Yes
It could be over here
Lorraine K Garman has written: 'A cinematographical and mechanical analysis of the push pass in field hockey' -- subject(s): Field hockey, Human mechanics
between pus pass and full hit. result chip hit
'Straight' means to pass the ball directly forwards, in a line parallel to the sidelines, i.e. straight up the field.
A push pass is where you put the field hockey stick against the ball (as if you had just stopped it) and shove it towards the desired target. When the ball is moving, you should end with your stick facing the target. It should not make a noise like a slap shot does, since you never actually hit the ball.
yes
If you get an assist in field hockey, that means that no player (besides the goal scorer) touched the ball after you get it and pass it to the scorer, finishing the ball. Here's the play-by-play: the ball is in your possession. You get rid of the ball and another player on your team gets it in the goal and scores.
Tackle the opposition when they have the ball; pass the ball to teammates; maintain possession; score goals; prevent the other team scoring goals against you.
shuttle pass
A tip pass in hockey is when a player shots the puck to a player from far away and while you do this pass it usually rises of the ground like a small lob in soccer.
A centre pass; the ball is placed at about halfway across the centreline, and played in any direction by one player, with all rules for a free hit applying.
Sports tape for field hockey is generally used to cover up scratch marks, which develop over playing. After you get multiple scratch marks in one place, and look like they can be threatening the usage of your field hockey stick, use the tape then. You can also use it to keep the binding around the top of your field hockey stick from falling off.