Jeremy Laura
Detroit Red Wings |
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Location: MI Joined: 01.26.2016
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I wasn’t so particular about my tape job. As long as it was cloth and waxed, it didn’t matter to me. I was very particular about the curve and had a family member who was in pre-prototype manufacturing, build me a jig. I’d then heat up the sticks with a heat gun and clamp it to the jig. Obviously this was in the wooden/fiberglass era. I wasn’t good enough for the manufacturers to build them for me, so I had to do it myself. I remember my dad driving me to a hockey shop in Niagara Falls and we’d buy two dozen at a time. I seem to remember it was about $300 total, which is the cost of one high end stick today. I had a number left over but my kids ruined most of them playing street hockey. I still have four unused Bending Branches sticks (old guys will remember them) that I’ve kept for no particular reason other than nostalgia. |
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danimal6777
Detroit Red Wings |
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Location: Hell , MI Joined: 09.15.2009
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I use double sided Gorilla tape. I find I hold onto the puck much better since I started using it. |
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Jeremy Laura
Detroit Red Wings |
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Location: MI Joined: 01.26.2016
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I wasn’t so particular about my tape job. As long as it was cloth and waxed, it didn’t matter to me. I was very particular about the curve and had a family member who was in pre-prototype manufacturing, build me a jig. I’d then heat up the sticks with a heat gun and clamp it to the jig. Obviously this was in the wooden/fiberglass era. I wasn’t good enough for the manufacturers to build them for me, so I had to do it myself. I remember my dad driving me to a hockey shop in Niagara Falls and we’d buy two dozen at a time. I seem to remember it was about $300 total, which is the cost of one high end stick today. I had a number left over but my kids ruined most of them playing street hockey. I still have four unused Bending Branches sticks (old guys will remember them) that I’ve kept for no particular reason other than nostalgia. - bluelineenforcer
That’s awesome! I saw an interview with Bobby Hull. He used to stick them in a toilet but the curve would disappear as the game went on. |
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Jeremy Laura
Detroit Red Wings |
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Location: MI Joined: 01.26.2016
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I use double sided Gorilla tape. I find I hold onto the puck much better since I started using it. - danimal6777
Ok, that’s genius. Do you have to re-wrap during a game, or will one application get you through? |
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ThatDarnCat
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Location: In the control group Joined: 04.01.2010
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I thought it was interesting how Bobby Orr only had a single wrap of tape on his stick but in the days of fiberglass on wood blades, I couldn't afford such slight protection on my sticks.
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tmanv
Detroit Red Wings |
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Location: Ottawa, ON Joined: 02.22.2008
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Tape it once and leave it until it falls off or gets cut with a skate haha |
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My son plays U11, and all the kids are drawing pictures and words on the blade tape. Bedard can be credited for this new trend. |
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danimal6777
Detroit Red Wings |
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Location: Hell , MI Joined: 09.15.2009
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Ok, that’s genius. Do you have to re-wrap during a game, or will one application get you through? - Jeremy Laura
Thanks. Just one application. It doesn’t make for a real quick release though🤔. |
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PrinceLH
Toronto Maple Leafs |
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Location: Belleville, ON Joined: 07.06.2007
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Nothing on the blade, on the knob I would start with a medium knob and swirl tape it 6 inches down, then back to the top again. Allows the glove to slide up to the knob a bit quicker with the overlay not catching at the bottom of the tape job. I still use carbonfiber shafts with blades from an aluminum. Sometimes, if I can get a wooden or composite blade from a broken shaft, I try to shave it to fit the composite hollow shaft and use it until it breaks. |
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WAAAAAAY back in the day (mid-80s.....), I used wood, had Gaffer's tape (used to tape down wiring in film sets, etc...) and cover the blade. I was ambidextrous, so the blade was kinda straight with a slight bend to the left as I had more power when shooting that way. My daughter now uses Gaffer's tape for her Irish Dance hard shoes!!! Funny how things come back around..... Being ambidextrous, I had other players try to get me to settle on the right as I had more power (supposedly....) and of course let me use their twigs to see what worked. Had a guy who had Peyroni's Disease of the his hockey stick but it was a rec league so no one really cared; that thing had a HUGE left-handed curve.....and he could blast a slapper but couldn't control it too well (I think he had Trouble With The Curve ).
I taped the top of the stick about 3" down from the top with a boat-load of white cloth tape (guess it was medical tape or some such...) so I could grind the top of the stick into the ribs of guys I didn't like. Heard Lordy Gordie did the same thing, so I figured if it was good enough for him, was good enough for me. I also taped my knuckles because....well, I was a kid in a men's league and things happened; until I was caught and "invited to leave"........
Never played w/composite twigs; always CCM sticks, usually 2d-hand, became great firewood after a few weeks. I watch the flex on the sticks of today; I know that our old wooden twigs would disintegrate if players today had to use them. |
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Nothing on the blade, on the knob I would start with a medium knob and swirl tape it 6 inches down, then back to the top again. Allows the glove to slide up to the knob a bit quicker with the overlay not catching at the bottom of the tape job. I still use carbonfiber shafts with blades from an aluminum. Sometimes, if I can get a wooden or composite blade from a broken shaft, I try to shave it to fit the composite hollow shaft and use it until it breaks. - PrinceLH
I always preferred the shaft-blade combo. Way less bounce when receiving passes and stick handling . |
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