Quote:
Originally Posted by devo22
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That’s the play. There are several questions:
1. It was not batted toward a teammate, so by the rule, it had to be batted somewhere that would give the Flames an advantage (which is why the batted puck from behind the net in the other game should not have counted). I can’t see how batting the puck in a way that after you lose sight of it, it goes off the dasher and then the back of your leg and into a scrum could be possibly considered an advantage, especially to the extent that it could overturn the call on the ice.
2. Why was Dallas given the opportunity to discuss with the referee whether they should challenge the call before they decided to challenge it? This significantly reduced the risk of losing the call that is intended to discourage teams from making borderline challenges like this one.