What is in hockey, what is shinny?
Simply he said Shinny is an informal kind of hockey game played on the ice without other rules or positions with the exception of goalkeeper and without protective equipment. The only required components of Shinny, according to enthusiasts, are ice skates and the ice surface on which they can play. Because players are without protective equipment such as helmet and pillows, roofing/cliffs or puck hit to rise above the ice is forbidden. Even with this rule, however, injuries to Shinny players are largely just another part of the game experience.
No nets, referees or equipment are connected in Shinny. Shinny players usually bring their own skates, while your chopsticks, puck and target boundaries will find items. Huries can be branches of broom or trees if it is rigid and can be used to hit puck. The puck can be a can or piece of fruit or some robust object that can withstand beating. In the history of Canada, a special kind of temporary puck used in Shinny was a frozen horse droppings that was runningThey referred to as road apples. Often, a can also often used, because after several games the shape begins to resemble a real metal ball with a repeated pummeling of sticks. The boundaries of the targets can be either naturally bounded or temporary.
Teams are initially formed in Shinny when all players throw sticks into the pile. The person is selected to divide the sticks into two groups. Players then get their own stick and create a team with other players whose stick was in the same group. Both resulting groups become enemy teams. Each team is named goalkeeper to secure the boundaries of the targets and prevent the second team from scoring points.
Shinny is basically a Canadian term, but it was originally derived from the Scottish word and the "Shinty" game, the type of field hocklíč. In a real nationalist form, Shinny is offered in a sufficient number of recreational centers in Canada and the game includes all ages. INThe United States is called scrimmage or hockey picking up. Shinny variants include street hockey, a version that did not play on the ice, and Ringette, a contactless version.
There is also a special discourse related to Shinny in real Canadian fashion. The arena is often referred to as the "Ice Palace", "Deke" is a complex defensive move designed to confuse the opposition, and the "Tic-Tac-toe playground" is a number of coordinated movements performed by the key players in the team to score the target.