Breakouts
There's quite a few breakouts, but this is the progression I've used to teach it to my U9 and U11 teams. The key aspect is communicating the breakout to the rest of the team. Players and coaches can call it out. It's not a library. Usually the puck retrieving defense is under pressure and might have his back to the rest of the ice. Players (especially the goalie and defense partner) can call out if there is pressure and what breakout is optimal.
Up (Setup)
This is the standard winger breakout. Puck side winger gets to the hash, the center curls for a second passing option. The puck D heads it up to the winger who has a options to carry, pass to the center or far side winger, or chip it out.
Wheel
Similar to setup, but the puck carrying defenseman carries it up until they meet a defender.
D2D
If the puck carrying defense is under intense pressure and there is forechecker playing the hash. We can pass the puck behind the net, and our far side defense partner retrieves and setups the breakout from there.
Reverse
This is like wheel, but going around the net to the far side.
Stretch
In the absence of a forecheck, you might have time to attack the far blue line with an aggressive pass up ice to a forward.
