Devilsfan2326
Registered User
- Oct 4, 2011
- 849
- 351
Ok perfect so you have experience, do you not have any memories of how your bench reacted after a fight, especially a resounding win? Or how the bench reacted after a big hit? Or a guy laying out for a huge block? Teams build energy off events like these, it really can swing momentum.After playing in Canada, I actually played hockey overseas in West Germany if it really matters that much to you.
It is an entertainment business and a lot of fans like a good tilt. Some times a staged fight can take a mean hard hitting meatball off the ice and the other players will feel a little bit happy. Fighting after a clean hit is just assaulting a guy for no reason if he does not want to fight and is 100x worse than a staged fightWhat's dumber? Fighting after a clean hit or staged fighting? I'd go with staged fighting because at least fighting after a clean hit is spur of the moment protecting a teammate. To me staged fighting is a complete sideshow there to justify guys' existence in a league that shouldn't be there. It has nothing to do with hockey. It's like going to watch a play and in the middle of it they do their taxes.
Ok perfect so you have experience, do you not have any memories of how your bench reacted after a fight, especially a resounding win?
That’s where the major disconnect actually comes from, your belief that early in a game there’s no momentum to shift. When it’s a level game, that’s exactly the right opportunity to try and give your team the upper hand. You seemed to think that a fight within the first 5 minutes accomplishes nothing. It’s the assertion that they’re fighting for the sake of fighting, when in reality, there’s usually a lot more behind the scenes that since fans don’t see, they just assume doesn’t happen. The same goes with this site almost turning “he’s a locker room guy” into a meme. We can’t see the benefits they bring, so it must be an old boys club thing and not a real reason to give that plug your teams board probably hates a contract.When did I ever say that fights weren't momentum shifting? Or that they couldn't inspire emotions in a team?
I take issue with the idea that our biggest guy has to fight their biggest guy because they're the biggest guys and everyone is expecting them to fight each other. And they expect to fight each because that's what they are expected to do.
The singular example I gave, which you took issue with for some reason, is when a staged fight takes place with no prior history, no in-game reason for fighting, no real momentum to shift, too early in the game to have much impact. There's no deterrence, no build-up, nothing.
Eventually in the NHL, there was a club of guys who were too big to fight anyone else, so they just fought each other, again and again and again. And there was no bad blood between the boxes, just conversation and mutual respect.
Fights between enforcers could certainly inspire teams, but at the right time and in the right circumstances. Otherwise it's just a sideshow.
That’s where the major disconnect actually comes from, your belief that early in a game there’s no momentum to shift. When it’s a level game, that’s exactly the right opportunity to try and give your team the upper hand. You seemed to think that a fight within the first 5 minutes accomplishes nothing. It’s the assertion that they’re fighting for the sake of fighting, when in reality, there’s usually a lot more behind the scenes that since fans don’t see, they just assume doesn’t happen. The same goes with this site almost turning “he’s a locker room guy” into a meme. We can’t see the benefits they bring, so it must be an old boys club thing and not a real reason to give that plug your teams board probably hates a contract.
Is it a staged fight when a player has to 'answer the bell' a few shifts later because he injured another player?
This isn't a spur of the moment thing, nor is it a fight between two enforcers. A player injures another player, even accidentally, and we know retribution is coming. But we have to wait, sometimes until the next game when those teams meet.
Wouldn't that be considered 'staged'? And where does that rank on the "Dumb-Meter"?
Is it a staged fight when a player has to 'answer the bell' a few shifts later because he injured another player?
This isn't a spur of the moment thing, nor is it a fight between two enforcers. A player injures another player, even accidentally, and we know retribution is coming. But we have to wait, sometimes until the next game when those teams meet.
Wouldn't that be considered 'staged'? And where does that rank on the "Dumb-Meter"?
I see a lot of people want it completely removed.You guys know what's sad? If you go to Social Media I bet most people still love staged fights.
I see a lot of people want it completely removed.
Choice DWhat's dumber? Fighting after a clean hit or staged fighting? I'd go with staged fighting because at least fighting after a clean hit is spur of the moment protecting a teammate. To me staged fighting is a complete sideshow there to justify guys' existence in a league that shouldn't be there. It has nothing to do with hockey. It's like going to watch a play and in the middle of it they do their taxes.
A staged fight is usually more entertaining than watching two 4th lines playing risk-averse, coach-approved hockey.
Voted neither.
Oh they try.Or teams can try to put together good 4th lines.
the staged fights of the late 90s/early 2000s were the worst. The game sped up, but you had these cavemen ruining every 4th line. Those lines are actually useful now because we’ve largely left those dinosaurs behind. Idk if they could keep up more in the 80s, but towards the end it was just bad NHLers doing some set piece most games. They’d try and avoid damage, wouldn’t really have a reason for it, and idiot fans would lose their minds like they do for fake wrestling. If I could unwatch all the Andrew Peters and Eric Bolton fights I’ve seen I would.
the staged fights of the late 90s/early 2000s were the worst. The game sped up, but you had these cavemen ruining every 4th line. Those lines are actually useful now because we’ve largely left those dinosaurs behind. Idk if they could keep up more in the 80s, but towards the end it was just bad NHLers doing some set piece most games. They’d try and avoid damage, wouldn’t really have a reason for it, and idiot fans would lose their minds like they do for fake wrestling. If I could unwatch all the Andrew Peters and Eric Bolton fights I’ve seen I would.
This post is awesome, and I couldn't agree more. Having those "heavyweight" 4th liners on teams did nothing but ruin 6 minutes of a hockey game, because they couldn't play the sport when they were on the ice. They just trudged around and waited to see if they'd find a partner to drop the gloves with.
It was bad for the fans, bad for the sport, and even bad for those players themselves. Lot's of fighters have come forward saying it was mental agony knowing they might have to fight some other knucklehead any given game.
I don't like fights for clean hits. It's dumb. But you can understand that the players on the ice might not see that it was clean or dirty in the moment, so they act on instinct and defend their own guy. I don't like it but I get it.
Staged fighting never had a point, and the sport is better without it.
Pretty wild to me that an entire generation was raised up to become really big, ice boxing face punchers to keep their spot on a roster (stick) with the lure of an NHL salary (carrot) from the time they were in Juniors to dance around with the other face punchers for some vague, undefined, unquantified "momentum" to be spread to the bench that is probably just as negated out by the other team's "momentum". With what we know about CTE and the premature deaths/suicides of so many ex-enforcers, societies 100 years from now will look on such practice as barbaric and animalistic.Do people really not understand the point of staged fighting? It’s trying to create a momentum swing, by bringing your guys into the game and raising their emotions. Players aren’t robots, they have emotions and watching your guy go beat the wheels off your opponent can get them fired up and swing the momentum in their favour.
Right, people understand it, and that's what makes it dumb as heck.The claim that fights after clean hits are mostly because players didn’t have time to realize it was clean is false.
Or maybe it’s partially true, but what’s being miser is that many times the players DO know that the hit was clean, and will fight anyhow. Especially if the player who received the hit was a star player.
It’s code. Whether anyone agrees that it should exist is another discussion, but it does exist, and the thinking is basically - “yes, the rules do allow you to hit our star player in what is deemed a clean check. Regardless, there will be a price to pay for whoever hit him, because he’s our star and clean or not, we’re coming after you if you go near him”.
I just can’t believe more people don’t understand this.