounces in order to help with their early skill development. These pucks are easier to stick handle, shoot, and
    lift for younger players. There's also training pucks which can be ten ounces or more, up to two pounds. These could
    differ colors, typically orange, and so are utilized to build wrist strength and puck handling speed. Street and
    floor hockey make use of a large number of colors, materials, and puck designs depending on the surface being played
    upon or the rules of every game. Most of these different pucks have something in common, however. They all evolved
    from the same simple origins hundreds of years ago.

    The first hockey pucks were stated to be slices cut from tree branches. These pucks didn't have standard size or
    diameter requirements. Ice hockey is thought to possess started out various early games, one of them similar
    to field hockey, called hurley ball. Ice hockey and its precursors such as hurley continued to utilize balls until
    the late 1800s. The ball was later adapted right into a puck after the game gone to live in the ice. Players cut the ball on
    both ends to form a flatter puck-like fit around result in the ball more manageable on the ice surface. The first
    vulcanized rubber flat hockey pucks were used in 1886. These early pucks were more crude than modern pucks,
    because they did not have the same smooth, round circumference. Improvements about bat roosting first vulcanized models
    continued over time, until they reached the shape we realize today.

    The foundation with the word puck is uncertain. Some think that the phrase is related to the verb ” to puck,” that is
    used to describe the act of striking or pushing a hurley ball. This word, produced from the term poke, could be
    linked to the Scottish Gaelic word “puc,” or even the Irish word “poc,” meaning to poke, punch, or deliver a blow.
    It's considered that Halifax natives, a lot of whom were Irish and played hurley, could have originally introduced
    the word in Canada. The first known printed mention of the the phrase puck was at Montreal in 1867, a year after
    the initial indoor game was played there.
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