About Performance, our history
LOST GAME DESPITE MOST SHOTS ON GOAL - why does this happen?
Performance International Rennul AB has the answer.
Hockey is easy to understand. Most goals win. Period. The team with the highest number of training hours should then be the best, shouldn’t they? It is not obviously so. An injured top player or a bad referee are things mentioned when a tough loss has to be explained. But are these really viable explanations?
The company Performance has after several years of statistics and analysis found the key to success in hockey. It's not just about shooting as many shots as possible; it is the characteristics of the shot that determine success. Conversely, the best defense game is when defenders force opponents to shoot the shot that the keeper easily saves. Here is an introduction to the PerformanceTM definition of what is good and bad hockey. Our work is so extensive that the conclusions are scientifically proven.
Performance International Rennul AB has the answer.
Hockey is easy to understand. Most goals win. Period. The team with the highest number of training hours should then be the best, shouldn’t they? It is not obviously so. An injured top player or a bad referee are things mentioned when a tough loss has to be explained. But are these really viable explanations?
The company Performance has after several years of statistics and analysis found the key to success in hockey. It's not just about shooting as many shots as possible; it is the characteristics of the shot that determine success. Conversely, the best defense game is when defenders force opponents to shoot the shot that the keeper easily saves. Here is an introduction to the PerformanceTM definition of what is good and bad hockey. Our work is so extensive that the conclusions are scientifically proven.
Background
During the 1980s, Stefan Lunner was one of Sweden's top goalkeepers. Although he already as a 25 -year-old had to end his career after a knee injury, he could look back on a successful 10-year elite career. As goalkeeper Stefan felt very high expectations on to not let in any score at all, regardless of the difficulty of the shot. The pressure came from coaches, teammates , spectators , but above all from himself.
Many of his saves was perceived by others as fantastic, while Stefan himself thought that the shots were pretty simple to save . Conversely he perceived from others that he should have saved many of the shots that looked easy, but that Stefan felt was impossible to save.
After his active career Stefan became a coach. To be able to define his hockey philosophy gaining on his experiences as active goalie, Stefan and his brother Professor Thomas Lunner investigated, if there was any connection between the shots were experienced difficult and those easy to save. After several years of work, they noted - yes, there is a connection. The theory of green and red shots was thus born. The Performance theory.
Many of his saves was perceived by others as fantastic, while Stefan himself thought that the shots were pretty simple to save . Conversely he perceived from others that he should have saved many of the shots that looked easy, but that Stefan felt was impossible to save.
After his active career Stefan became a coach. To be able to define his hockey philosophy gaining on his experiences as active goalie, Stefan and his brother Professor Thomas Lunner investigated, if there was any connection between the shots were experienced difficult and those easy to save. After several years of work, they noted - yes, there is a connection. The theory of green and red shots was thus born. The Performance theory.