I don't care if it's legitimate or not. There's nothing worse than a 2-2 this on a Tuesday night in February. Without O/T the game slows down to a crawl in the second period and never picks up. It's unwatchable.
Now, with overtime, at least you know someone is going to score before the game is over. And with 5 minutes of 3 on 3, it won't take forever. It gives you a reason to stay up and watch the end of the game instead of just going to bed early.
Guess what: it's the opposite. OT doesn't solve ties – it creates MORE of them. Since implementing today's OT/SO, more games end in a tie after 60 minutes than they did before. If you thought teams were playing for a tie back in the day, it happens
more often today with OT/SO.
I compared the final standings in the 1990s versus the recent standings. Back then, before implementing OT/SO, teams had as few as 6 or 7 ties per season and as many as 16-18. Overall average was about 10 ties per team, per season.
Today, the average has increased to about 15/16 tie games after 60, with many teams playing over 20 tie games per season. In 2023/24, Boston and Montreal both had 26 games that ended tied after 60.
Bottom line: OT/SO forces a (small "w") win onto tie games. But it comes at a cost. Teams have become more likely to slow down the 60-minute game and settle for a tie, knowing they can get a second point afterwards playing 3-on-3.
When we had ties, there was only one way to get 2 points: Win during 60 minutes of real hockey. Teams pushed harder and fewer games ended in a tie, because there was no second chance for 2 points.