Quote:
Originally Posted by Enoch Root
lol. If you think that's an inch or two, I don't know what to tell you.
More importantly though...
Exactly this. The shot from behind Bennett shows conclusively that the puck is on the ice. If you watch the video of it hitting the pad and then freeze-framing, it clearly hits the pad and is coming back out at the moment of the freeze-frame. It is AFTER hitting the pad that the puck is up in the air.
And it isn't anywhere near an inch in the air, even at that.
Edit: to those of you that claim that you can see an inch of his pad under the puck, that is the toe of the pad, IN FRONT of the puck. It is also an illusion of the angle. There isn't an inch of pad under the puck.
Look at the shot from behind Bennett of the puck on the ice, then ask yourself how you think it is an inch off the ice at the moment that it hits the pad. After? Sure. But not at contact.
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So.. your post just said you can't conclusively say it was in.