But that’s not what I said at all, is it?
Evolution is exactly what I’m pointing at. It wasn’t so long ago that players picked their spots with shot blocking, and generally tried to keep their face/throat out of the line of fire, even if it meant using a glove for extra protection. Upgrading their pads and adding visors were obvious steps to making it safer to step in front of a shot, but that has the converse effect of causing players to take increasingly dangerous risks because they feel protected.
The incident last night had a guy doing this in front of a point shot:
That’s standard technique now, because the assumption is that all the vital areas are protected. So he looms over the puck with his face sticking out and neck exposed, more concerned with using his hands as goalie gloves than using them to protect himself. It only takes the puck coming high off the stick to put it point-blank into an area that could disable or kill him.
We’ve seen the same phenomenon happen in everything from football to lacrosse rugby to baseball. It’s practically a foundational principle in sports — the more padding you give an athlete, the more he puts himself in position to sustain a catastrophic injury. Adding more pads isn’t necessarily the best next step, as there’s also a need for de-escalation and teaching players not to put themselves in mortal danger over some routine play.