- Full strength
Full strength (also called 5-on-5) in
ice hockey refers to when both teams have five skaters and onegoaltender on the ice. The official term used by the National Hockey League (NHL) is at "even strength" — abbreviated EV on [http://www.nhl.com/scores/htmlreports/20062007/GS020091.HTM official scoresheets] and goaltenders' individual [http://www.nhl.com/nhl/app?service=page&page=PlayerDetail&playerId=8469658 stats] . All games start with both teams at full strength. Teams that take a penalty, go on thepower play , or pull the goalie are no longer at full strength.If a team is shorthanded, and its penalties expire, or it is scored on so that its penalized players return, it returns to full strength. Likewise, if a team on a power play scores so that the opposing penalized players all leave the
penalty box , the team also returns to full strength.Full strength is slightly different from "even strength", which means that each team has the same number of skaters on the ice.
Another related reference is that of "equal strength". This is not an official term used by the NHL but is commonly used to describe 'full strength'.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.