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Refs gave Bartkowski a penalty for an illegal play, so it wasn't a clean hit. Its not much different from John Scott nudging Loui last year, head down and late contact.
Refs are capable of mistakes.
Refs gave Bartkowski a penalty for an illegal play, so it wasn't a clean hit. Its not much different from John Scott nudging Loui last year, head down and late contact.
It's very similar in my mind to the Campbell/Umberger hit. You can't call that clean and call this one dirty. Maybe it shouldn't be in the game, but it strikes me as legal.
No, you can't eliminate them. But stronger penalties would serve as a deterrent. Maybe if Bartkowski had known that predatory blindside hits to a defenseless player might get him a 20 game suspension, he would have held up and Gionta wouldn't be concussed.
Refs gave Bartkowski a penalty for an illegal play, so it wasn't a clean hit. Its not much different from John Scott nudging Loui last year, head down and late contact.
Great hit!!! Gionta got caught watching the puck. No foul at all. I don't know why a penalty was called.
People calling this a "clean hit" have either lost their minds or never had one to begin with.
Gionta didn't touch the puck.
People calling this a "clean hit" have either lost their minds or never had one to begin with.
Do you think it's interference if a guy is trying to take a pass and it hops over his stick and he gets hit at the same time?
Technically, yes. A hit exist to seperate an opponent from the puck, it is illegal ot hit an opponent who doesn't have the puck. A player cannot just go for a hit and pray that the opponent will do everything so that the hit is legal, it's on him to make sure he is allowed to make the hit. In this case, Bartkowski couldn't be sure that Gionta would have the puck, yet he opted to go for the hit anyway, hence it is on him if anything goes wrong.
Beyond that, this was hardly a case of a player just missing a simple pass, Gionta had to really stretch out to even have a chance of getting the puck.
All in all, the call was the right one. Bartkowski interfered with an opponent, which makes it a penalty. Gionta got injured on the play, which makes it a game misconduct. No need for anything more than that. Bartkowski banked on something that he shouldn't have banked on, and it turned out to make his hit illegal. It definately wasn't an attempt to injure, but in the end you are responsible for your own actions, which in this case leads to 5+game. Not every not-clean hit needs to be defended to death, just like not every 5+GM needs to be followed by a further suspension.
People calling this a "clean hit" have either lost their minds or never had one to begin with.
That's never been the standard of officiating. If a player attempts to play the puck, he's fair game. That's not interference and the lack of a call from the NHL proves it.
That's never been the standard of officiating. If a player attempts to play the puck, he's fair game. That's not interference and the lack of a call from the NHL proves it.
People calling this a "clean hit" have either lost their minds or never had one to begin with.
and yet so supplemental discipline......
And yet a 5 minute major and a game misconduct.
The NHL wasn't going to call an interference penalty after the fact. This is interference. Not sure what's left to say. That doesn't make it a suspension or Bartkowski a monster, but it was interference. You're free to skip between what the rule is or what the standard is, you're wrong on both accounts. This play certainly gets called interference on many occasions. Interference.