Around Hockey XV (All Non-Jackets Hockey talk in here)

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cbjfaninmo

4 those about 2 rock
Mar 17, 2012
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Lake of the Ozarks, MO
Now that the lawsuits are starting, get ready to see the NHL start reacting the way the NFL has in taking every precaution and erroring on the side of caution when it comes to head hits. If you like the big hits youre probably going to be disappointed in the way the NHL is headed

Man, things are just not like they used to be. Us older folks are much tougher than these young guys. Just think about it...we had no bicycle helmets, no seatbelts in the station wagons, parents smoking with the windows rolled up, sharp metal dashes, cigarette lighters to play with in the back seat and Dad with a cold six-pack in the front seat. We are all fine. :D. What is this world coming to????
 

cslebn

80 forever
Feb 15, 2012
2,802
1,366
Man, things are just not like they used to be. Us older folks are much tougher than these young guys. Just think about it...we had no bicycle helmets, no seatbelts in the station wagons, parents smoking with the windows rolled up, sharp metal dashes, cigarette lighters to play with in the back seat and Dad with a cold six-pack in the front seat. We are all fine. :D. What is this world coming to????

I know it's all those changes are leading the world to overpopulation :sarcasm:

Back on topic, the NHL already punished hits to the head severely. I don't think this would actually be too much more of a change for them. Does mean we'll end up with more Eric Lindros type players who can't figure out how to skate with their heads up - you know the type of thing every squirt gets taught.
 

Sore Loser

Sorest of them all
Dec 9, 2006
7,622
1,220
Spokane, WA.
Now that the lawsuits are starting, get ready to see the NHL start reacting the way the NFL has in taking every precaution and erroring on the side of caution when it comes to head hits. If you like the big hits youre probably going to be disappointed in the way the NHL is headed

I don't have a problem with the league banning hits like that, as long as it's done the right way. As someone who follows junior hockey and young players, I hate nothing more than seeing a career ended because of a reckless/dirty hit to the head. I can name so many names of guys who have had this happen to them for no reason other than a guy who isn't good enough to advance any further trying to get his name in the media.

This one hits home because I knew the kid and his family. He was a 2nd round pick of the Calgary Flames ... and he was never the same after this hit, which back then was considered legal:



It goes without saying that Aaron Volpatti won't be winning any AHL scoring titles any time soon. If this is the kind of thing that gets eliminated, our sport will be better for it.

Man, things are just not like they used to be. Us older folks are much tougher than these young guys. Just think about it...we had no bicycle helmets, no seatbelts in the station wagons, parents smoking with the windows rolled up, sharp metal dashes, cigarette lighters to play with in the back seat and Dad with a cold six-pack in the front seat. We are all fine. :D. What is this world coming to????

I won't post the Family Guy video I'm thinking of after reading this post, because I think it would get me banned ... I'm sure Mayor Bee knows which one.
 

Mayor Bee

Registered User
Dec 29, 2008
18,087
535
Man, things are just not like they used to be. Us older folks are much tougher than these young guys. Just think about it...we had no bicycle helmets, no seatbelts in the station wagons, parents smoking with the windows rolled up, sharp metal dashes, cigarette lighters to play with in the back seat and Dad with a cold six-pack in the front seat. We are all fine. :D. What is this world coming to????

Stephen Jay Gould used to argue very passionately that evolution was/is a random process that will produce a different species, not necessarily a better one.

Sometimes I have to wonder just how much the sub-concussive head trauma and exposure to leaded gasoline did to all of you guys.;)
 

BluejacketNut

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Sep 23, 2006
6,275
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I dont disagree at all SL, my point on it is about the ones that arent the big/cheap hits. Using the QB position may be the extreme side of it, but you've seen the hands barely touch the head and its a penalty, thats what i'm talking about with the effects of the lawsuits. They start winning lawsuits and having to pay, it could get to the point that if you so much look at someones head and its a penalty....once the lawsuits are successful, they'll be coming out of the woodwork
 

Mayor Bee

Registered User
Dec 29, 2008
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Paul Stewart has a good post on the subject of player safety:

http://www.hockeybuzz.com/blog.php?post_id=61632&blogger_id=196

I really think his point on the danger of current equipment is on the mark.

In all levels of football, a player will either be warned or penalized for an equipment violation. This should be done in hockey, specifically with mouthguards, and starting at the lowest levels. I don't understand why hockey mouthguards generally aren't tethered (for youth) the way that a football one is. Cages are generally used at the lower levels of hockey, and a tethered mouthguard shouldn't be an issue.

And of course, a couple years ago the NFL mandated and cracked down on minimum equipment. It was an open secret that the only pads most players wear is a helmet, shoulder pad shells (just the outer part), and that was pretty much it. They mandated the return of thigh and knee pads, then ordered officials to keep an eye on it.

The problem is that the NHL and other leagues don't have anything codified. And the other problem is that they don't have the same attitude about players using equipment as a weapon. In any level of football, a player with a hard non-standard pad will be warned that it's 15 and an ejection if he uses it as a weapon. In hockey, it's a bit different but players still need to be accountable for using the elbow and forearm as a weapon. My recommendation for years has been to use the international high-sticking rule, which would by its very nature keep the elbows and sticks down all through a hit.
 

Sore Loser

Sorest of them all
Dec 9, 2006
7,622
1,220
Spokane, WA.
I dont disagree at all SL, my point on it is about the ones that arent the big/cheap hits. Using the QB position may be the extreme side of it, but you've seen the hands barely touch the head and its a penalty, thats what i'm talking about with the effects of the lawsuits. They start winning lawsuits and having to pay, it could get to the point that if you so much look at someones head and its a penalty....once the lawsuits are successful, they'll be coming out of the woodwork

Can't disagree with any of this. I mentioned that it had to be done right; I think we're on the same page there.

I'm sure everyone remembers when Dion Phaneuf caught Kyle Okposo "with his head down" ... Okposo only started getting his career on track again this year.

In all levels of football, a player will either be warned or penalized for an equipment violation. This should be done in hockey, specifically with mouthguards, and starting at the lowest levels. I don't understand why hockey mouthguards generally aren't tethered (for youth) the way that a football one is. Cages are generally used at the lower levels of hockey, and a tethered mouthguard shouldn't be an issue.

And of course, a couple years ago the NFL mandated and cracked down on minimum equipment. It was an open secret that the only pads most players wear is a helmet, shoulder pad shells (just the outer part), and that was pretty much it. They mandated the return of thigh and knee pads, then ordered officials to keep an eye on it.

The problem is that the NHL and other leagues don't have anything codified. And the other problem is that they don't have the same attitude about players using equipment as a weapon. In any level of football, a player with a hard non-standard pad will be warned that it's 15 and an ejection if he uses it as a weapon. In hockey, it's a bit different but players still need to be accountable for using the elbow and forearm as a weapon. My recommendation for years has been to use the international high-sticking rule, which would by its very nature keep the elbows and sticks down all through a hit.

I agree with all of this. As a young hockey player, we were policed about mouth guards until the cows came home ... all the way up until bantam age (around 13). Strange that they started letting up on us then, because that's when the hitting became hard for the first time. Then, it was intermittent, annoying lectures from an occasional official. Basically, as long as you had one tethered to your cage, you were fine. As I reached the midget level (15), it was a complete non issue anymore.

I still believe in it. To this day, as an adult hockey player, I wear a full cage. I don't wear a mouth guard because we don't check, and I'll occasionally get some idiot who wants to flip me crap about it, but my answer is always simple and to the point. I have a family (including two young daughters) at home who don't need to see me in the hospital, and I have too much to lose by missing work because I wanted to prove my masculinity. Most of the time, they let up. The rest of the time, our 6'3", 230 pound concrete foreman defenseman deals with them.

I cannot fathom why people playing at lower levels would have any interest in putting themselves in danger. I've seen several guys lose teeth, break bones in their faces, and have to have serious work to be done. Most of those guys still play, now gladly wearing the full cages.

I know the NHL will never get to that level, but what's the issue with mouth guards? It's a proven fact that they prevent some concussions...
 

cslebn

80 forever
Feb 15, 2012
2,802
1,366
In all levels of football, a player will either be warned or penalized for an equipment violation. This should be done in hockey, specifically with mouthguards, and starting at the lowest levels. I don't understand why hockey mouthguards generally aren't tethered (for youth) the way that a football one is. Cages are generally used at the lower levels of hockey, and a tethered mouthguard shouldn't be an issue.

And of course, a couple years ago the NFL mandated and cracked down on minimum equipment. It was an open secret that the only pads most players wear is a helmet, shoulder pad shells (just the outer part), and that was pretty much it. They mandated the return of thigh and knee pads, then ordered officials to keep an eye on it.

The problem is that the NHL and other leagues don't have anything codified. And the other problem is that they don't have the same attitude about players using equipment as a weapon. In any level of football, a player with a hard non-standard pad will be warned that it's 15 and an ejection if he uses it as a weapon. In hockey, it's a bit different but players still need to be accountable for using the elbow and forearm as a weapon. My recommendation for years has been to use the international high-sticking rule, which would by its very nature keep the elbows and sticks down all through a hit.

The NHL doesn't, but USA Hockey actually does. Enforcement is a different issue but I played in games and reffed games where players were sent off the ice for mouth guards or lack of straps (specifically the chin) were not buttoned including High School Varsity play. The rules do exist for youth hockey. The rule was also always a warning followed by a minor penalty.

One of the biggest issues I actually had with youth hockey as a ref was shot blocking. Squirt and mite level players who can't skate as well and are at ages where head trauma is a greater impact were watching NHL shot blocking and trying to do the same. The problem was these kids would run into the other player's feet. Well then they got it in their heads that so long as they got the puck first they were okay to basically trip the shooter. There were times the shooter would go down badly too, either at the knees or risk a head to ice hit. I often stopped the game and warned both benches. That crap is intolerable in my eyes because it is not safe.
 

cslebn

80 forever
Feb 15, 2012
2,802
1,366
I still believe in it. To this day, as an adult hockey player, I wear a full cage. I don't wear a mouth guard because we don't check, and I'll occasionally get some idiot who wants to flip me crap about it, but my answer is always simple and to the point. I have a family (including two young daughters) at home who don't need to see me in the hospital, and I have too much to lose by missing work because I wanted to prove my masculinity. Most of the time, they let up. The rest of the time, our 6'3", 230 pound concrete foreman defenseman deals with them.

I cannot fathom why people playing at lower levels would have any interest in putting themselves in danger. I've seen several guys lose teeth, break bones in their faces, and have to have serious work to be done. Most of those guys still play, now gladly wearing the full cages.

Amen. I've never taken crap over it but there is no reason to ever intentionally put yourself at risk.

Though on that note, I had some teammates who didn't agree. Wednesday practices were skating and special teams. So the guys that didn't play PK/PP started with cups, then elbow pads, then shoulder pads taken off. They forgot every week that the coaches used them as practice fodder for the first unit PK while the PP worked on positioning. We beat the hell out of those guys knowing they had no pads on and made them pay hard.
 

Sore Loser

Sorest of them all
Dec 9, 2006
7,622
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Spokane, WA.
Amen. I've never taken crap over it but there is no reason to ever intentionally put yourself at risk.

Though on that note, I had some teammates who didn't agree. Wednesday practices were skating and special teams. So the guys that didn't play PK/PP started with cups, then elbow pads, then shoulder pads taken off. They forgot every week that the coaches used them as practice fodder for the first unit PK while the PP worked on positioning. We beat the hell out of those guys knowing they had no pads on and made them pay hard.

Saw a kid - and I don't use that term lightly, maybe 18 years old - in one of our men's league games last year go with no facial protection. He ran his mouth all night, crashed and banged with our defenders (again, no checking) ... was really asking for trouble. One of our bigger guys played him behind the net and shoved him over ... he got mad, stood up to throw a cross-check ....... and immediately took a slapshot directly to the chops from his own teammate, because he was beside the net. I believe he's up to 7 oral surgeries to repair broken bones in his face, and has to wear dentures.

No health insurance. He'll be paying for that for the rest of his life, both for the physical problems, and for the financial burden.

I'll keep my cage.
 

Fro

Cheatin on CBJ w TBL
Mar 11, 2009
25,315
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Juha Hiitelä ‏@jhiitela 30m
Our sources say Finnish KHL team Jokerit (or their Russian part owners to be exact) has offered 10M USD /season to Teemu Selanne #NHLDucks
 

NotWendell

Has also never won the lottery.
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Oct 31, 2005
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One of the biggest issues I actually had with youth hockey as a ref was shot blocking.

I sometimes question whether leaving the feet for the purpose of blocking a shot is actually good for the professional game as well. More shots getting through may lead to more goals. Less shot blocking may lead to less injuries.

That said, I haven't actually convinced myself of this argument yet.
 

Mayor Bee

Registered User
Dec 29, 2008
18,087
535
One of the biggest issues I actually had with youth hockey as a ref was shot blocking. Squirt and mite level players who can't skate as well and are at ages where head trauma is a greater impact were watching NHL shot blocking and trying to do the same. The problem was these kids would run into the other player's feet. Well then they got it in their heads that so long as they got the puck first they were okay to basically trip the shooter. There were times the shooter would go down badly too, either at the knees or risk a head to ice hit. I often stopped the game and warned both benches. That crap is intolerable in my eyes because it is not safe.

I've said before that nothing can underscore how ridiculous something is than by seeing youth players do it. When you see 6-year-olds cross-checking or facewashing opposing forwards for being too close to the goalie when the whistle blows, it's kind of ridiculous.

I sometimes question whether leaving the feet for the purpose of blocking a shot is actually good for the professional game as well. More shots getting through may lead to more goals. Less shot blocking may lead to less injuries.

That said, I haven't actually convinced myself of this argument yet.

I don't think it is good for the game; it's a case of a strategy or a very specific skill being detrimental to the game. I say this based on the following:
1) Quite literally anyone can do it. Shot blocking has skyrocketed in the last 15 years, and it's not from Craig Ludwig or Karlis Skrastins. It's anyone with a pulse who can just launch himself in front of a shot.
2) It directly smothers the offense. A blocked shot will normally boomerang back out of the zone, wasting more time to re-set the offense or power play.
3) It indirectly smothers the offense. Tortorella's Rangers teams had plenty of offensive skill, and a lot of it was artificially negated by the six-goalie system. Who needs Marian Gaborik to score goals when he can just get in the way?
 

Jackets Woodchuck

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candyman82

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Iron Balls McGinty

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Aug 5, 2005
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How much bad blood is there still between McConnell and Gilbert over the casino issue, though?

It can't be that big of a deal if it involves making money. If Gilbert can make up with Lebron, he can make up with anyone.

Frankly it would be better for Cleveland to have a local affiliate. I highly doubt anyone cares about the Avalanche there. Clippers attendance has thrived since becoming affiliates with the Indians because of the local connection. Take Huntington Park out of the equation and attendance will still be higher than when they were affiliated with the Nationals.
 
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Sore Loser

Sorest of them all
Dec 9, 2006
7,622
1,220
Spokane, WA.
It can't be that big of a deal if it involves making money. If Gilbert can make up with Lebron, he can make up with anyone.

Frankly it would be better for Cleveland to have a local affiliate. I highly doubt anyone cares about the Avalanche there. Clippers attendance has thrived since becoming affiliates with the Indins because of the local connection. Take Huntington Park out of the equation and attendance will still be higher than when they were affiliated with the Nationals.

Almost funny to think back to the old Cooper Stadium days. I don't know how much different my childhood would have been if Huntington Park existed back then :laugh: ... have to get to a Clippers game there before my time is up.
 
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