What’s A Penalty?

Monday, December 8th, 2008

What’s a penalty?  You can stop, rewind, freeze the play then and do it all again.  You can watch Shane Doan’s hit on David Backes time and time again in the 1st game of the Coyotes 3 game road trip that began in St. Louis.

It is a hockey hit. It is not a hit from behind, nor is it a boarding infraction.  It is a battle for a puck, 2 players, and they actually brace themselves, nearly stop, and Doan is stronger on his feet and catches Backes not quite as well prepared for a hit and unfortunately, gets injured on the play.

It is not the Mike Van Ryn injury. It is not a case where a player is facing the boards and vulnerable, and gets drilled from behind.  It is a hockey hit.

Doan gets a 5 minute major and it is a case of an overreaction to the far too many bad hits in the game. There should not have even been a penalty called.

In the meantime, veteran defenseman Ed Jovonovski and Derek Morris both get blatent high sticks to the eye area, and there are no calls. In both cases, the puck was close to both players.  From the broadcast booth, it is a much easier game, I understand that.

Here is another issue I have been having.

We know the sticks have “weak points” after a stick on stick, or a blocked shot to the shaft of the stick.  So a player blocks a shot, and the defending player is strong on his stick and the opposing playerks stick snaps, as a result of the puck hitting it originally.

Penalty. For slashing. For slashing? Or for having a stick that is already weakened by a puck?  Just because a stick breaks, doesn’t mean its a penalty.

There has to be some reward for a player that is strong on the puck. You can ask any top player about an opponent that is soft on the puck or a player that is hard on the puck. It is a strength. It is an asset that you have from an early age and likely a big reason why a scout rated you high or even just had you on the radar.  So, why do we take that away?

Just because a player falls down, it doesn’t mean it is a penalty on the nearest player around him.  Let’s get back to some on ice hockey sense.

See the play develop. Use common sense. Get the flow back into the game. I personally don’t enjoy a specialty teams game, where the flow and pace gets going and then the whistle blows and 10 guys are on the ice looking around, wondering where the infraction took place. It likely had no bearing on the play anyway.

It is a far more entertaining game when there is constant flow, back and forth action where chances are exchanged.

The honour of battling through checks and sometimes sticks is what separates the soft perimeter player, to the guy you want in the trenches in close games. Let’s not confuse the two types of players.

Call what the penalty is. Not what you think it was, as you may not have seen anything but a player falling down. They have big cushy pads on. They can handle it.  The other part about honour, or lack of it, occurred in Chicago with 2 seconds remaining in a 7-1 Blackhawks win.

A scrum in front of Hawk goalie Cristobal Huet, and Enver Lisin gets poked at by Brent Sopel and then Kyle Turris and Hawks rookie Kris Versteeg pair up.  Both have their gloves on, and then Versteeg pops him square in the nose. He said after the game that Turris, the 19 year old 180 lb offensive minded kid “challenged” him. He is kidding, right?

I spoke with Turris about it. Not a chance he challenged him.

Wayne Gretzky wasn’t amused with Versteeg, and in a 7-1 humiliation with 2 seconds left, it wasn’t impressive and didn’t leave the Great One with a good impression.

The Coyotes next face Versteeg and the Hawks on Jan. 6 in Phoenix.

You can be sure the Coyotes will be ready for the game and not just for what happened at the end of the game, but the lack of preparation to begin the game.

- 40

Hawks Too Much For Coyotes

Monday, December 8th, 2008

The best thing about last night’s game in Chicago?  It’s over and it’s only one game.  Right?  Perhaps.  But only if this team responds on Wednesday night in Dallas.

Kris Versteeg’s scrap with Kyle Turris at the conclusion of the game is what Wayne is responding to midway into this post game presser.

Wayne’s post-game:

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To be honest, this one was over by the conclusion of the National Anthem.  The Coyotes didn’t come to play.Let’s see if they pay the price in Dallas.

- Todd

FSN Arizona & Phoenix Coyotes Television/Radio Host
Visit:  FSN Arizona