It has been ten years since the Steckel on Crosby hit.

Crow

Registered User
May 19, 2014
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It was this hit. Concussion protocol was introduced in 2011 months after this. Rule changes were introduced in June 2011 redefining head shots. NHL didn't take action until their best player went down.

Not getting into whether it was a dirty hit, but rather that the NHL started taking head shots seriously after what happened to Crosby.
I don’t see how what happened 167 plus years later is relevant.
 

Planetov

Registered User
Nov 18, 2019
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I feel old because i was 18 when Sid joined the league, now I’m in my late 30s with a bunch of health issues including a benign brain mass limiting my physical movements and causing balance issues.

I think the pens and Crosby did okay all things considering.


Disgusting hit though. One is a plug and the other is among the greatest to play the game
Even in a thread full of black and yellow bias this is some serious hyperbole.
 

Beau Knows

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Mar 4, 2013
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I remember a lot of talk that he should have retired around that time. He went on to win a couple Cups, Smythes, etc and has scored over 1000 points since then.

Great to see guys like him and Bergeron comeback from some scary head injuries.
 
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HTFN

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Feb 8, 2009
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I mean sure, guy looking the other, heading the other way gets a fly by from a plug with no business making the hit
The plug was following the play, technically it’s the guy looking the wrong direction while trying to make a turn that does the fly-by here since he’s carrying most of the momentum.

David Steckel wishes he was the guy people say he was because of this hit, it would have added years to his career and millions to his bank account as a shit stirring type. In reality he’s a big bodied semi-soft dummy who skated through contact he barely noticed in an NHL game while following the puck. They literally drill taking contact without losing focus into you, this isn’t a free skate, nobody’s real instinct is (or should be) to turn around and wonder about who bounced off them just because it’s Sidney Crosby.
 

crab

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Jan 26, 2019
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The plug was following the play, technically it’s the guy looking the wrong direction while trying to make a turn that does the fly-by here since he’s carrying most of the momentum.

David Steckel wishes he was the guy people say he was because of this hit, it would have added years to his career and millions to his bank account as a shit stirring type. In reality he’s a big bodied semi-soft dummy who skated through contact he barely noticed in an NHL game while following the puck. They literally drill taking contact without losing focus into you, this isn’t a free skate, nobody’s real instinct is (or should be) to turn around and wonder about who bounced off them just because it’s Sidney Crosby.

hey Steckel was good at face offs okay

Same Penguins fans cheering on Matt Cooke and then calling this hit dirty, makes you chuckle
 
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blundluntman

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Jul 30, 2016
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I don't think Steckell intentionally clipped him, at the very least I'm pretty certain he wasn't headhunting. It'd be one thing if he was lining him up or had a couple extra seconds to react, but the turnover happened very fast and they collided after hardly 3 strides, that's not enough time to make a calculated decision like that. At worst, maybe he was aware of Crosby and thought "whelp, I'm not trying to hit him but if we collide, at least I take him out of the play for a couple of seconds." unfortunate situation either way but I don't think it was malicious (that kinda stuff happens for sure, but not in this case IMO). I'd blame Pittsburgh's medical staff first and foremost for even clearing him to play in Tampa
 
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Luigi Lemieux

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Sep 26, 2003
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I don't think Steckell intentionally clipped him, at the very least I'm pretty certain he wasn't headhunting. It'd be one thing if he was lining him up or had a couple extra seconds to react, but the turnover happened very fast and they collided after hardly 3 strides, that's not enough time to make a calculated decision like that. At worst, maybe he was aware of Crosby and thought "whelp, I'm not trying to hit him but if we collide, at least I take him out of the play for a couple of seconds." unfortunate situation either way but I don't think it was malicious (that kinda stuff happens for sure, but not in this case IMO). I'd blame Pittsburgh's medical staff first and foremost for even clearing him to play in Tampa
It was a different time back then. He had no history of concussions and there was no concussion protocol to follow. I'll bet lots of players pre-2011 routinely played with concussions, knowingly or unknowingly.
 

Voight

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Feb 8, 2012
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The contact on that play was almost entirely Sidney Crosby's fault. He abruptly turned, face-first, with his head down, while not looking where he was going but instead puck-watching. No hockey coach at any level would ever teach a player to do that.

If this was some non-star player, there is little chance anyone is calling this dirty. David Steckel is not that type of player and his career demonstrated that for anyone who is familiar. David Steckel is not Matt Cooke - although Pens fans from that era LOVED Matt Cooke and defended him waaaaay beyond the point of reason.

From the Pens forum in 2013 - well after Cooke's dirty hits were undeniable:


So I'm inclined to think this is selective emotion-driven reasoning more so than sober thinking.

Never forget Lemieux's white knighting after the Pens-Isles brawl.... said while he gladly employed Matt Cooke

"We, as a league, must do a better job of protecting the integrity of the game and the safety of our players. We must make it clear that those kinds of actions will not be tolerated and will be met with meaningful disciplinary action."
 

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