Some were deflections, I think 1 or 2 were weird and could be considered a shot but maybe im misrememberingI watched all the games. Which of the Jets goals did the Blues shoot into their own net?
If a player other than Hellebuyck touched the puck after the kick, it would have been referenced and THAT would have been the reason for the goal to stand.
But no such play happened & no video evidence exists, in fact EVERY angle show the puck go off the ice CLEAR AS DAY.
Thanks. "In any other manner" sounds like a clause to cover anything that wasn't already mentioned.I did some more looking into the rule book this morning, and it may answer a few questions posed by this thread overnight. While the phrase does not include the specific word "propel" in it being discussed upthread, there is also this part of rule 78.4:
"A goal shall be scored if the puck is put into the goal in any other manner* by a player of the defending side. The player of the attacking side who last touched the puck shall be credited with with the goal and assists may be awarded."
*"any other manner" refers to the earlier section of rule 78.4 that says "a goal shall be scored if the puck is shot into the goal by a player of the defending side. The player of the attacking side who last touched the puck shall be credited with the goal but no assist shall be awarded."
Connor Hellebuyck clearly does not possess the puck and "shoot" the puck into his own net. While the rule about kicking does specify that a kicked puck that "deflects" off the goaltender's stick and into the net does not count (covered by 49.2 subsection "ii"), since they ruled that Alex Petrovic kicked the puck with a distinct kicking motion, rule 78.4 does appear to give them grounds to rule it "any other manner" instead of a "deflection," thus awarding the goal as well as permitting there to be assists on the goal.
I didn't see any change of direction from the one video I watched. I see lots of sticks, but no actual contact with any, other than Hellebuyck's. If another stick did make contact, that would change the story and validate the ruling. Hopefully, another angle will become available that'll clarify it and make fans feel that justice was served.There was some discussion of this upthread. It boils down to:
- We are talking about after the last time the puck touches the ice
- The behind the net angle clearly shows that after the puck left the ice, it noticeably changed trajectory in mid-air
- If you slow down the ice level angle carefully, you can see the puck change velocity and trajectory as it is flying past the sticks
- Maybe Petrovic deflected it, maybe Barron, maybe both. Either way, the only objects that could have touched the puck were those sticks
So even if you don’t feel you can trust the ice level angle to demonstrate actual contact, on a logical level you now there had to have been a stick deflection before it reached Hellebuyck.
Why wasn’t this referenced by the referee? Perhaps because it was simply missed. Or perhaps because his call was that Hellebuyck knocked it into the net, so when he got the “good goal” call from upstairs, he simply reiterated his original call. Notably, it shouldn’t have taken 7 minutes to verify or overturn the original call. The length of the review suggests something else was looked at, even if it wasn’t specifically communicated to the referee.
Thanks. "In any other manner" sounds like a clause to cover anything that wasn't already mentioned.
Except last night's chain of events was mentioned: A kicked puck that deflects off the goalie's stick is no-goal. That's the bottom line and that sounds like exactly like what happened. The other stuff – would the puck have missed the net / was Petrovic trying to pass it / was Hellebuyck making a save or playing it – are mind-reading questions that fall outside of the rules. All we know is a kicked puck bounced off a goalie's stick into the net. There's a specific rule governing that exact sequence; it states it should be ruled no-goal.
Hellebuyck certainly wasn't 'shooting' the puck. His reaction and ensuing contact was preventative. Hellebuyck saw the puck, twisted his body to intercept it, whereby it hit his stick and deflected into the net. Unfortunately for Winnipeg, the review gave more weight to the call on the ice than the actual rule.
Sounds like there are multiple versions of "You", which could explain how you're able to hand out so many 'Likes'.I actually agree in the sense that if it were me making the call, I would rule that Hellebuyck's relevance to the puck going into the net was a deflection. The war room obviously thought otherwise, since they allowed the goal. On the other hand, if it were also me, I wouldn't have ruled it a distinct kicking motion in the first place, rendering Hellebuyck's relevance to the puck going in moot, resulting in it still being a good goal.
That's just me though. Drawing on my own experience as a ref has no bearing, since I worked under USA Hockey rules, which are much less permissive with regards to the puck going into the net off a player's skate. This would have been a very clear "no goal" with USA Hockey rules, which basically only allow pucks going in off an attacking player's skate if it's an obviously unintentional deflection.
Reading here... it ain't black or white.Thanks. "In any other manner" sounds like a clause to cover anything that wasn't already mentioned.
Except last night's chain of events was mentioned: A kicked puck that deflects off the goalie's stick is no-goal. That's the bottom line and that sounds like exactly like what happened. The other stuff – would the puck have missed the net / was Petrovic trying to pass it / was Hellebuyck making a save or playing it – are mind-reading questions that fall outside of the rules. All we know is a kicked puck bounced off a goalie's stick into the net. There's a specific rule governing that exact sequence; it states it should be ruled no-goal.
Hellebuyck certainly wasn't 'shooting' the puck. His reaction and ensuing contact was preventative. Hellebuyck saw the puck, twisted his body to intercept it, whereby it hit his stick and deflected into the net. Unfortunately for Winnipeg, the review gave more weight to the call on the ice than the actual rule.
Sounds like there are multiple versions of "You", which could explain how you're able to hand out so many 'Likes'.
I mean yes. If this were the explanation the refs and/or league would have went with, it makes sense.There was some discussion of this upthread. It boils down to:
- We are talking about after the last time the puck touches the ice
- The behind the net angle clearly shows that after the puck left the ice, it noticeably changed trajectory in mid-air
- If you slow down the ice level angle carefully, you can see the puck change velocity and trajectory as it is flying past the sticks
- Maybe Petrovic deflected it, maybe Barron, maybe both. Either way, the only objects that could have touched the puck were those sticks
So even if you don’t feel you can trust the ice level angle to demonstrate actual contact, on a logical level you now there had to have been a stick deflection before it reached Hellebuyck.
Why wasn’t this referenced by the referee? Perhaps because it was simply missed. Or perhaps because his call was that Hellebuyck knocked it into the net, so when he got the “good goal” call from upstairs, he simply reiterated his original call. Notably, it shouldn’t have taken 7 minutes to verify or overturn the original call. The length of the review suggests something else was looked at, even if it wasn’t specifically communicated to the referee.
There is no carve-out in the actual rule for the goalie "propelling" the puck into the net. The rule states that if there is a kicking motion and the puck then touches the goalie's stick, it will be ruled no goal. It is a very black and white definition in the rulebook. By a very plain application of the rule, it should have been no goal.It was a kick, but Hellebuyck also clearly propelled that puck (which was going wide) into the net. Good goal is the right call.
The rule doesn't say this. You're adding words because you want a different outcome.There is no carve-out in the actual rule for the goalie "propelling" the puck into the net. The rule states that if there is a kicking motion and the puck then touches the goalie's stick, it will be ruled no goal. It is a very black and white definition in the rulebook. By a very plain application of the rule, it should have been no goal.
It's not black and white, because it uses the word deflection, not touches.There is no carve-out in the actual rule for the goalie "propelling" the puck into the net. The rule states that if there is a kicking motion and the puck then touches the goalie's stick, it will be ruled no goal. It is a very black and white definition in the rulebook. By a very plain application of the rule, it should have been no goal.
There is no carve-out in the actual rule for the goalie "propelling" the puck into the net. The rule states that if there is a kicking motion and the puck then touches the goalie's stick, it will be ruled no goal. It is a very black and white definition in the rulebook. By a very plain application of the rule, it should have been no goal.
Yes it does. Why don't you show me where the word "propel" is in that rule?The rule doesn't say this. You're adding words because you want a different outcome.
the Rule literally says "DEFLECTION" this was not a deflection. You keep saying "TOUCHES" like that is the same thingYes it does. Why don't you show me where the word "propel" is in that rule?
I've attached the actual text of the rule below for your benefit, since you obviously don't know what it is and never read it. Point ii):
A kicked puck that deflects off the stick of any player (excluding the goalkeeper's stick) shall be ruled a good goal.
Key words there: Excluding the goalkeeper's stick. The rule literally says if there a kicking motion that then goes off the stick of the goaltender, it is no goal.
Hope you're man enough to admit you are literally and factually wrong.
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Refs have awarded the Jets 13 PPs over three games and have only given the Stars 7 PPs. Bettman is pretty bad at this helping the Stars thing.nhl making a controversial call against a canadian team in the playoffs shocker... betmans dream of never letting the cup come to canada lives on lol.
And the key word the NHL used is "propelled", but that word does not appear in the rule book.It's not black and white, because it uses the word deflection, not touches.
Saying it deflected off Hellebyucks stick into the net is disingenuous, because he clearly played it into the net, it wasn't the result of a deflection
Yes it does. Why don't you show me where the word "propel" is in that rule?
I've attached the actual text of the rule below for your benefit, since you obviously don't know what it is and never read it. Point ii):
A kicked puck that deflects off the stick of any player (excluding the goalkeeper's stick) shall be ruled a good goal.
Key words there: Excluding the goalkeeper's stick. The rule literally says if there a kicking motion that then goes off the stick of the goaltender, it is no goal.
Hope you're man enough to admit you are literally and factually wrong.
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They said it was "propelled" into the net by Hellebuyck. There is no mention of the word "propel" in the rulebook. There is no plain interpretation of the rule that says it should be a goal. They just felt like it should be, so they said it was. Ignoring the rules is so NHL, so it makes sense.The key word in section "ii" is "deflects." They ruled it was not a deflection, which leads it into 78.4:
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They, correctly, awarded the goal, so you're clearly wrong.And the key word the NHL used is "propelled", but that word does not appear in the rule book.
A very plain application of the rule says it should be no goal. That is indisputable. They should write the rule better to cover cases like this, but it obviously should be no goal.
Look, it's pretty NHL to just ignore what the rules are, so whatever. But your argument is basically just let's not interpret the rulebook how it's written.
They said it was "propelled" into the net by Hellebuyck. There is no mention of the word "propel" in the rulebook. There is no plain interpretation of the rule that says it should be a goal. They just felt like it should be, so they said it was. Ignoring the rules is so NHL, so it makes sense.
Yes, because it literally deflects of Hellebuyck's stick.the Rule literally says "DEFLECTION" this was not a deflection. You keep saying "TOUCHES" like that is the same thing