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- Aug 25, 2003
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Holloway makes no attempt to not make contact with the goalie, good non call.
Kulak pushes his guy into the goalie from a solid distance out, good goal.
"No attempt to not make contact"?
He doesn't make contact at all if Hughes doesn't shove him right into the goalie - and even then it was marginal at best.
Marginal at best by the rule is still a non goal"No attempt to not make contact"?
He doesn't make contact at all if Hughes doesn't shove him right into the goalie - and even then it was marginal at best.
Very poor plays to comparefirst one guys skating through the crease and gets pushed in
second one guys hard stopping outside the crease but gets pushed in and most of the contact is from the defenseman and goalie anyway
this thread is unbelievably dumb except to a blatant homer
Agreed...It looks like maybe there's a bit of contact with the Seattle player and Pickard's glove, but it's so hard to tell because at the same time the Oilers player is barreling into his goalie.Honestly kind of looks right to me based on those two clips? Coming from an Oilers fan.
First one Holloway is helped into the crease but makes no effort to avoid contact with the goalie, happily skates right through him. Second on I'm not sure the Seattle player even touches Pickard? At least from that angle? Looks like its Kulak who takes Pickard out of the play. Maybe a different angle would be more telling.
If he had not been touched at all, he would have skated directly through the blue paint inches from the goalie.
He received the amount of contact that will universally occur when you skate through an NHL goalie crease. There wasn’t some flagrant shove that forced him into the crease, he was already there on his own efforts.
Doing that and expecting the refs to side with you on goalie contact is not a smart move.
Marginal at best by the rule is still a non goal
Agreed 100%, he was not intending on making contact with the goalie. So why the ref rather quickly chose to rule it "goalie interference" after watching the defender push him into the goalie....I suppose I'll never understand a ref's thought process.
Oh no argument here, contact was definitely made but my argument was that Holloway wasn't looking to bulldoze the goalie into the net.
They flip a coin with these. Just remembered Brian Dumoulin pushing a guy into his goalie, taking the goalie out for a playoff series, and getting a goal called off. Then again the goalie was scumbag Casey DeSmith, and they didn't win the series, so it worked out okay in the end.
I don’t really care ultimately about either goal as the Oilers won anyway.Both seem like the right call.
Just more crybaby oil fans thinking big bad bettman is out to get them and its all a conspiracy lmao
There are inconsistencies, without a doubt, in goaltender interference calls, but as others are saying, these two seem correct.
Pertaining to the first one, I have had way too many discussions with hometown fans who seem to think that because their forward was engaged by a defenseman, any contact from that forward on the goaltender is the defenseman's fault. It just isn't true. The forward still needs to attempt to not interfere with the goaltender's movement. That effort was little to nil in the first clip as the forward made some initial contact with the goaltender due to his check and then simply drove through the crease, and through the goaltender, in an effort to disengage. If he had been engaged by his check, made contact with goalie, but attempted to spin in the other direction so as to not continue interfering with the goaltender, there'd be an argument. But he took what was mild contact caused by his check and made it 5x more interference by choosing to push forward directly through the goalie in the crease.
On the second one, the contact is entirely caused by the pursuing defenseman and there's really nowhere to go for the forward (other than the way he went) in which he clearly tries to minimize contact as much as possible.
I'd have made the same calls.
Probably because the referee is simply trying to call the play based on what he's seeing. He's not doing some quick analysis in his head that says what the forwards intentions would have been if the play unfolded differently.
Perhaps he saw exactly what other people in the thread are talking about...? A forward who received contact that bumped him into the goalie, but then continued the interference largely on his own volition in the following moments.
On the flip side, this one always stands out to me as the most egregious, "Matt-Duchene-Missed-Offside" example of a missed GI call:
It seems the refs just never can seem to get it right with any regularity.
Mom I said something I laughed at on the internetBoth correct CALLS. Good job zebras
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