I agree this should be looked at, but everyone saying he jumped needs to look at it in slower motion, or frame by frame. His skates are on the ice when contact is made. The force of the hit is what caused Whitecloud to leave his feet, not a jump.
It's in no way comparable to the Reaves hit.
Definitely didn’t jump into the hitDefinitely jumped into the hit, should've been something.
Not really sure how you curtail that given it's pretty much text book of how you should be throwing a hit? It's like telling a boxer not to use his legs when he punches. The problem is the game is played at a very high speed and even the slightest of miscalculations goes sideways quickly. People watch things in slow motion or even general replay and think "he had tons of time to react" when usually they don't.He didn’t jump. But he did explode upward into the hit which I believe the league is trying to curtail (doing a poor job of it though)
How is it comparable? If Reaves was coming straight at him, it would’ve been comparable and a clean hit.He launches his body up towards the head. There's no arguing that. He knew what he was doing. He could have made the exact same hit keeping his body where it was (lower) and it would have been perfectly fine. He decided to injure Knies instead. Doesn't matter if it was a split second decision., etc., the onus is on the hitter to avoid head contact and his actions specifically led to the head being the primary point of contact. I still can't believe people are arguing this. Like I said LDS is the only explanation.
Yes it is. That's silly.
It's really not. Whitecloud drove through the core of the body. The determining factor on deciding whether his hit was illegal is whether his upward extension was unnecessary. The Reaves hit had no mitigating factors. He came from a 90 degree angle and decided to drive through Nurse's head.Yes it is. That's silly.
On the topic of players having their head down; how does this differ from football players being really low to the ground? Yet the NFL is forcing the league away from hits to the head, and no type of position by the attacking player is considered at-faultAgain, I think this hit MIGHT be illegal based on whether the DoPS considers this an unnecessary extension upward. They also might consider standing up into the hit to be a regular hitting motion (which it arguably is). The issue with this hit is exactly that Knies is crouched really low. Whitecloud extends upward, but to completely avoid head contact, Whitecloud would have needed to have his chin at the level of the board, which would basically force him to have a hip check stance.
Trouba did that against Barron, so it's not impossible, but people were still really angry over that hit.
But yeah, overall, the NHL and the DoPS have made it abundantly clear that they don't care about player safety in general, and head trauma in particular.
Being able to tackle makes it a lot different.On the topic of players having their head down; how does this differ from football players being really low to the ground? Yet the NFL is forcing the league away from hits to the head, and no type of position by the attacking player is considered at-fault
Doesnt it seem like 'keep your head up' is just an older adage that is used to defend these types of plays moreso than it is unavoidable head contact?
Football has done wonders for the league in terms of removing head contact from most tackles; and id argue its much harder to avoid in football, considering the size of most running backs
Interesting video
Tackling is certainly different but not a ton; plus football helmets are large crowns, with most running backs keeping their head low and forwardBeing able to tackle makes it a lot different.
It's really not. Whitecloud drove through the core of the body. The determining factor on deciding whether his hit was illegal is whether his upward extension was unnecessary. The Reaves hit had no mitigating factors. He came from a 90 degree angle and decided to drive through Nurse's head.
He came from the side, yes, but a half step further and that's all shoulder. Timing is off by a millisecond.It's really not. Whitecloud drove through the core of the body. The determining factor on deciding whether his hit was illegal is whether his upward extension was unnecessary. The Reaves hit had no mitigating factors. He came from a 90 degree angle and decided to drive through Nurse's head.
Suggesting they’re the same and then telling someone to get checked out.No he didn't, he launched up to hit him in the head. Get your LDS checked into, it can be fatal.
This is incorrect.On the topic of players having their head down; how does this differ from football players being really low to the ground? Yet the NFL is forcing the league away from hits to the head, and no type of position by the attacking player is considered at-fault
Doesnt it seem like 'keep your head up' is just an older adage that is used to defend these types of plays moreso than it is unavoidable head contact?
Football has done wonders for the league in terms of removing head contact from most tackles; and id argue its much harder to avoid in football, considering the size of most running backs
Suggesting they’re the same and then telling someone to get checked out.
Bold move with a side of delusion
You don't have 50
You refuse to name any
Are you saying that he doesn't drive through Knies's core? Because you might need to re-check all of the replays if that's actually what you're claiming.No he didn't, he launched up to hit him in the head. Get your LDS checked into, it can be fatal.
That's explicitly stated as not a mitigating factor for rule 48.He came from the side, yes, but a half step further and that's all shoulder. Timing is off by a millisecond.