- Jan 23, 2008
- 9,303
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This will be his 12th suspension.
9 in the Q
2 in the AHL
There’s enough things you can blame on that dumbass. He can sit this one outAn exceedingly dirty, dangerous play by a player who should be considered a repeat offender but won't be (yet).
How can I blame this on Matt Rempe?
Uh, go back and look at where his left leg and left arm are at the start of the sequence and where they are when Spurgeon goes down. His left leg comes off the ice and goes up against the back of both of Spurgeon’s legs. His left arm goes in front of Spurgeon’s right shoulder and then pushes him backwards. That’s a textbook slew foot.What i said in another thread about this is that guy is a pos, but it's really looks like that wasn't intentional at all as there's nothing you see from a typical slewfoot.
There's no kick to take both legs out, there's no arm on Spurgeon's shoulder/chest to push him back.
An exceedingly dirty, dangerous play by a player who should be considered a repeat offender but won't be (yet).
How can I blame this on Matt Rempe?
Only 1 of the AHL suspensions was for a bad hit/crosscheck. The other was an automatic for instigator penalty at the end of a game.Wow. That makes me wonder about something-does AHL suspensions count as a 'repeat offender' factor? (I imagine not, but maybe it should).
Anyways I think 4 games at least.
Uh, go back and look at where his left leg and left arm are at the start of the sequence and where they are when Spurgeon goes down. His left leg comes off the ice and goes up against the back of both of Spurgeon’s legs. His left arm goes in front of Spurgeon’s right shoulder and then pushes him backwards. That’s a textbook slew foot.
You'd think the State of Hockey writers and fanbase would recognize what a slew foot is and isn't, but I guess not. We're just too homerish I guess for most to be objective.
It wasn't a slew foot. The rulebook says it isn't. The video says it isn't. Certainly not an intentional play either. It was an unfortunate, scary play that ended up with an injury. Two players went for a battle to the end boards, and this time it didn't end well. Sucks for Spurg, but that's hockey. The penalty in the game was much more than enough. A suspension is just stupid and another example of the league penalizing results instead of actions.
52.1 Slew-footing - Slew-footing is the act of a player using his leg or foot to knock or kick an opponent’s feet from under him, or pushes an opponent’s upper body backward with an arm or elbow, and at the same time with a forward motion of his leg, knocks or kicks the opponent’s feet from under him, causing him to fall violently to the ice.
You clearly don't know what a slew foot is.You'd think the State of Hockey writers and fanbase would recognize what a slew foot is and isn't, but I guess not. We're just too homerish I guess for most to be objective.
It wasn't a slew foot. The rulebook says it isn't. The video says it isn't. Certainly not an intentional play either. It was an unfortunate, scary play that ended up with an injury. Two players went for a battle to the end boards, and this time it didn't end well. Sucks for Spurg, but that's hockey. The penalty in the game was much more than enough. A suspension is just stupid and another example of the league penalizing results instead of actions.
You watched that video and seriously think it wasn't a slew foot?
I have no doubt who knows what one is and isn't.You clearly don't know what a slew foot is.