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Make sure there's enough space in your fingertips. Check the alignment of your knuckles. Make a fist to test the stretch of the material. Line up the wrist break with the underside of your wrist. Spend some time shooting and stick handling to test your gloves.
Once your gloves are on, you should have about 0.25 in (0.64 cm) of space between the tips of your fingers and the tips of your gloves. If your fingers butt up against the tips of your gloves, they're too small. Your gloves will have breaks in the fingers, allowing you to curl your hands around your stick. In a good-fitting glove, your knuckles should roughly line up with those breaks, making it easy to move and curl your hand. When you make a fist in your glove, the material connecting the palm of your glove to the fingertips shouldn't stretch too far. You'll feel some give, but the material shouldn't become taught against your palm. Regardless of the length of the cuffs, the wrist break should line up with the underside of your wrist. The wrist break is where the palm of the glove ends and the cuff begins — there should be a line of stitching there. Once you're fairly certain you've got gloves that fit correctly, test them out a little bit. Wear them to shoot a few goals and handle your stick in standard drills. If they feel uncomfortable at all, exchange them. Before you buy the gloves, check with the seller about their return policy. If the gloves can't be returned, bring your stick to the store and test them out before you buy them.