Ben Prentiss: Go-to Trainer to NHL Pros

NHL players Chris Kreider, Matt Moulson and Jonathan Quick with Ben Prentiss

One of the biggest keys for hockey success in the winter? How athletes spend the off-season. And top players from around the country are coming to Fairfield County to train with Ben Prentiss at the 2,000-square-foot specialized Prentiss Hockey Performance center
(prentisshockey.com), located in his Bodytuning gym in Darien, CT.

Prentiss is the go-to guy for several NHL starsโ€”he counts Montreal Canadiens forward Max Pacioretty and Los Angeles Kings goalie Jonathan Quick among his current clients, as well as recently retired six-time All-Star Martin St. Louis. In addition to the pros, he works with junior high and high school standouts, seeing 120 players for 500 sessions each week. This is the guidance Prentiss gives to players (and parents) about maximizing potential and getting to the next level.

Whatโ€™s the difference between training an NHL player and a junior one? Whether itโ€™s an AHL guy trying to get to the NHL or a college kid trying to sign a pro contract or a high school kid trying to play in college, they all train differently. You have to keep an eye on the volume of the workout, and the intensity of the workout, and make different exercise prescriptions. For instance, [40-year-old] Marty [St. Louis] has a different volume than a kid who plays on the U.S. National Team named Chad Krys [who I train], who is supposedly going to be a high draft pick next year. Heโ€™s 17 years old and can handle certain things Marty canโ€™t handle. Then you also realize that heโ€™s 17, and you have to gauge what heโ€™s going to do compared to Max Pacioretty, whoโ€™s 26 and in the prime of his career.

Jonathan Quick Prentiss
L.A. Kings goaltender Jonathan Quick (shutterstock.com)

Every summer you create a personalized plan for all of your athletes. What does that entail for a pro player? It all depends. In the NHL, 82 games feels like these guys are in a car accident 82 nights of the year. They show up, and you see what injuries they have, how you need to address those injuries and how toxic they are. You determine what kind of detox or cleanse you need to do before they start training. You have to get them off different sleep [schedules] because of all the travel and time changes.

What advice do you give to parents ofย  high school players who come to you with a college or pro dream? Unfortunately, I give them advice that they donโ€™t want to hear.ย  To me, the problem is that hockey players are becoming less athletic because theyโ€™re only playing hockey from the time theyโ€™re six years old. If you look at the stars of the game, they grew up playing lacrosse or baseball or track and hockey as well. They didnโ€™t specialize in hockey until they got to high school. We usually take them at 14, when theyโ€™re physically and emotionally ready. I tell them to get out of skates, do other things, use other muscles, swim, run, jump. Be active. Thatโ€™s my best advice. A lot of the NHL guys I have werenโ€™t even the best guys on their team when they were 12 years old.

Are there other mistakes you see kids and parents making? Eating badly on those long, long car rides for travel hockey. We try to give kids healthy snack options, like trail mix, fruit, jerky and other things you can bring on the road. Theyโ€™ll see our nutritionist, and sleep is also a huge thing. The research is there on higher level athletes in terms of sleep deprivation affecting their performance. I tell parents to get the electronics out of the kidsโ€™ rooms so they can sleep better.

Prentis New York Rangers Chris Kreider
In his gym in Darien, CT, Ben Prentiss trains Chris Kreider of the New York Rangers. (Scott Audette)

What do you have planned next for Prentiss Hockey Performance? [Our goal is to] be the stand-alone facility for training athletes, specifically for hockey, anywhere in the country. The next step is a bigger facility with doctors, acupuncture, soft tissue work, hot tub/cold tub, infrared sauna. We want to be able to take a guy in the play-offs who wants to get treated and get some work done to him for a day and fly out, or a junior team of 20 kids at a time.

Are there any player success stories that stand out to you? Absolutely. Max Pacioretty [of the Montreal Canadiens] comes to mind the quickest. I trained him through the broken neck and Comeback Player of the Year, and now heโ€™s a multiple time 30-goal-per-season scorer. During the season, we pretty much talk or text after every game. But Iโ€™ll never forget Ryan Shannon being my first guy as well. Iโ€™ve trained him for 12 years, since he was a junior at Boston College. Heโ€™s a small little guy, and he won a Stanley Cup; heโ€™s in Switzerland now and won a cup for Zurich. Somebody like Marty [Martin St. Louis]โ€ฆanybody could train Marty and heโ€™d be good. Certain guys you start with when theyโ€™re kids and go through college and end up in the NHLโ€”Iโ€™ve had a few nowโ€”and thatโ€™s pretty special.

Youโ€™re heavily involved in the Big Assist charity hockey game, which benefits the Obie Harrington-Howes Foundation (ohhf.org), an organization dedicated to improving the quality of life for individuals with spinal cord injuries. Why? Itโ€™s a great cause. I might be biased, but hockey players are so great with their time and donating things for the auction and signing autographs and making themselves available. Ryan Shannon started it, and everybody thatโ€™s in the game, I train. I donโ€™t do anything except coach and provide the players from the gym. All the big names who lend their timeโ€”from Marty and Chris Kreider and Tory Krugโ€”they are the ones who deserve all the credit.

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