Does anybody here know or heard if a goalie has ever received 2 penalties on the same play like Smith should have last night? I was thinking about that play and got me wondering why we don't see that happen more often with so many goalies playing the puck. Or has it happened before and I just missed it?
If you call him for the trapezoid, then the play stops before the puck is shot over the boards.
You can get two penalties on one play. But not in that instance.
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Does anybody here know or heard if a goalie has ever received 2 penalties on the same play like Smith should have last night? I was thinking about that play and got me wondering why we don't see that happen more often with so many goalies playing the puck. Or has it happened before and I just missed it?
Someone pointed out that, as soon as he plays it out of the trapezoid, it's dead and the shot over the glass shouldn't have been a call.
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I really don’t get why they can’t just give us a mixed broadcast? Have Ball and DeBrusk or Quinn and Hrudey and have both Gene and Ryan Leslie do intermissions.
It’s not hard.
It's not hard but it makes little business sense from a cost perspective. You have a local team in Edmonton who can do the job required. Why would they pay the extra travel expense? People are going to watch regardless.
Does anybody here know or heard if a goalie has ever received 2 penalties on the same play like Smith should have last night? I was thinking about that play and got me wondering why we don't see that happen more often with so many goalies playing the puck. Or has it happened before and I just missed it?
If they had caught him playing the puck outside the trapezoid then play should have been blown dead right there, making the delay of game moot. I think.
Seriously, you can't even do the damn research and look for the actual knee hits?
Fowler was the other big one, and he answered the bell with Manson.
Aho was as clean a hit as you can deliver, but I guess as an Oiler fan, you wouldn't know what that looks like.
Typical Oiler fan, not an objective bone in their body.
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Calgary Flames, PLEASE GO TO THE NET! AND SHOOT THE PUCK! GENERATING OFFENSE IS NOT DIFFICULT! SKATE HARD, SHOOT HARD, CRASH THE NET HARD!
Here is the Aho hit. Shoulder tucked in, Aho looking down at the puck way to long and at the last second tries to get out of the way. None of that is on Gio.
Here is the Aho hit. Shoulder tucked in, Aho looking down at the puck way to long and at the last second tries to get out of the way. None of that is on Gio.
Aho's left leg never moves, as he has his weight on it.
That's why it gets hyper extended when Giordano's leg makes contact with his.
Gio's leg and knee shouldn't be leading like that. The reason this stuff keeps happening is that Gio throws limbs out there all the time. Its good to be competitive, but you have to have some control of your body.
Looks like Giordano lead with and made contact with his shoulder. His feet seemed planted and his focus was on the body to body hit. Clearly their legs connected as well since Aho got hurt, but its not anything either party did wrong or adjusted to initiate. More like a freak secondary effect.
Aho head is down the entire time while Gio is stationary. Aho is reckless and put himself into that position by cutting into the middle with his head down like that. That wasn't on Gio at all.
Or is the Oiler logic you shouldn't be allowed to be hit with your head down looking down at the puck (ala Kassian) or when you skate really fast.
Here is the Aho hit. Shoulder tucked in, Aho looking down at the puck way to long and at the last second tries to get out of the way. None of that is on Gio.
You can even see at 1:19 Giordano bends his leg to bring his knee in away from Aho.