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5. The Quiet Eye | Early Introductions

5. The Quiet Eye | Early Introductions

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Quiet Eye Isn’t Quiet | How Elite Athletes Actually See

We tend to think of vision as clear, continuous, and camera-like.
In reality, it’s fragmented, selective, and heavily constructed by the brain.

In this episode, I explore how elite athletes use their eyes under pressure — and why traditional “Quiet Eye” explanations fall short when applied to fast, open sports like hockey.

Using a landmark on-ice eye-tracking study by Martell & Vickers (2004), we break down how expert defenders don’t simply hold their gaze longer, but instead use a rapid-to-stable cascade of visual attention: quick sampling early, followed by a final stabilizing fixation before action.

This episode reframes Quiet Eye not as a single moment, but as the final phase of a much more dynamic perceptual process.

  • Why most of your visual field is blurry — and why you never notice

  • How the brain fills in blind spots and missing information

  • What “Quiet Eye” really means in closed vs open sports

  • Why team-sport gaze research produced conflicting coaching advice

  • How this study used live, on-ice eye tracking instead of video simulations

  • Key differences between elite and near-elite visual behavior

  • Why elite athletes succeed with shorter fixations, not longer ones

  • The idea of a “quick-then-quiet” gaze cascade

  • Implications for hockey, goaltending, and skill development

  • Why training vision requires humility, not simple prescriptions

Elite vision isn’t calm from the start — it’s efficient.

Experts sample information rapidly, recognize patterns early, and only settle into a longer, stabilizing gaze once the situation collapses and action is inevitable.

Quiet Eye still matters — but it’s earned, not forced.

Martell, S. G., & Vickers, J. N. (2004).
Gaze characteristics of elite and near-elite athletes in ice hockey defensive tactics.
Human Movement Science, 22, 689–712.

The Coretex Athletic Review explores sport science, perception, and performance through the lens of real research — with a bias toward practical relevance for coaches, athletes, and practitioners.


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