Better Edges Start at the Ankles: Here's How to Train Them
Better Edges Start at the Ankles: Here's How to Train Them
The most overlooked fix for skating power, edge control, and injury prevention in hockey
Dr. Jamie Phillips | Ghost Athletica | Grand Rapids, Michigan
Ankles do not get much attention in most hockey training programs.
They should.
Tight or unstable ankles do not just affect how your skates feel. They limit your stride length, compromise your edge control, and reduce your overall power output. And over time, that limitation creates compensations that travel up the chain, showing up as knee pain, hip dysfunction, or lower back problems that seem unrelated to the ankle but trace directly back to it.
The good news is that both ankle mobility and ankle stability are trainable. And the return on a small, consistent investment here is significant.
Why Ankle Function Is Critical for Hockey Skating
Skating places demands on the ankle joint that are genuinely unique among sports.
You are constantly transitioning between dorsiflexion and plantarflexion within each stride cycle. You rely on subtle, precise angle shifts for edge control that determines your ability to accelerate, decelerate, and change direction. And you are absorbing and transferring force through your foot and ankle on every single push.
If you lack mobility, you cannot get low in your skating stance or push efficiently through your full range. Your stride shortens, your posture becomes more upright, and your power output drops.
If you lack stability, you struggle with balance, edge control, and injury resistance, particularly in the single-leg positions that skating constantly demands.
Some athletes naturally have better ankle range or stability than others. But everyone can improve, and in our hockey training programs at Ghost Athletica in Grand Rapids, ankle function is something we address directly rather than assuming it will take care of itself.
Signs Your Ankles Need Work
Run through this list honestly:
- Your stride feels short or choppy without a clear explanation
- You have trouble holding deep edge angles on either side
- Single-leg balance drills feel consistently unstable
- You experience knee or hip discomfort during skating or squatting that does not have an obvious source
- You wear out one side of your skate boots significantly faster than the other
If any of these sound familiar, the ankle is a likely root contributor and worth addressing directly before chasing the symptom further up the chain.
Mobility: Building the Range to Skate Deeper
Dorsiflexion, the motion of pulling your toes toward your shin, is the single most critical ankle movement for skating mechanics. Limited dorsiflexion forces an upright skating posture, shortens your stride, and disrupts knee tracking through the push phase.
Top mobility drills for hockey athletes:
Kneeling wall dorsiflexion: Kneel with one foot forward and drive your knee toward the wall while keeping your heel on the ground. This directly targets the range needed for a deep skating stance.
Banded ankle mobilizations: A resistance band applied at the front of the ankle joint during a lunge position helps restore true joint mobility rather than just stretching the surrounding soft tissue.
Heel-elevated deep squats: Elevating the heels takes the ankle range requirement out of the squat temporarily, allowing you to train depth and position while gradually building the mobility to do it flat-footed over time.
Foam rolling calves and anterior tibialis: Addressing soft tissue restriction in the calf and the front of the lower leg is often a necessary first step before joint mobility work can produce its full effect.
Mobility work should be done regularly, ideally before every skating session, strength training session, or dry-land workout. Five minutes of focused work before training is enough to produce meaningful change over time.
Stability: Owning the Range You Have
Mobility without stability is an incomplete solution. Once you have built more range at the ankle, the next step is training your body to control that range under load and in the dynamic positions that skating demands.
Top stability drills for hockey athletes:
Single-leg balance with reach: Standing on one leg, reach the opposite foot in multiple directions while maintaining control of the stance ankle. This builds proprioception and single-leg stability simultaneously.
Banded ankle perturbations: A partner or coach applies light, unpredictable resistance to the ankle while you maintain a single-leg stance. This trains reactive stability that transfers directly to edge control on the ice.
Lateral hops to balance: Hop laterally and hold the landing on a single leg for two to three seconds, building the eccentric ankle and hip stability needed for controlled edge transitions.
Single-leg RDLs and step-downs: Both of these movements challenge ankle stability in positions that closely mirror the demands of skating stride mechanics and directional changes.
Stability training enhances proprioception, which is your nervous system's awareness of joint position in space, reduces injury risk significantly, and produces direct improvements in edge control and skating efficiency.
How Often to Train Ankle Mobility and Stability
Mobility work: 3 to 5 times per week, done before skating or lifting sessions as part of your warm-up.
Stability work: 2 to 3 times per week, incorporated into your strength training warm-up or as a standalone component of your dry-land routine.
You do not need long sessions. Five to ten minutes of focused, consistent work compounds quickly. Ankle training is one of those areas where frequency matters more than volume, and where athletes who show up consistently see results that surprise them.
The Takeaways
Ankle mobility and stability are foundational to efficient skating, clean edges, and long-term injury prevention in hockey. Limited ankle range reduces stride power and creates compensation patterns that eventually become pain further up the chain. Mobility drills open the range. Stability work teaches your body to own and control it.
This is not an advanced training concept reserved for elite athletes. It is a fundamental that pays dividends at every level, from youth hockey in Grand Rapids through junior and college programs.
If you are a hockey player or goaltender in the Grand Rapids area looking for a performance program that addresses the details most training programs overlook, Ghost Athletica's hockey training programs are built to cover exactly this. Learn more at ghostathletica.com.
Dr. Jamie Phillips, DPT Ghost Athletica | Ghost Goaltending | Grand Rapids Hockey Training Byron Center, Michigan | ghostathletica.com
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