A clear is how a team escapes defensive pressure. At 13-14, players can learn a structured three-pass pattern that gets the ball to open space.

Equipment needed: 6 cones, 1 ball, 6 sticks.

Setup: Mark the defensive zone with cones at the restraining line. One defenseman has the ball in the zone. Two short-stick players line up 5 yards away (wings of the clear). One short-stick player lines up at the restraining line facing the ball carrier (outlet).

How to run it:

  1. Defenseman passes to the first wing, who catches and immediately looks downfield.
  2. Wing passes to the outlet player at the restraining line. Outlet is the first person to get past the line.
  3. Outlet advances the ball upfield to open space, then passes to the second wing coming behind.
  4. Do 4 reps slow, then 4 reps at game speed with a coach providing light pressure.

What to look for:

Each pass should be crisp and on time. If the first pass is late or off-target, the wing has no room to move. The outlet player should be moving to the restraining line before the pass is made. If they’re standing still, they’re not a viable outlet. The second wing should be trailing, ready to continue the clear upfield.

Variation: Add pressure. One defender shadows the initial ball carrier, forcing them to pass early. Now the clearing team has to execute under pressure, which is the real situation.