Tobias Kahun
Registered User
- Oct 3, 2017
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No it wasntIt's the EXACT SAME HIT as Ryan Reaves
No it wasntIt's the EXACT SAME HIT as Ryan Reaves
Apparently you need further education. I'm not sure if you know this, but the Leafs suspension history I was talking about pre-dates more than a few days ago. I don't give a shit about the Panthers and they aren't relevant.Lmao educate myself. Reaves got 5 games for that hit on Nurse. 5. Sure, Whitecloud could’ve gotten called, he wasn’t, Leafs were called for the retaliation. It happens all the time, but keep thinking the League is out for Leafland. Panthering didn’t exist, either.
If he doesn't leave his feet prior to contact, leaving his feet is not against the rules.He clearly jumps into the head, gimme a break. Even if he hadn't, by your definition, the Reaves hit last week was legal.
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Are you STILL talking about the Peeke hit? One foot off the ice isn't charging.Did they get a penalty for the major penalty for charging by Pacioretty on Peeke leaving the ice blatantly prior to the hit?
No. No conspiracy after all. Selective memory when it comes to the examples of Toronto being the unfair victim. Parros being incompetent is an entirely separate issue.
On the other hand this looks like a typical hit where the skates end up off the ice as a result of the hit making it look worse. Unless you try a different screenshot as evidence.
Live by the sword.You’re right. The Whitecloud one was worse. Left his feet and got all head.
Because we use the rules to decide what is illegal instead of our emotions or personal moral compass.I think it was a terrible hit and they need to get these hits out of the game. I do not see how people are thinking this is through the body. He goes straight up through the head.
I haven't been digging deep into this thread. Is the best video in here still a 8 second clip from Omar that has no replays, doesn't show the lead up to the play, and doesn't slow the play down?
If he doesn't leave his feet prior to contact, leaving his feet is not against the rules.
The rules need changed. These hits should not be allowed in the NHL now that we know the devastating impact of brain injuries.Because we use the rules to decide what is illegal instead of our emotions or personal moral compass.
See post 112 for a better angle, or slo mo video in post 164.I haven't been digging deep into this thread. Is the best video in here still a 8 second clip from Omar that has no replays, doesn't show the lead up to the play, and doesn't slow the play down?
If he doesn't leave his feet prior to contact, leaving his feet is not against the rules.
Sure but until the rules are changed, they can only rule by what the rules actually are.The rules need changed. These hits should not be allowed in the NHL now that we know the devastating impact of brain injuries.
Whether he has upward momentum through the hit is irrelevant for the sake of determining whether the hit is illegal, unless it's an "unnecessary extension of the body upward" that results in his hitting the head. If I had any faith in the DoPS, I would leave determining that to them and let them determine whether this falls under "unnecessary extension," or if it's just using ground forces to ensure you can deliver a hard hit to a player skating right at you. Unfortunately, it's the DoPS.Like a lot of hits I guess. But in this case, he certainly launches himself upwards into the hit, I don't know how anyone could argue with me that.
Alright. What do you change the rules to?The rules need changed. These hits should not be allowed in the NHL now that we know the devastating impact of brain injuries.
Eh, I don't see it. The big question to determine whether this hit was an illegal check to the head is whether Whitecloud's upward momentum through the hit was unnecessary. Trouba had little to no upward extension through the hit, that was just Barron acting as if hitting was illegal.Looks to me like the hit on Barron by Trouba earlier this year.