Barsky
Registered User
- Jun 22, 2010
- 279
- 163
Yes, agreed, the sky is down and water is dry...Yes, she was great.
Yes, agreed, the sky is down and water is dry...Yes, she was great.
I get that. Stutzle slashes the stick. That's a penalty, meaning his touching the pick creates a stoppage. Calling the goal off and calling the penalty seems like the right call.It was called interference, no goal, and Stutzle got a penalty.
Former referee Dave Jackson interview posted in this thread, said it was a bad call.
Looks like that doesn’t help you with your rage.
I'm 8 pages behind, but I thought Stutzle slashed the stick out of Svechnikov's hands. Is that not the penalty?
I'm finding it hard to be in an uproar here so if someone could help me out and help me get enraged, that would be great.
I get that. Stutzle slashes the stick. That's a penalty, meaning his touching the pick creates a stoppage. Calling the goal off and calling the penalty seems like the right call.
Are people arguing at you can just slash the stick or...? This looks incredibly simple to me.
Majority think good goal, including a former NHL referee.I get that. Stutzle slashes the stick. That's a penalty, meaning his touching the pick creates a stoppage. Calling the goal off and calling the penalty seems like the right call.
Are people arguing at you can just slash the stick or...? This looks incredibly simple to me.
My take is that if you opt to have one hand on your stick, you waive the right to have that penalty called. You’re reaching. An ordinary run of the mill stick check could have enough force to knock the stick out of your hand, and that ought not be penalized. Another player shouldn’t have to be responsible for calibrating the force of an NHL stick check according to whether you’re holding it with two hands, or choose to have one hand on it.It's not called most times. Like I've said, last game, McDavid knocked a stick out of a player's hand and it went up 20 ft in the air and everyone in the building saw this stick go flying up higher than the glass.
Why didn't McDavid get a penalty for knocking the stick out of the sens players hand?
This wasn't a case of the refs not seeing it as the stick went flying...it means that these refs are of the mind that knocking the stick out of your opponent's hands is not a penalty...
So then what is the direction from the league's office to the refs.
Is knocking the stick out of your opponent's hands a penalty or not? If it's a matter of discretion on the ref based on force...surely the stick going up 20 ft over the glass would be enough force, no?
So what's the deal????
That should also likely be a penalty.It's not called most times. Like I've said, last game, McDavid knocked a stick out of a player's hand and it went up 20 ft in the air and everyone in the building saw this stick go flying up higher than the glass.
Why didn't McDavid get a penalty for knocking the stick out of the sens players hand?
This wasn't a case of the refs not seeing it as the stick went flying...it means that these refs are of the mind that knocking the stick out of your opponent's hands is not a penalty...
So then what is the direction from the league's office to the refs.
Is knocking the stick out of your opponent's hands a penalty or not? If it's a matter of discretion on the ref based on force...surely the stick going up 20 ft over the glass would be enough force, no?
So what's the deal????
But it's Stutzle who slashes the stick out of Svechnikov's hand, not allowing him to make a play. We see this relatively often, and it's called a penalty. Maybe not "interference" but certainly slashing.Majority think good goal, including a former NHL referee.
Svech is not even close enough to slash Stutzle, even reaching as far as he can, with one hand on the end of his stick. It was just a bad call
You should listen to interview, he explains why ref who called it had a bad view, and would have been concentrating on the player with the puck, vs Stutzle. Also said back ref never raised his hand, said they should of had a scrum and counted the goal.
I’ll take the opinion of a someone who reffed 1500 games,That should also likely be a penalty.
But it's Stutzle who slashes the stick out of Svechnikov's hand, not allowing him to make a play. We see this relatively often, and it's called a penalty. Maybe not "interference" but certainly slashing.
If he slashed it out of his hands at the blue line and it was immediately called without the goal being a factor, would we be mad?
Again, I'm just not getting the uproar here. Seems pretty straightforward.
Okay, thanks.I’ll take the opinion of a someone who reffed 1500 games,
doesn’t even sound like you’ve listened to it either,
As Jackson alluded to, that will go on his game sheet as a bad call (as a goal was taken away, and a penalty given)
He said every call is graded.
i wonder if this is a reputation call on stutzle.
I'm 8 pages behind, but I thought Stutzle slashed the stick out of Svechnikov's hands. Is that not the penalty?
I'm finding it hard to be in an uproar here so if someone could help me out and help me get enraged, that would be great.
My take is that if you opt to have one hand on your stick, you waive the right to have that penalty called. You’re reaching. An ordinary run of the mill stick check could have enough force to knock the stick out of your hand, and that ought not be penalized. Another player shouldn’t have to be responsible for calibrating the force of an NHL stick check according to whether you’re holding it with two hands, or choose to have one hand on it.
If you have both hands on your stick, and it’s knocked out of your hands, well there are a couple scenarios. Was it a stick lift? Too bad - hold onto your stick. Was it a downward slash? That could be a call, depending on whether or not the official deems it to be legit, and not embellished by dropping one’s stick at the same time as a slash occurs.
Of course, when a stick is broken by a forceful stick check, automatic penalty.
Knocking a stick up is a stick lift, while coming down on a stick with force is a slash.Does the wording say anything about the direction the slash is coming from?
You're saying hitting the stick upwards and out of someones hands is allowed but hitting a stick downwards and out of someone's hands is not allowed?
What about hitting it sideways? Where is the wording for the direction of the stick knock in the writing?
I find it strange that you differentiate the direction it's coming from.
Why wouldn knocking the stick out of the hands be depended on the direction of the knocking???