Connor Hellebuyck made Presentation for NHL on Goaltender Interference

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Voight

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This league seems to have such a hard time seeing the forest for the trees.

Why do we want more goals? Because a 4-3 is automatically better than a 3-2 game? No, we want goals because goals create drama. Partially because they’re entertaining in their own right, as highlights of the game, and partially because they lead to lead changes and momentum shifts which lead to more drama. After a goal you feel that buzz in the building, a change in the energy level on the ice, and a renewed focus on the goalie’s mental stamina. When teams trade goals, the lead changes create narrative tension that any viewer can get invested in. Drama is entertaining and that’s why we watch the game.

Say there’s a controversial call on the ice, and it turns out that the call was wrong. That’s still drama, still entertaining. The offended team’s fans will boo, the coach will yell and kick his whiteboard. Fans will argue about the mistake for a day or two afterward, and in a worst case scenario it determines the outcome of the game and goes down on a “worst calls” compilation somewhere. Even when it makes us mad, it’s still part of the show.

What kills the entertainment value? Stopping the drama to stand around and review the play down to the microsecond, with Court TV style analysis on the broadcast. So when they finally announce the verdict, the game resumes with a dampened energy level. And in situations like Winnipeg the other night, when they get it wrong it isn’t about ending up on a “worst calls” compilation, it’s about people questioning how it’s possible for Toronto to get a 3-minute review wrong and noting that this call changed the payouts on the same gambling network which owns the rights to the broadcast. It’s bad for entertainment, and also bad for the perceived legitimacy of the league.

The call on the ice the other night was no-goal. That was the correct call, as the referee could clearly perceive that interference was taking place. For that to be reviewed and overruled is just a head-scratching moment for what kind of product they’re really trying to put out there.

No, we want more goals so we can all hit the overs.

*This post sponsored by FanDuel
 
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Ducati Boy

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Feb 7, 2018
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Not sure what some of you want.

In the evaluation of 3 or 4 trained professionals it is ruled a goal. But hey, due to the speed of play, refs sometimes make mistakes.

So, the failsafe option is deployed. More experts who can break the play down and watch details repeatedly are called in to check. They come to the same conclusion.

But that’s not good enough. Some casual fan of the team who lost the decision thinks the play was interference and that he’s right regardless. Conclusion: officials are a bunch of idiots. And it will remain that way until they make the call I think should be made.

I wonder. Do you guys take the same approach to evaluating medical research?
 

Barrie22

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Aug 11, 2009
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Not sure what some of you want.

In the evaluation of 3 or 4 trained professionals it is ruled a goal. But hey, due to the speed of play, refs sometimes make mistakes.

So, the failsafe option is deployed. More experts who can break the play down and watch details repeatedly are called in to check. They come to the same conclusion.

But that’s not good enough. Some casual fan of the team who lost the decision thinks the play was interference and that he’s right regardless. Conclusion: officials are a bunch of idiots. And it will remain that way until they make the call I think should be made.

I wonder. Do you guys take the same approach to evaluating medical research?
Just needs to be consistent, 1 night no goal is called on a play where the goalie is touched and doesn't change anything about his movements in the crease, next night goal is called on a play where the goalie is spun around in the crease and hinders his ability to get set for the shot properly.
 
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kylbaz

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Not sure what some of you want.

In the evaluation of 3 or 4 trained professionals it is ruled a goal. But hey, due to the speed of play, refs sometimes make mistakes.

So, the failsafe option is deployed. More experts who can break the play down and watch details repeatedly are called in to check. They come to the same conclusion.

But that’s not good enough. Some casual fan of the team who lost the decision thinks the play was interference and that he’s right regardless. Conclusion: officials are a bunch of idiots. And it will remain that way until they make the call I think should be made.

I wonder. Do you guys take the same approach to evaluating medical research?
You're comparing medical research, based on facts using data and testing to watching hockey replays?
If 3 of 4 see it as a good goal but 95% of the population see it as a bad goal, are the hundreds of thousands wrong? Or the three 'trained professionals'?
 

Ducati Boy

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Just needs to be consistent, 1 night no goal is called on a play where the goalie is touched and doesn't change anything about his movements in the crease, next night goal is called on a play where the goalie is spun around in the crease and hinders his ability to get set for the shot properly.
Sure. There is always going to be a gray area that could go either way given the complexity of the play. Even if we shift the definition of GI in favor of the goalie or the skaters, that gray area is still going to exist. It's the same on borderline penalties. Living with ambiguity in a dynamic world.

You're comparing medical research, based on facts using data and testing to watching hockey replays?
If 3 of 4 see it as a good goal but 95% of the population see it as a bad goal, are the hundreds of thousands wrong? Or the three 'trained professionals'?
Trained, expert, objective professionals who know the standards and who are in the best position to judge versus outside casual viewers with a vested interest. Hmmm.

Yeah, the pros can still get it wrong but when the great weight of experts is going against you shouldn't you doubt your own hubris just a little?
 

kylbaz

Winnipeg <3
Nov 14, 2015
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Sure. There is always going to be a gray area that could go either way given the complexity of the play. Even if we shift the definition of GI in favor of the goalie or the skaters, that gray area is still going to exist. It's the same on borderline penalties. Living with ambiguity in a dynamic world.


Trained, expert, objective professionals who know the standards and who are in the best position to judge versus outside casual viewers with a vested interest. Hmmm.

Yeah, the pros can still get it wrong but when the great weight of experts is going against you shouldn't you doubt your own hubris just a little?
No, because their track record is god awful and very few fans have any trust in. Stop calling them pros.
I'm guessing you agree with the experts that ranked the Australian break dancer #1 in the world as well, because, you know, they were experts. The millions around the world laughing are all wrong.
 

castle

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Dec 2, 2011
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Sure. There is always going to be a gray area that could go either way given the complexity of the play. Even if we shift the definition of GI in favor of the goalie or the skaters, that gray area is still going to exist. It's the same on borderline penalties. Living with ambiguity in a dynamic world.


Trained, expert, objective professionals who know the standards and who are in the best position to judge versus outside casual viewers with a vested interest. Hmmm.

Yeah, the pros can still get it wrong but when the great weight of experts is going against you shouldn't you doubt your own hubris just a little?
If there is one thing we've learned over the past few years, there are no experts on what goalie interference is. It is an evidence free zone where opinion is all that matters.
 

Heldig

Registered User
Apr 12, 2002
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Not sure what some of you want.

In the evaluation of 3 or 4 trained professionals it is ruled a goal. But hey, due to the speed of play, refs sometimes make mistakes.

So, the failsafe option is deployed. More experts who can break the play down and watch details repeatedly are called in to check. They come to the same conclusion.

But that’s not good enough. Some casual fan of the team who lost the decision thinks the play was interference and that he’s right regardless. Conclusion: officials are a bunch of idiots. And it will remain that way until they make the call I think should be made.

I wonder. Do you guys take the same approach to evaluating medical research?
You are equating medical research with the quality of reviews by the NHL head office?
 

ijuka

Registered User
May 14, 2016
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Was it last year that I saw Eller grab a goalie under his arm and literally drag him 6 feet across the goal and off the crease, and then his teammate scored in the empty net, and this was a good goal.

To me, the big issue currently is that crease isn't being respected, and way too much focus is being put on whether the interfering player was shoved into the goalie. Essentially, the player just goes right in front of the goalie's face, onto the crease, and the moment they're bumped against by anyone(which is pretty natural considering players are trying to defend the goal), this interfering player then falls on top of the goaltender, and that's supposedly a good goal.

I think that if the interfering player is on the crease when they get shoved, then it IS goalie interference, even if they get pushed on top of the goaltender. Or just do it like European leagues and blow the play dead when a player enters the crease.
 

Ducati Boy

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Feb 7, 2018
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You are equating medical research with the quality of reviews by the NHL head office?
I'm not equating them in terms of degree of veracity since, as I've already mentioned, the speed and complexity of in-the-moment analysis of hockey leads to inevitable gray areas.

Instead I'm making an analogy of insiders' considered, objective perspectives versus those of outside viewers with vested interests.

People can talk about poor 'track records' of NHL HQ but, let's face it, what they mean by 'track record' is not some committee or professional peer review study, but simply the fact that they have diagreed with some of the calls in the past.
 

GeeoffBrown

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Jul 6, 2007
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IMO they should lean towards DISALLOWING goals for goalie interference and lean towards ALLOWING goals for distinct kicking motion
 

Heldig

Registered User
Apr 12, 2002
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I'm not equating them in terms of degree of veracity since, as I've already mentioned, the speed and complexity of in-the-moment analysis of hockey leads to inevitable gray areas.

Instead I'm making an analogy of insiders' considered, objective perspectives versus those of outside viewers with vested interests.

People can talk about poor 'track records' of NHL HQ but, let's face it, what they mean by 'track record' is not some committee or professional peer review study, but simply the fact that they have diagreed with some of the calls in the past.
Well, I see many of these threads for all manner of teams showing terrible missed calls missed again by the league. I dont need to have a vested interest to be puzzled by the inconsistency the league applies the rules of the game.

Yes, in this case, I am a fan of the team in question.

Are you saying, after reviewing the play, that you dont think Geekie interfered? By the rulebook,

Goaltender interference refers to any attacking player who, by means of their stick or body, interferes with or impedes the movements of the goaltender by actual physical contact. While incidental contact with the goaltender may occur, attacking players must make an effort to avoid contact in all circumstances. The onus is always on the attacking player and players who do not make an effort to avoid the goaltender must be penalized.
 

Ducati Boy

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Feb 7, 2018
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Well, I see many of these threads for all manner of teams showing terrible missed calls missed again by the league. I dont need to have a vested interest to be puzzled by the inconsistency the league applies the rules of the game.

Yes, in this case, I am a fan of the team in question.

Are you saying, after reviewing the play, that you dont think Geekie interfered? By the rulebook,

Goaltender interference refers to any attacking player who, by means of their stick or body, interferes with or impedes the movements of the goaltender by actual physical contact. While incidental contact with the goaltender may occur, attacking players must make an effort to avoid contact in all circumstances. The onus is always on the attacking player and players who do not make an effort to avoid the goaltender must be penalized.
I thought it was borderline. I’m a Bolts fan so I was happy it counted. I’d be interested in hearing the refs or Toronto’s detailed explanation.

Sometimes similar plays have worked against the Bolts, and yeah, then I’m pissed, but even then I’d see it as part of that gray area thing and not as systemic incompetence.
 

Heldig

Registered User
Apr 12, 2002
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I dont see anything borderline about it. Geekie made no attempt to play the puck, rather stuck his stick in Helle's pad and shoved him into the net. By definition that should be goaltender interference 10 out of 10 times.

I would also be interested to hear the league explanation. Oh well, NHL Wheel of Justice...maybe next time my team gets a lucky break like that.

It would be fun to see Helle's presentation. Hope he makes it public at some point.
 

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