Hockey Talk: A Breakdown of Hockey Slang, Chirps, and Lingo (2024)

While every sport has its own terms and sayings, hockey is on an entirely different level. Hockey players essentially speak their own foreign language, which decades-old phrases being used to reference everything from basic plays and equipment to trash talk and the quality of one’s hair.

To the uninitiated, hearing a string of these phrases in succession may sound like complete gibberish – but you can be sure the message is carefully articulated and highly descriptive.

To help shed some light on the basics of hockey slang, we’ve laid out definitions of some of the more commonly used terms and phrases in the game. This is really just the tip of the iceberg, but wrapping your head around these to begin with will get you started down the path of chirping like a beauty with immaculate salad.

Apple: Another word for assist.

Biscuit: Another word for puck.

Bottle Rocket: A goal that breaks the goalie’s water bottle by popping it off the top of the net.

Bucket: Another word for helmet.

Celly: Short for celebration, as you’d see after a goal or a win.

Cheese: The upper area of the net, specifically in reference to goal-scoring (see also: top shelf).

Cherry-Picker: A player who lurks behind the opposition’s defense in an attempt to get a breakaway or an odd-man rush opportunity.

Chirp: Another word for trash talk.

Clapper: Another term for a slapshot, in reference to the sound made when the blade of the stick contacts the puck and the ice.

Dangle: A quick and often captivating stickhandling maneuver that dekes out a defender. Work on your dangles with our SweetHands and Attack Triangle stickhandling tools.

Dish: Another word for a pass, particularly one that sets a teammate up for a scoring opportunity. Work on your passing skills with our PassMaster passing trainer.

Face Wash: When one player wipes the palm of his glove in the face of another player.

Fishbowl: Typically used as a chirp to reference another player’s helmet with a full plastic shield instead of a cage.

Flamingo: When a player stands on one skate to avoid getting hit in the leg by a shot.

Flow: A compliment in reference to the length, quality, or general beauty of a player’s hair (see also: lettuce, salad).

Lettuce: A compliment in reference to the length, quality, or general beauty of a player’s hair (see also: flow, salad).

Light the Lamp: Another term for scoring a goal, in reference to the lamp behind the net that lights up after scoring.

Lumber: Another word for a hockey stick, despite the fact that most are no longer made of wood (see also: twig).

Muffin: A weak shot that should have been saved after waffling back and forth in the air all the way to the net.’

Pillows: Another term for a goaltender’s pads.

Plumber: A player on the team who may not be the most skilled but who still serves an invaluable role by doing the dirty work in the corners and helping his team win.

Sauce: An abbreviated term for a saucer pass that leaves the ice in order to be more difficult to deflect or intercept. Work on your sauce with our PassMaster passing trainer.

Sin Bin: Another term for the penalty box.

The Show: A term commonly used to refer to the NHL.

Snipe: A goal scored from mid to long range that cleanly picks a corner to sneak past the goalie. Work on your sniping skills with help from our Shooting Tarp, and check out these tips for improving wrist shot power and accuracy.

Tape to Tape: A term used to reference a great pass that travels cleanly from one player’s blade to another player’s blade.

Tic-Tac-Toe: A term used to reference a quick passing play that results in a goal.

Top Shelf: The upper area of the net, specifically in reference to goal-scoring (see also: cheese).

Twig: Another word for a hockey stick, despite the fact that most are no longer made of wood (see also: lumber).

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December 21, 2022 — Amy Budde

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Hockey Talk: A Breakdown of Hockey Slang, Chirps, and Lingo (2024)

FAQs

What is hockey lingo? ›

Celly: celebration following a goal. Cheese: the top shelf of the net. Chiclets: teeth. Chirp: to trash talk the opposing team. Clapper: a slapshot.

What does peanut butter mean in hockey? ›

Peanut Butter: a goal scored on the top shelf of the net. Pigeon: an insult to describe a player who can't score on his own and relies on others to send him the puck. Pillows: a goalie's knee pads. Pipe: the goal post. Pinch: an action by the defenseman to move into the offensive zone to keep the puck inside the zone.

What do you call a bad hockey player? ›

Bender: A bad hockey player. The term refers to the player's ankles bending or buckling while trying to skate. "Bo plays 'D' division with a bunch of benders." Biscuit: The hockey puck. "The net was wide open; you've gotta put the biscuit in the basket!"

Why is it called chirp? ›

chirp (v.)

"make a short, sharp, happy sound like a bird," mid-15c. (implied in chirping), echoic, or else a variant of Middle English chirken "to twitter" (late 14c.), from Old English cearcian "to creak, gnash." Related: Chirped. As a noun, attested from 1802.

What is a dirty dangle in hockey slang? ›

Dangle: a deke. Dirty: used to describe an incredible deke or pass (see, filthy)

What does a pizza mean in hockey? ›

Pizza (serving up a pizza)‐ a turnover in the middle of the ice that provides the other team with a fantastic scoring chance. Pylon‐ an extremely slow player. Typically a player who gets turnstiled frequently.

What does lettuce mean in hockey? ›

While it's been adopted by other sports, like baseball, flow was popularized in hockey. It refers to long, flowing hair that extends past the bottom edge of a helmet. Lettuce, while not quite as commonly used as flow, can be used the same way.

What does cheddar mean in hockey? ›

Snipe (noun): a powerful or well placed shot that results in a pretty goal. Every bar down shot is a snipe, but not every snipe goes bar down. Top Cheese/Cheddar (adjective): used to describe a shot that goes in off or right below the crossbar. Twig (noun): hockey stick, even though none are made from wood anymore.

What is a skunk in hockey? ›

A mercy rule, slaughter rule, knockout rule, or skunk rule ends a two-competitor sports competition earlier than the scheduled endpoint if one competitor has a very large and presumably insurmountable scoring lead over the other.

What is a biscuit in hockey? ›

A hockey biscuit, on the other hand, is a colloquial term for a hockey puck. There is no difference in the physical properties or size of a hockey puck and a hockey biscuit - they are the same thing. A hockey puck is often described as a black disc, and is used as the ball in ice hockey.

What do hockey players call their hair? ›

Whether you call it chop, moss, lettuce, salad, or flow, hair is a big part of the game of hockey. Today's National Hockey League players often set the standard for flow, but youth pick up on those cues, and curls can be seen peeking out from under helmets in leagues from Mites to Juniors.

Do hockey players chirp? ›

Chirping, or trash-talking, is an essential part of the modern game, allowing players to engage in lighthearted (or sometimes not so lighthearted) banter or get in opponents' heads or throw them off their game.

What is the slang for the Stanley Cup? ›

It is commonly referred to as simply "The Cup", "The Holy Grail" or facetiously (chiefly by sportswriters) as "Lord Stanley's Mug".

Do NHL players hear the crowd noise? ›

It seems as if certain sounds, like those pesky missed shots, have dulled over time. Others, like the roar of a crowd, are channelled internally but don't overwhelm sounds or speech that are key to the action on the ice. “You can tell right away during the national anthem if it's going to be loud or not,” Stecher said.

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