I hope you guys don't get tired of me reminiscing. One of the ways to get to a good goalie is setting him up with either fast or slow moves in the shot set-up. Even a slower shot creates the need for incredible time reactions if it should be shot in a surprising area and angle. Case in point; I used to do a tap tap dance between the close and far man on the 3 line back and forth and then mix the middle man almost like setting a rythm and then doing a quick double time only to then do a dink push from the side. How much time do you have to react and how fast does the ball get from man to goal? If the goalie is keeping up to your moves he has a problem slowing down for the dink. And the opposite is true. When I moved to Oregon in 1979 my wife(my goalie) and I went looking for some action and finally found where the weekly tournaments were being held. I played my herky jerky style with fast back pin reversals while my wife, God bless her, shot a 3/4 speed control game of picking angles and switches from in back. Our first game was against the two guys that seemed pretty good but we skunked them, er SHE skunked them. They tried to keep up to my stuff and she picked them apart because they over reacted. These boys had won all the tournaments for the past two months and they were pissed. I never did get them to warm up to us. Oh well,,, But the point I'm trying to make is setting up a shot can have so many variables. Make them think your a rowdy power player and finish them with finess or hide your power until you need it. One thing I've learned in competition is to make your opponent guess who you are. Never say anything to make them think you are second guessing your skill against theirs. Don't give them anything unless it is on your terms. Control is what this game is about and there are many levels of control. If you can make your opponent start guessing you can beat him.