Emil Lilleberg (who?) lowers the boom on Brett Leason

Stony Curtis

Registered User
Sep 21, 2018
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His struggle might not be a brain thing though…could be winded, etc. The biggest thing I noticed in that or what I didn’t understand was what the hell was he thinking? He was just skating in a straight line for so long and you could clearly see the guy coming if he was paying attention.
I remember thinking the same thing last year when Filip Hronek basically skated directly into the shoulder of Ryan Reaves like Reaves wasn't even there. Hronek must have though Reaves hyperspaced into his path at the last possible moment.
 

abo9

Registered User
Jun 25, 2017
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Worth noting, Leason is kind of a big dude. 6 foot 5 and 218 lbs. Rare to see big guys like that get sent flying, even more rare when its clean

Lilleberg is 6 foot 1, 205 lbs
 
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TheDawnOfANewTage

Dahlin, it’ll all be fine
Dec 17, 2018
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Shades of Sutton on Leopold, but cleaner. Damn, absolute beauty. Worth noting Ducks got a post out of it, seeming scoring chance, but I wouldn’t put that on Lillberg, there’s like 3 botched covers there.
 

TheNumber4

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Nov 11, 2011
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How did this guy go from Arizona to Lightning? Can’t seem to find a trade or waiver history that would have transferred him.
 

TheDawnOfANewTage

Dahlin, it’ll all be fine
Dec 17, 2018
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By the way he hobbles off the ice, he might just, though.

Seems like players are ever more unprepared for big hits, given the direction the game is taking. We ought not forget to teach players how to protect themselves and read the play for safety as well as offensive options.

People say this like Lindros never happened, or Lafontaine, or numerous other guys gettin caught with their head down. It happened/happens in every era.

This is like a cleaner version of Sutton on Leopold.
 

Norwegianoiler

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Nov 17, 2014
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People say this like Lindros never happened, or Lafontaine, or numerous other guys gettin caught with their head down. It happened/happens in every era.

This is like a cleaner version of Sutton on Leopold.

It has happened is does happen, indeed. Given that this type of hit and ones far more predatory in nature were far more common in earlier hockey, it's not quite the same anymore though. Lindros was an anomaly in that he had poor awareness in an era where players actively ran around looking for a monster hit to end someone's game or series. The Matt Cooke type of head hunter or even just the Kronwall style opportunist isn't nearly as common any longer. What was always a danger before, isn't as much any more. Earlier, guys were absolutely forced to learn self-protection. In the clip, Leason skated about half the ice with his head down before getting caught. I speculate that he'd have been hit far earlier in previous eras. It just seems to me that we are in danger of being more unprepared simply because the number of hits like Lilleberg's is going down and it's thus easy to underestimate teaching self-protection as part of coaching. I don't know if it is, but it just strikes me as a possible consequence to the changes in the game.
 

Rschmitz

Finding new ways to cheat
Feb 27, 2002
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He had a medical condition, Yotes were worried Lightning weren't. I don't blame them for not signing a guy for health purposes.
 

black hawks matter

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Nov 19, 2024
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And for a moment we can remember an era of hockey when men were men. And though the comforts of modernity tempt us to become ever weaker, we see a spark of what we once were, what we could become again. Though the world has been fully explored and there is no new wilderness to conquer, and no more savage tribes to quell, when global hegemons wage war with unmanned drones, we simulate this great trial of manhood at the highest stakes through the institution of sport. May our good ‘ole boys club be ever vigilant in keeping the mob at bay, who nip at the heels of Apollo with thier instigator rules, hoping to douse the light all to coddle those who would never touch the sun
 

johan f

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Jun 23, 2008
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His struggle might not be a brain thing though…could be winded, etc. The biggest thing I noticed in that or what I didn’t understand was what the hell was he thinking? He was just skating in a straight line for so long and you could clearly see the guy coming if he was paying attention

Lilleberg came in like Kronwall used to do, not easy to anticipate.
 

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