NHL 11 Faceoff Guide

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  • RaychelSnr
    Executive Editor
    • Jan 2007
    • 4845

    #1

    NHL 11 Faceoff Guide



    Pass Back

    There are three stances from which you can attempt a pass back: upright, forehand or backhand.

    A stick lift will beat the upright or forehand stance, and a tie up will beat a backhand pass back. But your average NHL player relies on the plain old "win back" most of the time.

    If your faceoff rating is higher than the other center’s rating, you can counter with your own pass back from any stance and win the majority of draws. But if your faceoff ratings are equal, you will have to choose the appropriate counter based on your opponent’s stance.

    In versus mode, it’s important to know the faceoff ratings for all your centers. Guys with a high rating can win faceoffs cleanly, but you may have to get dirty with the third- and fourth-line centers, using stick lifts and tie ups to steal draws.

    Read More - NHL 11 Faceoff Guide
    OS Executive Editor
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  • tbbucsfan001
    Pro
    • Aug 2009
    • 642

    #2
    First.
    This is awesome.

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    • Nashtak
      Rookie
      • Feb 2011
      • 1

      #3
      I'm not sure i understand. Are those arrows always the same regardless of your handiness. If not, which one were you using for this guide? Isn't backhand the one where your players wins the faceoff in between his legs?

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      • jyoung
        Hall Of Fame
        • Dec 2006
        • 11132

        #4
        The arrows assume your player is right-handed.

        For stick lift and pass back, lefties would be pressing the opposite direction.

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        • JezFranco
          Pro
          • Jan 2010
          • 725

          #5
          The arrows are not the same regardless of handiness.

          No-brainer really, just like using the skill stick at anytime in the game, pushing the stick right or left will move your stick right or left which equals backhand or forehand depending on if the player's a rightie or leftie.

          Thank you EA - This game is officially better than sex

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          • WestCoaster
            Banned
            • Feb 2011
            • 7

            #6
            Quite straight forward to be honest, informative tips though, good stuff.

            Comment

            • jyoung
              Hall Of Fame
              • Dec 2006
              • 11132

              #7
              Re: NHL 11 Faceoff Guide

              The CPU can be tough to beat online because they are so unpredictable in what moves they do and always have perfect timing, whereas a human has to deal with lag, which changes the correct faceoff timing from game to game.

              I find the best way to beat the CPU online is to keep mixing up your tactics and just ignore whatever the CPU is doing, because the CPU never sticks with 1 move all game long like most human centers do online.
              Last edited by jyoung; 02-13-2011, 12:07 PM.

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