Friday, June 10, 2011

Why the NHL Needs to Keep its Edge

As the 2010-2011 NHL season winds down with what now promises to be one of the nastiest and chippiest Stanley Cup Finals in recent memory, some folks in the general sports media, and within the Hockey World itself, are loudly proclaiming that something needs to be done to clean up this game.



While I agree that headshots and concussions are a problem the league has to deal with, I hope they can manage to achieve this much needed goal without blunting some of the edge off the game.



As the great John Buccigross has written, "Hockey is a blood sport. It is played with a searing emotion most people can't empathize with unless they have played and lived the sport. Hockey is mostly difficult and frustrating. Which is why there is such an explosion of excitement whenever someone scores. Just about every goal is well-earned in some way. In this game, nothing comes cheap."



When Bucci refers to the game of Hockey here as a "blood sport," he is certainly not taking the perspective of some neanderthal wishing to see gladiatorial style combat upon the ice. He is putting into words the raw emotion and fury that inherently part of a hard hitting, high speed game played by rugged men.



It is not about the blood spilling out onto the ice after Steven Stamkos takes a puck to the face in Game 7 against the Bruins that draws us to the sport. It is him waving off the trainer, racing into the locker room, and returning less than five minutes later with a full cage guarding his now exploded nose and continuing on in the game without a second thought.







My instant response: a moment you can only have in the NHL playoffs.



At one time concussions were viewed in many circles the same way Stamkos’ broken nose was. Get some smelling salts, clear your head and get back out there for the next shift. The sport has learned the hard way that such a policy is reckless and dangerous for the safety and long term health of its participants.



It is right and proper that the NHL address hits to the head that lead directly to these concussions as a serious and dire matter. I implore the league however to be careful not to totally take away the mentality, the unquestioned willingness to sacrifice limbs in order to lift the Stanley Cup with heart and heart alone. Planting the seeds of doubt within the players would cheapen the game, cheapen the Stanley Cup, and lessen the impact of the sacrifice guys have spoken about for ages that it takes to win the Hardest Trophy in Sports.



My suggestion: target specifically blindside and direct hits to the head with harsher and automatic suspensions of 10 games for a 1st offense and escalate a scale from there. Fine the team that employees the offender on sliding scale as well. Leave the periphery stuff go. Players will adapt quickly to launching shoulders into chests rather than elbows into craniums. Scrappy, dirty stuff, like Alex Burrows biting Patrice Bergeron? Leave that kind of decision to the referees on the ice. Keep a hands off approach and let the player’s police themselves and send their own messages. Tell me that incident did not add an element of drama and edge to these Stanley Cup Finals. Having that edge is a good thing for the sport. Hockey is a game that needs to be played on the edge.



The fans who get into the game buy into this and understand such things. And they are your target audience NHL.



One of my favorite fan stories of this post season came from the “non-traditional” hockey market of Tampa Bay (there have been more Cups there than Toronto has had since ’67, just sayin).




Steven Paul, a Bolts season ticket holder was told by his Home Owner’s Associaton that his “GO BOLTS” sign in his yard was violation of the mandate within the neighborhood that no signage was allowed with the exception of security company signs. His response was the same as Stamkos flying back onto the ice for game 7. He pressed on in the face of clear and present danger with an edge to his game and a thin shield to guard himself from further ‘harm’:





"Protected By:


GO BOLTS


Security"



My instant response: a moment you can only have in the NHL playoffs.














1 comment:

  1. I agree with your points on the heashots and concussions being addressed, and I hope it doesn't take the physical nature out of the game. I lost count after the tenth hard hit from a body check in last night's game, but they were all clean. However, the league needs to be consistent when punishing a player for infractions. Whether he is a superstar or fourth liner shouldn't matter, and take into account a repeat offender's actions. I will be the first to admit. I never played the game, so I have know idea how fast it is down on the ice, but I have sat on the glass as a fan, and it is much faster than up in the last row or watching it on TV. That said, the NHL has officials that have played the game, or at least should have, to make those decisions. The playoffs have been amazing. Steven Stamkos coming back after destroying his nose was one of those moments. Yeah, Tampa Bay lost the game, but who cares. Kudos to Steven. Hockey players are some tough SOB's and some of the most lowkey guys you'll want to meet. One time I had the privlige (I think I messed up the spelling) of meeting Barry Melrose and we chatted for a few minutes. What a cool guy. To take the time to talk to a 20-something red-bearded unathletic kid drinking a Labatte Blue and wearing a Sidney Crosby T-shirt is mighty classy. By the way, I got myself a jersey. Go Barry. Great job covering the finals, as always.

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