By Terry Johnson, Original Stix
1800's - The first stick manufacturers emerge in Canada. At this time, sticks are hand carved from a single piece of wood.
1950's - Manufacturers begin wrapping wooden blades with fiberglass for reinforcement, pioneering the use of synthetic materials in sticks.
You can't eat this banana.
1970's - The sport continues to adopt synthetic materials as fiberglass is now used throughout stick blades and shafts, offering lighter and more durable sticks than ever before.
1980's - Aluminum shafts explode in popularity. While much heavier and stiffer than wood and fiberglass sticks, aluminum sticks offered unprecedented durability.
1990's - Featuring the flexibility of wood and the stability of wooden sticks, composite shafts are rapidly adopted throughout the ‘90s.
2000's and beyond - The one-piece composite stick is introduced, forever changing the sport. Superior to wooden sticks in nearly every category, players of all skill levels make the switch. By the end of the decade, wooden sticks are no longer used at the NHL® level.
7 comments
Composite sticks ruined the NHL. Now everyone is a superstar. Back then you had the snipers, Mike Bossy, Guy Lafleur, Bobby Hull, Dale Hawerchuk, etc. Now Joe Blow is a sniper. Have of the time these guys cant even hit the net. When Bobby Orr shot the puck he knew where it was going.
Do you know anything about field hockey sticks?
how did you get this info