1. You can only use the flat side of the stick
2. Don't let the ball hit your feet
3. To score you must be inside the half cicle
4. In indoor the ball cannot leave the floor
5. In indoor you cannot have a backswing
6. If you back is toward another girls face that is called obstruction
7. Dont let your stick go above your waist, try not to let the ball above your waist either
That's all I can think of right now... AND Field Hockey DOES RULE!
It is a mixture of field hockey's rules and lacrosses rules.
There are many places a person could find rules for field hockey. For instance, a person may check out a book from the local library which describes the rules and play of field hockey. Additionally, a person may check with the websites called Field Hockey ISport and NFHS Field Hockey. Both websites offer information on the rules of field hockey.
The simple answer to that question is No you can not Shoulder Barge in Field Hockey at all it is against the rules
To implement the Rules of Hockey whilst maintaining Player Safety
There is currently no offside rule in field hockey. There were prior offside rules, rules that restricted the positioning of players from the attacking team in a way similar to the offside rule in soccer. The offside rules were changed as the rules of field hockey changed. The evolution of the field hockey offside rule culminated with its abolition in the mid 1990s.
Ice hockey is played on ice, while field hockey is played on a grass surface, the rules in field hockey are kinder than ice hockey, and the sticks vary between versions.
Manufacturers do not make left-handed field hockey sticks because there is zero demand for them: they are illegal according to the rules and regulations of the sport for traditional and safety reasons.
one is that they can't hurt or purposely get in the way of a player. GO UNI!
The roll-in was replaced by a free hit from the line in the 1970 revision of the rules.
Hockey is very entertaining to people who know the rules. If you don't know the rules, then hockey is hard to understand.
The game of ice hockey probably evolved from the game of field hockey that was played in Northern Europe for hundreds of years. The modern version of ice-hockey finds its origins in the rules laid down by a Canadian named J G Creighton. His rules were implemented in the first game of ice hockey played in Montreal, Canada in the year 1875.
Hockey's rules were created by it's creator, but over time, we changed to rules to our liking.