The preliminary movements of a wrist shot in hockey involve several key steps. First, the player positions the puck near the back foot while shifting their weight to the back leg. Next, the stick is drawn back, and the player winds up by rotating their hips and shoulders to generate power. Finally, the player shifts their weight forward, snapping the wrists and following through to direct the puck accurately towards the target.
wrist
A wrist shot is a shot in ice hockey which involves primarily the wrist muscles to propel the puck using the concave side of the blade.
A wrister is a wrist shot in ice hockey, a shot made with a distinct wrist motion.
A wrist shot is using you wrist to shoot a puck without slapping it off ice, you keep it on the ice when you shoot.
Flexion of the digits and the wrist
Quick shot isn't an actual shot. I don't know where you heard it, but that's not an actual term. There is a wrist shot, slap shot, chip shot, and snap shot.
Wrist abduction is when the wrist moves away from the body, while wrist adduction is when the wrist moves towards the body.
Flexion dorsiflexion and circumflexion I think
I do not know how doctors treat a broken wrist in this century, but when I broke my wrist in the late 1990's,the doctor just gave me an X-ray and put a cast on my arm. Unless your arm was infected, there is no need for a shot.
The wrist joint primarily allows for flexion, extension, abduction, and circumduction movements. Adduction and eversion are not typical movements of the wrist joint. Adduction and eversion are more commonly associated with joints like the shoulder and ankle, respectively.
Carpals are bones found in the human wrist, consisting of eight small bones that allow for complex movements of the hand and wrist. They provide support and flexibility to the wrist joint, allowing for various hand movements like flexion and extension as well as side-to-side movements. Carpals are connected to the radius and ulna of the forearm, forming the wrist joint.
1) Wrist shot 2) Slap shot 3) Snap shot 4) Backhand