Bob Probert ruin fighting?

PistolPete

Registered User
May 3, 2025
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I get the sense that his easygoing nature made fighting nothing personal but just a job and that led to the "unwritten code" around fighting where it was never anything personal so a player didn't attempt to do maximum damage to his opponent.

The fights after he was in the league for a while strike me as different from before. Players fell to the ice, the opponent kept punching, his well being be damned.
 
I get the sense that his easygoing nature made fighting nothing personal but just a job and that led to the "unwritten code" around fighting where it was never anything personal so a player didn't attempt to do maximum damage to his opponent.

The fights after he was in the league for a while strike me as different from before. Players fell to the ice, the opponent kept punching, his well being be damned.
And that ruined it for you?
 
It's very regrettable to read opinions that say that the idea of sportmanship is ridiculous and criticize that 'a player didn't attempt to do maximum damage to his opponent' in 2025, when the entire world is acutely aware of long-term damage of hockey-related head trauma and works towards decreasing it impact.
 
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