no
The main factor causing the puck to slow down its run is friction as it rubs against the ice. Electricity does not directly affect the puck's motion on an icy surface.
It depends. If s/he does not have the puck or just have it, no. If s/he has the puck, yes and no: if s/he does not know that you are there and you are behind them, no you cannot hit them; if they see you and you haven't skated hard at them, yes.
Now there is not an NHL 10 for PS2 only for Xbox 360 and PS3.
On ice, the puck experiences less friction due to the smooth surface, allowing it to slide further with less force. On the street, the rougher surface creates more friction, making it necessary to exert more force to push the puck. Overall, the forces required to move the puck on ice are generally lower compared to those needed on the street.
, To answer your question, a Hockey "Offside" is when the player crosses the offensive blue line before the puck. There is a move called "Dragging the line" that NHL players, or in general any hockey player (Like myself) use. What they do is keep a skate ON the blue line when the puck is crossing the line and you are ahead of the play and/or puck.
Offsides is when a player crosses the blue line before another player on the same team with the puck crosses into there zone. The player with the puck must enter there zone first. This is to prevent a player from just sitting by the goal waiting for someone to pass the puck to them so they can score.
i cant bleve it ahh... its not comming out for playstaytion 2 === === NO NHL10 FOR PS2 BOOO BOOO
Offsides, resulting in a face off taking place outside of the previous attack zone.
No, you don't dribble a puck. You stickhandle with the puck.
I've only played 2k10 but from what I've heard nhl10 is much better
On a rink rink.