NHL Worst Plays Of The Week: WHAT ARE THE RULES!? | Steve's Dang-Its

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2022
  • Steve Dangle shares his picks for worst plays of the week in the NHL. He goes over everything from Blake Coleman's "kick-in" goal to Cale Makar scoring a goal that looked off-side to 99% of fans at the time.
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Komentáře • 1K

  • @nicksojka7457
    @nicksojka7457 Před 2 lety +242

    One of the few positives about getting knocked out of the playoffs is you no longer have to worry about your team being featured in Dang-Its.

    • @DC-yl4vc
      @DC-yl4vc Před 2 lety +9

      or being F'd by the league

    • @loltrip2741
      @loltrip2741 Před 2 lety +4

      my teams out but still making dangits like trading our 1st round pick to Columbus when we are rebuilding.

    • @metalheadcol
      @metalheadcol Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@loltrip2741 now that is a dang it 😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @allthingshockey9688
      @allthingshockey9688 Před 2 lety

      As a capitals fan I can agree with this

  • @Beljeth
    @Beljeth Před 2 lety +142

    Man, all this time as someone who got into hockey after already being into soccer I had been thinking "At least offsides in hockey is really straightforward, unlike offsides in soccer" and now I have to come to grips with being wrong about that.

    • @ciqme
      @ciqme Před 2 lety +7

      I’ve been a hockey fan for years but I too had to rethink how I thought about offsides

    • @SomeSortOfLandCow
      @SomeSortOfLandCow Před 2 lety +7

      To be fair, hockey's offside rules are straightforward and less ambiguous than soccer. It's just that most fans don't/didn't completely know them.

    • @TheHebrewHammer
      @TheHebrewHammer Před 2 lety

      Fun fact about offsides in Football (Soccer):
      If the goalkeeper is the second-last opponent and you are behind him, you will be deemed offside. However, if there are 2 players behind the goalkeeper, you will only be offside if you are ahead of the second-last opponent.
      I don't get it either.

    • @Stumbler69513
      @Stumbler69513 Před 2 lety +4

      The weird thing is, everyone's understanding of the offside is correct. What most people got wrong was assuming where Makar had "possession" of the puck. The ruling gave him possession way later than what passes the eye-test and that's why it doesn't make sense without the context of what that "push ahead" of the puck is.

    • @buzzsaw1000
      @buzzsaw1000 Před 2 lety +1

      Since when does offsides in hockey have to do with possession (other than bringing a puck in behind you.) It's all about touching the puck (or interfering with a defender) on a delayed offside. Makar doesn't touch the puck until the tag-up is completed. While it's not as exaggerated and probably not on purpose, it's the same as when a player purposely doesn't touch the puck going across the line. (The Bunting example is perfect) I do this exaggerated type in beer league about once a month or so.

  • @Oxmen33
    @Oxmen33 Před 2 lety +137

    Maybe it's just me but kicking motions are pretty hard to make when you're standing on that same one leg.

    • @cha0s883
      @cha0s883 Před 2 lety +4

      He was gliding with his right leg and used his left to push the puck in

    • @DC-yl4vc
      @DC-yl4vc Před 2 lety +3

      @@cha0s883 which has been allowed 100 times

    • @onyblitz9178
      @onyblitz9178 Před 2 lety +15

      He was gliding with his right leg while his skate was off the ice? That's a neat trick.

    • @Oxmen33
      @Oxmen33 Před 2 lety +2

      @@cha0s883 3:46 you can CLEARLY see his right skate is not on the ice, it comes down and toe picks the ice. His full weight is on his left skate which is also the skate used to "kick" the puck.

    • @cha0s883
      @cha0s883 Před 2 lety +3

      @@onyblitz9178 Correct, watch 3:33 in 0.25 speed. He was gliding with his right leg, and his left skate was off the ice. He then brought his left skate in front of his right to push the puck in the net, which is obviously an unnatural movement

  • @mcj88
    @mcj88 Před 2 lety +114

    As for The "Kick", you said it at the start of the year when the Kraken got burned by a blatantly-kicked in goal that counted, and it bears repeating again: *if officials can't determine what is or isn't a "distinct kicking motion", then maybe kicked-in goals should just count.* Either that or _no_ goals that bounced off of skates should count - make it all-or-nothing, but I know which end of that spectrum would be _less_ controversial.

    • @jasongamer8649
      @jasongamer8649 Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah just make everything except palm of the hand legal, short of throwing it in, kicks headbutts, anything should count

    • @Stumbler69513
      @Stumbler69513 Před 2 lety +4

      The problem is you don't want people going into the crease swinging around their foot-knives just to try to get a goal. IMO the best solution is to say no goals off of skates that are not on the ice during any part of the motion that resulted in the goal. So you can deflect/kick it in by angling or sliding into the puck but you can't lift your skate to "kick" it in.

    • @jasongamer8649
      @jasongamer8649 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Stumbler69513 I mean it can only make the game more exciting at that point. How bout no high kicks?

    • @kirillthethrilll
      @kirillthethrilll Před 2 lety +1

      @@b.y.2460 lmao you said it best 😂

    • @ethancrisp3491
      @ethancrisp3491 Před 2 lety +2

      I feel like an issue is when you are an expert in the rules and do this everyday, you are more likely to analyze it and really need to define a 'kick' whereas someone watching could easily just identify a kick or no kick. Having more experience seems to make it more difficult to determine it if that makes sense.

  • @t2av159
    @t2av159 Před 2 lety +161

    Remember when you were a kid, and there was always that friend who made up things while playing games. Thats the NHL, in corporate form.

    • @MrNeeko777
      @MrNeeko777 Před 2 lety +9

      "So what are the rules?"
      "We'll figure it out while we play."
      Lol love your comment

    • @CoryCat65
      @CoryCat65 Před 2 lety

      sure seams like it

  • @misslolohannah
    @misslolohannah Před 2 lety +22

    The “Nevermind!” had me dying when it happened, oh boy, perfect timing 😂

  • @leighgolding2771
    @leighgolding2771 Před 2 lety +23

    The "olé olé olé" singing got me 😂😂😂💀
    That song is for Soccer, Habs fans!

  • @bassnhockey
    @bassnhockey Před 2 lety +64

    Forget casual fans, I don’t think Makar knew this! I honestly believe Makar pushed the puck to gain speed, not wait for his teammate. Hell I play minor pro hockey in Europe and I didn’t know that was how it’s written.

    • @peterpike
      @peterpike Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah, Makar was screened initially and his angle toward the offensive zone shows he didn't see Nichushkin. It wasn't an intentional play, but it didn't violate the rules anyway. Also, I don't think the linesman saw it when it happened either. I suspect on close calls, they default to just saying it's onside (and really, when you look at the play in real-time, it was about 1/10 of a second--3 frames on the normal speed film--where it would have been a delayed offside). They know that if a goal is scored, there's video review, so better to err on the side of allowing a scoring chance than incorrectly terminating one. And since 99% of the time this happens, the puck is just cleared or the goalie makes a save, that's the smart default mode to have on the ice: unless it's clearly offside, assume it's onside and let the video review take care of the rest.

    • @bassnhockey
      @bassnhockey Před 2 lety +4

      @@peterpike I completely agree that if a linesman is unsure that they should call it onside on the ice. I was just saying that if I had to bet, I’d bet Makar watching on the Jumbotron was thinking yeah that’s off. I don’t think he knew the way the rule was written during or after the play.

    • @bruxi78230
      @bruxi78230 Před 2 lety +10

      @@bassnhockey ---- In an interview after the game, Makar admitted he didn't know about that particular detail in the offside rules. He was just going full speed and it just worked out for him. But it's conceptually no different from a dump-in on a delayed offsides. If the offensive player doesn't touch it until his teammate touches up, it should be and was allowed.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před 2 lety +5

      It honestly doesn't matter if Makar knows the rule or not, because if a player doesn't know the rule, he/she got punished for violating the rule without knowing that. However, the good thing about this rule is like to see whether a goal crosses the line or not. There is no ambiguity. So you know that if a similar situation happens, if those conditions checked out, the same call would be made. As for all of those fan-made changes to the rule, the fans need to be better in order to learn the rule when there is no ambiguity and if there is no ambiguity, there is no way you can improve the rule to make it clearer.

  • @kc9602
    @kc9602 Před 2 lety +59

    "Knife Shoes!!" 😂😂😂
    Good one, Steve.

    • @Captain_Nightwing
      @Captain_Nightwing Před 2 lety +5

      I will be at work tomorrow and I will start randomly laughing and people will ask my why I am laughing and I will reply "knife shoes" and people will walk away from me slowly.

  • @brma3124
    @brma3124 Před 2 lety +65

    The hilarious thing about Kyrou not shooting that is that the commentator immediately started gushing about how "poised" he was on that play. Yeah, amazing play to sit with a puck on an open net until it's not really an open net anymore.

    • @christyouredumb956
      @christyouredumb956 Před 2 lety +19

      It’s blues analyst Darren Pang. The fact they let him do the series on a national broadcast is a fail

    • @angelinaliu1816
      @angelinaliu1816 Před 2 lety +4

      @@christyouredumb956 it’s been physically painful listening to him during the entire playoffs

    • @patricktwyman2730
      @patricktwyman2730 Před 2 lety +1

      @@christyouredumb956 but the guy that’s talking is not Darren Pang. Not saying he’s the best broadcaster in the world but that’s not him.

  • @GPEVOX
    @GPEVOX Před 2 lety +30

    The reason I knew this rule with the Makar play is because it happened to the Avalanche against Vegas.

  • @brenengjesdal9023
    @brenengjesdal9023 Před 2 lety +30

    20:41 Me and my friends were complaining about that call for the entire game as Oilers fans. We have all played minor league hockey and (I guess ) we have a very good understanding of how offsides work. When Elliotte Friedman explained it after the game, we both sat there and realization struck us HARD. No matter what Steve Dangle says I always seem to agree with it or have thought the same ideas before. Great commentary

    • @unjourdef2
      @unjourdef2 Před 2 lety +12

      Just imagine if Makar had dumped the puck in the corner instead of that small push-over. It didn't matter if he had possession or not, as long as when he ends up touching the puck in the zone, his teammate is out of offside position. I thought it was offside too at first, but it's a tricky rule indeed. Good call on the ice and review, but tough to grasp.

    • @boogiedownbrown
      @boogiedownbrown Před 2 lety +10

      @@unjourdef2 I agree, I am an Avs fan but texted my friend saying it was coming back, followed shortly by THEY BLEW THAT CALL. But after hearing the explanation, it made sense. Its a tricky call that we Avs fans will cheer about and Oilers fans will bring up when pissed... depending on how this series plays out.

    • @factbeaglesarebest
      @factbeaglesarebest Před 2 lety

      You played minor league? What league? Do you mean juniors? Or are you actually talking about youth hockey. The Makar goal was a good goal, he did not acquire possession of the puck until a few strides into the opposing side; oilers still would have lost.

    • @burningfarts
      @burningfarts Před 2 lety +2

      @@unjourdef2 it actually is offsides because makar is in clear control

    • @unjourdef2
      @unjourdef2 Před 2 lety +2

      @@burningfarts He does control the puck. He does have possession. But he doesn't touch the puck in the offensive zone or crosses the blue line plane until his teammate is back on the blue line as well, so the delayed offside doesn't get called. It all happens in a fraction of a second, but it's not offsides (by a hair, but still).

  • @rickseiden1
    @rickseiden1 Před 2 lety +22

    Rangers' fan. I was watching Game 7 against the Canes and when Igor did that, I said, "IF YOU'RE A GOALTENDER, TEND THE GOAL!" And I knew I'd see it again today.

    • @urNbrTotoro
      @urNbrTotoro Před 2 lety +4

      same here, couldn't help but say out loud "that's a dangit."

    • @JaredChenkin
      @JaredChenkin Před 2 lety

      I did the "shesty, WHERE ARE YOU GOING???". On a related note, he IS really good at handling the puck in other situations.. dude has 3 assists in the playoffs already

    • @rickseiden1
      @rickseiden1 Před 2 lety

      @@JaredChenkin some day hell get that elusive short-handed goal.

    • @JaredChenkin
      @JaredChenkin Před 2 lety

      @@rickseiden1 that would be so money

  • @Captain_Nightwing
    @Captain_Nightwing Před 2 lety +34

    I watched the clip with Coleman's kick.
    "I see how they called it that."
    See's the other clips of 'kicked' goals
    "I don't see how that's not allowed."

    • @mattoiler9714
      @mattoiler9714 Před 2 lety

      It’s not soccer bro

    • @GetTheFOutOfMyWay
      @GetTheFOutOfMyWay Před 2 lety +1

      #NhlConsistency duh

    • @StrykerZeals
      @StrykerZeals Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah, same I see the Coleman one and I can see the argument for it being a kick. Then I see the Nate Thompson one then I'm like.... Okay nevermind.

    • @mattoiler9714
      @mattoiler9714 Před 2 lety

      If they start allowing kicking in pucks it’s defeats the purpose of the game go watch soccer

    • @montuckyman4982
      @montuckyman4982 Před 2 lety

      @@mattoiler9714 it's true its not soccer but the main reason for not allowing a kick is for safety. I mean you can slide and angle your skate for an obvious deflection off your foot. It's just a really bad idea to have a kicking free for all in a net front scrum , with dudes faces and necks down by the puck. That's the main reason.

  • @sportsforlife17
    @sportsforlife17 Před 2 lety +33

    Me: Im having a bad day
    Steve: Posts
    Me: Nevermind

  • @lrba5524
    @lrba5524 Před 2 lety +21

    "distinct kicking motion" is in the rulebook to allow purposeful redirections with your foot and disallow "shooting" with your foot. plus they tend to rule the instep as a kick. I don't think the Calgary example was an egregious example of the kicking rule, but some of the others you looked at were. while it's unfortunate, I also think this example was consistant with the spirit of the rule.

    • @Khaine85
      @Khaine85 Před 2 lety +1

      Yea I saw the same thing, he lifted his left leg and extended it towards the puck doing more than a full cross over.

    • @rickybobby9885
      @rickybobby9885 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Khaine85 what are his options? Not do that and eat the crossbar??

    • @Tyler1330
      @Tyler1330 Před 2 lety

      He wouldn't have eaten the cross bar he & both his legs would have stayed with the defence man. Making them both slide pass, but close, to the right goal post. I wouldn't call it a kick rather a purposeful move to the leg to ensure your skate contacts the puck. I'm not sure if those specifics are covered in the NHL rules or what constitutes an official "kick" in hockey.

    • @Bullshirt1983
      @Bullshirt1983 Před 2 lety

      @@rickybobby9885 What he did stretching his leg across his body to kick the puck was much more dangerous. Risked cranking himself on the post instead of following his line and just missing the post.

    • @rickybobby9885
      @rickybobby9885 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Bullshirt1983 watch his right skate. His balance is taken from him requiring him to use his other leg to stop his momentum from carrying him directly into the post. If he doesnt use his left skate he goes straight into the post. Its easy to see

  • @randalgregory9045
    @randalgregory9045 Před 2 lety +14

    Thanks for videos. Your narration is the best! Goaltender interference and kicking mystery decisions are definitely a bummer.

  • @johnr5808
    @johnr5808 Před 2 lety +4

    I'm not sure I agree on the offside call. Full disclosure, I am an Oiler fan, so obviously biased.
    But my argument is he had control. Maybe his stick wasn't touching it at that moment, but he had control.
    Picture this, a player receives a breakout pass at the opposition blueline, he spins around to accept the pass while skating backwards. His skates enter the zone before the puck. While his skates are in the zone, but before the puck crosses, he lifts his stick over the puck and sets it on the other side to stickhandle. By the interpretation of the Makar goal this should be offside. He wasn't touching the puck and therefore did not have control for a moment while his skates were in the zone.
    In my opinion, both instances have the player in control of the puck even though they are not touching it in that exact moment.
    What am I missing?

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety +2

      I can find no wording in rule 83 that says the play should be whistled down because Makar has control. 83.1 does account for the scenario you are referring to, but it doesn't account for the situation that actually occurred (someone other than the puck carrier was offside). Basically, for one player skating backwards with the puck, "control" allows their skates to cross before the puck. But if someone else is offside, "control" does not determine when the whistle blows.
      And it gets more complicated from there. I've been typing explanations all over this thread... and my fingers are getting tired.

    • @Doom5115
      @Doom5115 Před 2 lety +1

      Delayed offside doesn't refer to having possession, only attempting to gain possession, under the rules Makar had possession having been the last player to touch the puck with either his stick or body, hence why he wasn't attempting to gain possession

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      @@Doom5115 The key is that "possession" is defined in the rulebook in that very strange way that you pointed out. Just imagine that the same play should TECHNICALLY be offside if the puck touched a player on the same team before crossing the line, even if Makar retained control.

    • @Doom5115
      @Doom5115 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pyRoy6 Honestly, whether or not its weird way to define it is neither here nor there, in this situation the fact is that it is defined that way, which means that the play was onside,
      Whether or not the rule should be changed is a different conversation, because they don't and very much shouldn't, call the game based on what the rules "should" be, but rather what they are.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      @@Doom5115 Yeah. I'm not saying that the call was wrong. I will say that none of the experts on TV has been able to explain it correctly (or, at least, adequately)...which does say that the rules need some fixing..

  • @Cartergarrett26
    @Cartergarrett26 Před 2 lety +18

    The tnt broadcast in America explained the rule perfectly

  • @loltrip2741
    @loltrip2741 Před 2 lety +6

    unpopular opinion: makar's goal is a good goal. that rule is a good rule and should not change. you should be allowed to do what he did. there are countless examples of players pushing it in the zone and only touching it once everyone tags up (or at least trying to do so) but its very situational, requires a lot of awareness and most of the time it doesn't lead to a goal because most teams don't have an absolute sieve in net who lets in wrist shots from that far out.

  • @TheKyykky
    @TheKyykky Před 2 lety +7

    I think kicking should be allowed as long as the blade stays on the ice. Then it would be easier to determine if it was a goal or not. Then the idea of why you aren't allowed to kick(safety, as nobody wants knives flying around the net) goals would stay but there wouldn't be as much controversy.

    • @kaydenshepherd510
      @kaydenshepherd510 Před 2 lety +1

      Was about to say the same thing. I mean if the thing they're trying to prevent is players getting cut from kicks, then I think as long as the foot stays on the ice then it should be a good goal

  • @lisalockhart5407
    @lisalockhart5407 Před 2 lety +3

    "he went wayyyyyyy to far this way and wayyyyyyyy too far that way" LOL classic

  • @blainbruce9597
    @blainbruce9597 Před 2 lety +3

    I’ve been a fan since the early 80’s and an oilers fan and I was surprised with both calls

  • @oliverbowser
    @oliverbowser Před 2 lety

    Hahaha the “BOOM…Ole Ole Ole Ole” at 5:40 had me cracking up 😂

  • @MessiRonaldoandaviationfan909

    I always love hearing Steve say IF YOU'RE A GOALTENDER TEND THE GOAL!

  • @user-iz3gv5vo6b
    @user-iz3gv5vo6b Před 2 lety +3

    I think that the biggest problem with the non-offside, is that the linesmen are going to the video to see if the Avs player's skates have looped back across the line yet, which they confirmed have not. They then spot a faint half inch of space between Makar's stick and the puck while he's carrying it across the line, and say" "hey I can say that I was right and it's a good goal because we can subjectively rule that since Makar's stick is not actually touching the puck at that particular instant, we can say that he's not in full control of the puck and that he passed it to himself waiting for his teammate to get onside before he touches it again". It's not true, but we can call it that way because then we've confirmed that we're right, and the what the fans and players see with thier uneducated eyes are all wrong.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      That seems pretty close to what happened, but it's worth noting that there's nothing in the rule (that I can find) that says an offside is whistled down when a player has control of the puck crossing the line (while someone is offside).

  • @shiron1158
    @shiron1158 Před 2 lety +1

    I had an instance playing high school hockey where I took a slap shot right in the cup. Dropped me like a sack of bricks, but my team never touched the puck, they were all just standing there staring at me so play continued. Before I recovered enough to get up the other team had scored.

  • @gamingshowerthoughts9723
    @gamingshowerthoughts9723 Před 2 lety +3

    The offside was nonsense. The implication is that you can just enter the zone offside as long as you sort of "hover hand" the puck until your teammates tag up. On a giveaway + partial breakaway you could realistically enter the zone SEVERAL SECONDS offside. and just do some shoulder fakes or tee up a slapshot while you wait for your teammate to tag up. This is not how it's ever called, nor should it be called this way.
    Also if "possession" of the puck now means having it glued to your stick, does this mean if you skate the puck up the ice in full control but you havent touched it for a few seconds....is checking you interference???

    • @TheGoalieMan100
      @TheGoalieMan100 Před 2 lety

      Not entirely how it works. If any player enters the zone with a player currently offside (based off of foot position), the play will remain offside. Feet tag up before the puck carriers feet also enter the zone (both feet completely cross), therefor onside.

  • @gregbaraks3183
    @gregbaraks3183 Před 2 lety +4

    I honestly think it was a kick and the major reason I think that is that it was his left (outside) foot coming across to knock the puck in. I also don't think it matters whether to not the puck was already going in or not, and I think he definitely meant to kick the puck with his skate. I also think while he was driven into the net, his foot extended which was not forced by the defender.
    Saying this, I may be slightly biased as I am not an Oilers fan but I did prefer them over Calgary for their series.

    • @robrick9361
      @robrick9361 Před 2 lety +1

      This doesn't matter. It's the complete inconsistency that's the problem. Makes the sport unwatchable at times.

  • @rushilb6
    @rushilb6 Před 2 lety +11

    nah when Igor left the net I literally screamed "Igor... IF YOU'RE A GOALTENDER"

  • @ari1234a
    @ari1234a Před 2 lety +2

    About the Makaar`s goal and subsequent ruling of it, it`s technicality as they say, lots of attorneys/snakes gets a good moolah outta finding them.
    Thing is though its a rule and rules can be changed but them changes has to be made before the game starts, now this rule benefited the Avs today next time it might benefit some other team.

  • @kipper1314
    @kipper1314 Před 2 lety +14

    Steve you forgot the dang-it of when you said "watch a leafs game" during the watch a playoffs game.

  • @TMJ32
    @TMJ32 Před 2 lety +11

    The Makar play was a quirky play but it's onside according to the rules. And that exact play has been called onside over and over for years. I get why people think it's offside initially and it's been challenged unsuccessfully several times as well. But it makes perfect sense why that's onside.

    • @angelinaliu1816
      @angelinaliu1816 Před 2 lety

      Agreed. I understand the initial challenge cause in real time it really looked like it could’ve been offsides but it is clearly stated in the rule book and the review made it obvious 🤷‍♀️

    • @MadBulletz
      @MadBulletz Před 2 lety

      wait... so if someone steamrolled him there when he enters it would be called interference cuz he didnt have "possession" of the puck. Cool so I could enter the zone while my teammate is way offside but instead of touching it I could just stick handle close to the puck without touching it and wait for him to touch up? And if someone hit me it's called interference. Because according to you I don't have possession of the puck?

    • @TMJ32
      @TMJ32 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MadBulletz no dummy not at all lol. Everything you just said is completely wrong.🤦‍♂️I can't believe how many people don't know what delayed offside is. I don't think you're going to get this but I'll try once...Makar did have possession of the puck, that's big part of why this was onside. On a delayed offside, the rule says you aren't allowed to try to GAIN possession if the puck is loose, or a defender has it (ie. You cant chase a guy while you're offside, or go running into the corner to pick up a puck you don't have). Neither of those apply to Makar, he had the puck. Next part, your feet still have to stay onside until all offside players have tagged up. So your comment about running around after the puck makes no sense, you'd be offside. Makar's feet were still in the neutral zone. The last part of the rule says if there's a delayed offside and the team HAS THE PUCK it's offside when and if they TOUCH it while their team is still offside. Makar didn't touch the puck or enter the zone until Nichushkin had tagged up. If you still don't get it then read rule 83.3 and read up on what delayed offside is.

  • @boblawblaw6875
    @boblawblaw6875 Před 2 lety +18

    The officiating in these playoffs has been a complete mystery. Never have I seen so much inconsistency

    • @colinmazzella7948
      @colinmazzella7948 Před 2 lety +1

      Don’t we say this every year?

    • @ziggle5000
      @ziggle5000 Před 2 lety +1

      Never? Except for literally every other season lol?

    • @boblawblaw6875
      @boblawblaw6875 Před 2 lety

      @@colinmazzella7948 ya but this is it’s friggin bad !

  • @mcj88
    @mcj88 Před 2 lety +1

    1:09 looks like me trying to play as a goalie with NHL 22's sloppy, slidey goalie controls: going too far one way then too far the other in correction because it's impossible to control at all.

  • @TomAllnatt
    @TomAllnatt Před 2 lety

    I love the explanation at the end. Very clear explanation of the rule and view of the non-touch.

  • @sethers
    @sethers Před 2 lety +11

    Steve, part of the way this Rangers’ team breaks out this season has been Shesty stopping the puck and starting the breakout around the boards. It’s a risky tactic, sure, but Shesty is by far the best active stickhandling goalie. He picked the wrong time to do it there (sounds like there was a miscommunication with Lindgren going to the bench) but through the dozens of other times during this game (and every other game) that he does this, it helps the Rangers game a lot.
    Put it like this - Shesty’s made this play hundreds of times over the 2021-22 season, and he’s ended up on Dangits for it only one time before, maybe twice if I’m remembering correctly. He’s not like, say, Lundqvist who never ever ever should leave his net during action. Heck, you had Shesty stopping the puck and sending it as a hat pick earlier in the playoffs (Game 6 at Pitt) bc that’s one of his skills, a skill that’s brought the Rangers to where they are today, with a 1-0 lead in the ECF.
    This is a Dangit bc he completely messed it up, but if you’ve watched him play and the Rangers this season you’d see that him making the play is crucial to how the team plays.

    • @JaredChenkin
      @JaredChenkin Před 2 lety +2

      Can't up vote this enough. Dude has 3 assists in the playoffs!!

  • @pyRoy6
    @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety +3

    Tim's explanation at the end is objectively wrong (of course, Sportsnet has failed to do a proper deep-dive into this with someone who actually knows what they are talking about). I believe the call was correct, but not for those reasons. First off, the offside rule (83) doesn't actually explain when the play should be whistled down except in the section of delayed off-side, so we definitely have to look at 83.3 to determine how it should be called. 83.3 is NOT only for situations in which the defending team has the puck, but also for this situation (by its wording "...or, the attacking players are in the process of clearing the attacking zone"). Because of this, the play could arguably be whistled down since Makar was attempting to gain possession of a loose puck. But this is tricky, because the rulebook glossary makes a distinction between "possession" and "control of puck," and does not define "loose puck" at all. "Possession," believe it or not, is granted to the last player to touch the puck, regardless of control or any other circumstance. This means that Makar has possession, and retains possession throughout the play...which is probably why the league could not say he was attempting to gain possession. Even if the rule were interpreted the other way, Bunting's play is not a good example because he appears to intentionally lift his stick (i.e. he is not attempting to gain possession or control or whatever).
    If I were in charge, I would make the following changes:
    - Clarify all wording in 83.3
    - Clarify "possession" and "control of puck" in a way that makes sense by normal language (they are currently insane, and actually contradict each other)
    - Add a definition of "loose puck" if needed to clarify new definitions of above
    - Explain when the whistle should be blown in every section of rule 83

    • @joelface
      @joelface Před 2 lety

      huh... that explanation of "possession" makes sense, but is also bizarre to suggest that you remain in "possession of the puck" after you dump the puck in until someone else touches it.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      @@joelface It is bizarre. But that's the definition in the rulebook glossary. And it should be changed to match some sort of plain language, honestly. I also noticed that the definition is contradictory to the definition of "control of puck." It's pretty sloppy.

  • @mrswb
    @mrswb Před 2 lety +1

    I like listening to the radio call, and on the Avalanche offsides thing even the radio guys thought it was coming back.

  • @nolanfn4958
    @nolanfn4958 Před 2 lety +2

    I knew it when they showed it in the intermission because it’s pretty simple, possession never mattered. The whistle goes when the puck is touched in the zone when the play is offside. In this case it never was, however Oilers should not be penalized when they have 10 seconds to challenge a play that took the referees 3 minutes.

  • @yeeeyeee13
    @yeeeyeee13 Před 2 lety +5

    I feel like this happens all the time, but because it’s the playoffs… they digitized the play. 82 game season, games 1-70 don’t count

    • @ziggle5000
      @ziggle5000 Před 2 lety +1

      "they digitized the play" lol are you a character on letterkenny or something?

  • @cujo505
    @cujo505 Před 2 lety +7

    As an Oilers fan whose still in therapy trying to understand last years playoffs still...I will remain in therapy because of that offside. My brain is blown 💨🧠

    • @Xeteh
      @Xeteh Před 2 lety +3

      Crazy to me that there are a bunch of examples that the NHL has called that the same way for years at this point and people refuse to accept it. He pushed the puck in and didn't touch it until Nichushkin tagged up.

    • @brackendouglas3433
      @brackendouglas3433 Před 2 lety

      Did you watch the full review and rules reading at the end of the video?

    • @cujo505
      @cujo505 Před 2 lety

      So you guys are telling me that you have heard of possession and or control of the puck rules of coming over the blue line? Cmon

    • @brackendouglas3433
      @brackendouglas3433 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cujo505 it’s called tagging up it happens all the time with a delayed offside.

    • @Xeteh
      @Xeteh Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@cujo505 He doesn't touch the puck until Nuke touches up. Do you really want refs blowing plays dead because a guy is close to a loose puck on entries? Get over it, man.

  • @Cancelx2k
    @Cancelx2k Před 2 lety

    only reason i thought i had the jump on the offside call is cause i was thinking like as in basketball on a inbound the timer doesn’t start until the player touches the basketball or in soccer where you have have to be behind the last defender BEFORE the player passing him touches the ball. idk in my opinion it didn’t seem that hard of a concept to grasp in the moment but everyone’s sports knowledge is different

  • @LHOH197
    @LHOH197 Před 2 lety +1

    I've been watching hockey for almost my whole life and played for a couple years I thought for sure that I knew what offsides was and I thought I knew what a distinct kicking motion was well apparently I had no clue what offsides or a kicking motion is now

  • @zacharyjeffares8158
    @zacharyjeffares8158 Před 2 lety +3

    The only way for it to be declared offside is if Makar was skating BACKWARDS WITH THE PUCK. This is because on zone entry in this instance, the puck is BEHIND the blue line; and since Makar has control and possession that would mean he is onside. But because his teammate is inside the offensive zone while Makar has possession and control of the puck, that would be offside.

    • @NicholasIstre
      @NicholasIstre Před 2 lety

      I looked it up in the NHL rules and it looks to be the same as when I was officiating recreational games under USA Hockey rules: the puck carrier with full control of the puck can never be offside. That scenario you described would be ruled onsides. It was a specific situation brought up during the officiating training.
      UPDATE: looked it up. Section 10 of the 2021-2022 NHL rulebook, part of Rule 83.1:
      A player actually controlling the puck who shall cross the line
      ahead of the puck shall not be considered “off-side,” provided he had
      possession and control of the puck prior to his skates crossing the
      leading edge of the blue line.

  • @DDWyss
    @DDWyss Před 2 lety +12

    If you're a defenseman, TEND THE GOAL!

  • @berges104
    @berges104 Před 2 lety +2

    As an AVS fan and one that was 9 rows up and inline of that shot for 3-2 in the 1st period, I am not going to complain about the win ;-)

  • @avsrock1561
    @avsrock1561 Před 2 lety

    Your right totally.... like I said on your live broadcast video.... I was at the game and was shell shocked when it was called on sides... after I got home and watch the replays though I was thrilled the league got this one right.... personally I feel a player going the opposite direction not involved in the play should just have to touch up and be considered on sides.... maybe some day on that one lol.... but it would be nice if the league had more answers for the public on reviews and also the refs should be responsible for answering questions from the press after games.... because personally I'm wanting answers sometimes....

  • @dirk903
    @dirk903 Před 2 lety +8

    That "offside" rule has now been exposed... prepare yourselves for teams adding this into their playlists

    • @DoradoFever
      @DoradoFever Před 2 lety +1

      This isn't the first time this has been seen or done. Perhaps known in the playoffs, but there still is other examples of this. Clearly Makar knew and his hockey IQ allowed the setup to lead to a goal.

    • @meadRL
      @meadRL Před 2 lety +2

      @@DoradoFever you think that was intentional?

    • @BadPandaWoodworks
      @BadPandaWoodworks Před 2 lety +1

      You're WAY behind... It's been like this for years...

    • @soulknife20
      @soulknife20 Před 2 lety +1

      It's been a rule for like 17 years. It was change or added in 2005

    • @peterpike
      @peterpike Před 2 lety +1

      They showed an example of Arizona LITERALLY DOING THAT AS A PLAY from last year. Incidentally, most teams aren't going to be "adding" this to their playlist because a play that has "wait 0.1 seconds for a player to exit the zone" isn't going to be as useful as, say, breaking through a press, or setting up a shot off a faceoff, which are worth practicing since you'll see those a million times more often.

  • @WhiteSekii
    @WhiteSekii Před 2 lety +4

    Hockey, the Only sports where you need a PHD to become a fan

    • @bruxi78230
      @bruxi78230 Před 2 lety

      You obviously don't watch NFL football. Even long time fans don't understand the catch rule, it's totally screwed up beyond belief. All sports have these anomalies, I actually feel that hockey does the best job of reviewing with the situation room in Toronto.

  • @ayewhosthat2083
    @ayewhosthat2083 Před 2 lety

    "Thompson... OLAY OLAY OLAY OLAY" killed me lmao

  • @danielegaiotti2431
    @danielegaiotti2431 Před 2 lety

    I think about the times playing hockey that I've waited for a teammate to cross the line before I touch a puck that is over the line and the offside call makes perfect sense to me.
    Idk how that kick wasn't a goal and I've given up on thinking I know which way a goaltender interference call will go years ago.

  • @t3tsubo
    @t3tsubo Před 2 lety +13

    I think the way the NHL is interpreting the rule for kicking is that you can't kick a puck that is stationary/near stationary, or one that has rebounded off the Goalie, into the net. If the puck is coming off a shot or is moving fast, then its a redirection and not a kick.

    • @craigtothec
      @craigtothec Před 2 lety +6

      They should rewrite the rule to say that the puck can't have the majority of its momentum imparted to it by the foot/hand/whatever, and remove the part about a distinct kicking motion, since that's the way they are interpreting it anyways. "Kicking motion" is clearly too vague and should probably have never been in the rules in the first place.

    • @-Twenty-Nine-
      @-Twenty-Nine- Před 2 lety +4

      I think they interpret the rule as you can't have your skate provide forward momentum to the puck

    • @m0RRisC2319
      @m0RRisC2319 Před 2 lety

      I believe a goal should only count after it hits a players skate if the players skate is not moving. If you are standing still (or reasonably stationary) and the puck bounces off of you, then the goal should count. I never liked the "distinct kicking motion" rule because to me, it is too vague but ironically also too specific at the same time. Determining "distinct" vs "kicking motion" is the same thing when you breakdown the definitions of those two terms. For example, does a "non-distinct" kicking motion exist? How about a distinct "non-kicking motion"? That doesn't make any sense. If I was King, "a moving skate cannot cause a goal" would be the rule I would implement. That seems to be the most realistic solution.

    • @joelface
      @joelface Před 2 lety

      @@m0RRisC2319 But what if you're skating (like what happens in many off-the-rush plays) and the puck happens to glance off of your skate unintentionally?

  • @thewaterwarrior9817
    @thewaterwarrior9817 Před 2 lety +23

    Still a kick l, technically not offsides but in reality its offsides 😂😂

    • @Capt_Chaos_91
      @Capt_Chaos_91 Před 2 lety +2

      In those cases they really need to go by possession. And by possession I mean significantly influencing the puck with your stick (pushed it forward on his backhand) without any contesting players battling for possession. NOT “oH bUt He WaSnT tOuChInG iT!!”

    • @TMJ32
      @TMJ32 Před 2 lety

      @@Capt_Chaos_91 why. There's nothing wrong with the rule the way it is.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před 2 lety

      @@Capt_Chaos_91 The you don't understand the rule. The rule clearly says "touches the puck". If you disagree, simply tells me how possession of the puck is a less ambiguous criterion than touching the puck? How do you quantify the possession? How long does the player have to touch the puck for it to be deemed a possession? Unless you can answer all these questions, your improvement to the rule is trash and is only adding more ambiguity to an otherwise clear-cut rule.

    • @Capt_Chaos_91
      @Capt_Chaos_91 Před 2 lety

      @@jkliao6486 it wasn’t an interpretation of the rule. It was a proposed revision. Ive already heard analysts use the term possession over touch. I already explained what a reasonable quantification of “possession” should mean (in my opinion). A significant influence of the puck with the stick without any contest from an opposing player. As far as the time of possession, as long as it would take for a referee to blow the play dead on a delayed penalty.
      I’m not looking to argue over this since it’s in the past but Steve raised a VERY good point. The rule is too complex and has too many branches and subsequent circumstances that can contradict itself in different ways. If fans and the league have to dig into it this much, it’s probably too complicated. 19:54

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před 2 lety

      @@Capt_Chaos_91 So? What is the criterion for a significant influence of the puck? How much angle do you have to change the puck trajectory and how much speed does the puck have to carry to be deemed significant influence? You are not addressing any of these questions, yet thinking your criterion of "significant influence" is better than the current criterion of "touching the puck"? I can ask 100 non-blind people on the street to watch the play and ask them if Makar touches the puck, 100 people would tell me no, he didn't touch the puck. What about you? Do you have the confidence that you ask 100 people on the street, even without hockey knowledge, 100 people will tell you Makar has significant influence during the delayed offside period? "Yeah, but he is just gliding with the puck, he didn't change the trajectory of the puck". That's called ambiguity. And if you can't understand the rule? Get better because this is not a subjective rule where it depends on the refs. It's an objective rule that as long as all the criteria are met, the outcome would be the same every single time.

  • @SlovakLegend
    @SlovakLegend Před 2 lety

    I learned this offside rule I think 2 or 3 years ago with NJD, where Blake Coleman entered the zone backwards, being first in the zone and the puck followed him after, but it was said he had full possession of the puck and therefore it was allowed for him to do it.

  • @timkearns9576
    @timkearns9576 Před 2 lety

    100 % agree with your take on the business problem with the blown calls. When you are paying for tickets and have calls like the Coleman goal get reversed it is very difficult to spend hard earned $s on a ticket. I hope the NHL listens to you.

  • @Michael_Billig
    @Michael_Billig Před 2 lety +4

    Every example you show that was called a goal had the skate NOT PROPELLING the puck into the net. The Coleman goal was a kicking motion WITH the puck being propelled into the net. Just gotta examine the rule book very carefully

  • @jimmyjoejoeshabadoojr
    @jimmyjoejoeshabadoojr Před 2 lety +3

    Can we just agree that Coleman kicked it, but it should've still been a goal?

    • @Neiliss1
      @Neiliss1 Před 2 lety

      I agree it was a kick and im a flames fan. They need to reevaluate the rules on this for future games

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      @@Neiliss1 They need exceptions for pucks that are already going in and/or situations in which case the kick has zero risk of hurting anyone.

    • @Neiliss1
      @Neiliss1 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pyRoy6 Yep i absolutely agree

  • @therealstinkypinky
    @therealstinkypinky Před 2 lety +1

    So my question here with the Makar goal. If he was to get absolutely steam rolled at the blue line, would that be interference since he didn't have control of the puck? Genuinely curious on this.

  • @genewebber9759
    @genewebber9759 Před 2 lety +1

    Steve I’m with u, I am getting turned off every time I watch a game now, I have been watching and playing hockey sense the 70”s. When comparing hockey (especially the playoffs)then and now i can’t help but think that there is an agenda to who wins and who doesn’t. When we have to find someone to explain what seems obvious 99% of the time that’s a problem and a HUGE DANGIT.

  • @RyBredSamich
    @RyBredSamich Před 2 lety +5

    Your telling me I can literally keep the puck right in front of me stick handling it even if my guy is 10yds in but I’d have to physically touch the puck, even though it’s only 1cm away from my stick, I can just glide to the net then and shoot it.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety +1

      By the wording of those rules, yes, but you would have to keep yourself onside until your teammate tags up. But don't use Tim's explanation. Read 83.1, 83.3, and the glossary (for the definition of "possession."

    • @jaca8712
      @jaca8712 Před 2 lety

      @@pyRoy6 This is all the glossary says about possession: "The last player to physically touch the puck with his stick or body shall be considered in possession of the puck. (NOTE 1) A player can have possession of the puck without control, but he cannot have control of the puck without possession." That's it. Control of the puck, also in the glossary, is: "The act of propelling the puck with the stick, hand or feet."
      Anyone who's ever played hockey knows that Makar was in possession and control of the puck. To state differently in the name of an offside undermines some fundamental tenets of the game. If Makar wasn't in control, I don't know what this game is about anymore.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      @@jaca8712 I think you're misunderstanding what I mean. That's a couple things happening. 1) There's no way to know when to whistle the play down without looking at 83.3.
      2) 83.3 provides two ways in which this play could be whistled down. One of them is touching the puck while the play is offside. The other is "attempting to gain control" of the puck while the play is offside.
      So I think the bonkers definition of "possession" means that Makar already had possession and therefore could not be trying to gain possession.

    • @jaca8712
      @jaca8712 Před 2 lety +1

      @@pyRoy6 Fair enough, but 81.1 says this: "A player is on-side when either of his skates are in contact with the blue line, or on his own side of the line, at the instant the puck completely crosses the leading edge of the blue line." So, by the contrary, Nichuskin would be offside, wouldn't he?
      83.3 also says this: "If, during the course of the delayed off-side, any member of the attacking team touches the puck, attempts to gain possession of a loose puck....the Linesman shall stop play for the off-side violation" This seems to apply to Makar--if he didn't have control, then he definitely was attempting to gain possession of the puck. So it appears that in either case, the call should be offside. I don't have a dog in this fight (I'm a cursed Leaf fan) but when we get down into the nitty gritty of it, I think it's a hard call to stomach.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety

      @@jaca8712 I think you have it right. 81.1 explains when someone is offside, but it doesn't say when it gets whistled down. I initially thought 83.3 does say what you think, BUT the definition of "possession" seems to mean that Makar was in possession the entire time, and therefore could not have been "attempting to gain possession."
      It's bonkers, but I think the call was correct by the bonkers wording of the rules.

  • @tarpsoff57
    @tarpsoff57 Před 2 lety +18

    I swear to god I’ve learned so much about some of the NHL rules from watching these videos. Also, THAT WASN’T A KICK!!!!!!!!!!

    • @troymelnyk7253
      @troymelnyk7253 Před 2 lety +1

      It's a kick for sure. He even said he purposely hit it in with his skate

    • @tarpsoff57
      @tarpsoff57 Před 2 lety

      @@troymelnyk7253 Not a kick. As far as I’m concerned the Flames won that game

    • @SprXSynergy
      @SprXSynergy Před 2 lety

      @@tarpsoff57 no sir some of the flames players were seen trying out for the Toronto FC team

    • @tarpsoff57
      @tarpsoff57 Před 2 lety

      @@SprXSynergy your point being?

    • @therocket2591
      @therocket2591 Před 2 lety

      Facts. Even if you watch the goal in normal speed he wasn’t intending to kick it. His leg almost hit the goal post and could have possibly to injure his left leg from hitting the goal post,cause of smiths pad and a oilers players stick getting in the way and tripping him.

  • @TheZombiemofo
    @TheZombiemofo Před 2 lety

    I had a feeling that the kicking rule would be a big issue by the end of the season when we seemed to have so many controversial incidents with pucks going off the skate in the first few weeks of the season.
    At the moment both that and goalie interference seem to be the most contentious rules as they're far too open to interpretation. So they often end up being called based on how the officials "feel" at the time, rather than a hard "this is okay, but this isn't okay" rule that they need.

  • @MRMNYC
    @MRMNYC Před 2 lety

    Congrats, Steve -- you're officially my spirit animal. 😂😂😂 People have said that to me and I never really understood why, but thanks to you, I now understand. 🥳🤣

  • @michaeljuliano8839
    @michaeljuliano8839 Před 2 lety +4

    I was one of those fans in the 9-minute review in the Panthers @ Lightning. A friend of mine was watching on TV and insisted the crowd was out of line. What he didn’t realize is that we score a goal, celebrate, hear there’s a challenge, stand there for 9 minutes with no replay or explanation of any kind, and then the ref calls the goal back, and the crowd boos so loudly, if he offered an explanation, none of us can hear it. Then it happens again, and we basically all just want to murder the refs. It’s a very different experience than watching on TV.

  • @kylesmith7086
    @kylesmith7086 Před 2 lety +5

    It was his left foot which was trailing him before entering the crease. He brought his foot forward into the crease across his right leg. Kicked.

  • @ninjanunch2769
    @ninjanunch2769 Před 2 lety

    Speaking of kicking motions what about the headbutt goal from Shaw that got called back during the Hawks cup run. That's the craziest thing I ever saw and would of been awesome if it was allowed that was also the game where he took a puck off the face

  • @mylesgoodwin2017
    @mylesgoodwin2017 Před 2 lety

    Please tell me how you achieve a distinct kicking motion while trying to stop on your outside edge.

  • @mozar5175
    @mozar5175 Před 2 lety +10

    This was definitely an offside play. The fact that the referee says the player didn’t have control of the puck is pure BS!

  • @JohnnySyn
    @JohnnySyn Před 2 lety +4

    I think Makar had control of the puck before he crossed the blue line. He already touched the puck and had control of it. Should have been offside!

    • @caro12347
      @caro12347 Před 2 lety +2

      right? he pushed it over the line and since the puck isn't clued to the stick he later touched it again.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety +1

      @@caro12347 Does it say anywhere in the rulebook that "controlling" the puck over the blueline means it should be whistled down? I could not find anything that says that, even though maybe it should for simplicity's sake.

    • @caro12347
      @caro12347 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pyRoy6 with the rulebook you can justify both offside- and onside call tbh. Just stating my opinion in how it makes sense. To me rules can ,similar to laws, be layed out by the wording, the meaning or the history behind it. In my opinion the meaning is important here. So for me it makes no sense why someone having possession of a puck can get away with it being offside by retouching the puck after your teammate leaves the zone. Plus it wasn’t an intentional retouch after the teammate leaves the zone. So to me the intention of this rule was not this situation.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety +2

      @@caro12347 I agree that maybe the rule should say it's whistled down if someone carries the puck with control across the blueline while someone is offside. I'm just pointing out that that's not what the rule says.

    • @caro12347
      @caro12347 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pyRoy6 true tho

  • @Alex-zo6mz
    @Alex-zo6mz Před 2 lety

    im realy glad u showed 3 other examples of goals that shouldnt have counted and then showed a 4th that also shouldnt have counted. really productive addition to this conversation, u r the best

    • @Alex-zo6mz
      @Alex-zo6mz Před 2 lety

      also it was definitely a kick u r deluded lmfao

  • @mattithyahueliyah3164
    @mattithyahueliyah3164 Před 2 lety +1

    It’s a kick for sure but it was going in anyway had I been the red I may of aloud it, but was selfish by the player to cross his leg for the kicking field goal in the goalies crease after he ran the goalie, the kick in the crease is the big catch, as well as it’s the playoffs. He tried to stop the puck when it went inside. Either way flames get burned anyways.

  • @Sad7Statue
    @Sad7Statue Před 2 lety +8

    I still think about that bad kick call every night while I'm going to sleep.
    Edit: every Oilers fan that says that was a kick is lying to themselves

    • @cha0s883
      @cha0s883 Před 2 lety +1

      He literally crossed his left leg over his right to push the puck in. That's such an unnatural motion. This is coming from someone who hates the oilers

    • @thomasgruber3387
      @thomasgruber3387 Před 2 lety

      @@cha0s883 and you see that his right legt was blocked by the goalie so he wanted to use his left leg to not fall down or something?

  • @RyBredSamich
    @RyBredSamich Před 2 lety +10

    That’s a kick too, he used the inside of his opposite leg to awkwardly contort his body and kick it in, if it was the outside of the skate it would be fine, but it was the inside.

  • @nursetj191
    @nursetj191 Před 2 lety

    Steve, as always, ya nailed it. thanks for reppin the common fan!

  • @TheBGYeti
    @TheBGYeti Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah thats a kick, the three previous show people positioning their foot off of a pass/shot to redirect, with Calgary the puck is not heading in the direction of the player who has to reach his foot out to touch it hence the kicking motion

  • @Capt_Chaos_91
    @Capt_Chaos_91 Před 2 lety +8

    I don’t care who you root for, Thursday truly IS the best day of the week!

  • @SleepyScylla
    @SleepyScylla Před 2 lety +3

    Even with that little segment with Tim & Friends explaining 83.3 part2, it still holds an immense margin for interpretation. Tim & Friends seem to think he didn't attempt to posses the puck/did not posses the puck. What I see is Makar going towards the puck which == attempted possession of said puck. Then he states the rule is written for players already offside moving towards the puck, THE RULE SAYS ANY ATTACKING PLAYER, which again.. maybe it was written for just the player who is already offside heading back to the blue line, BUT THAT's LITERALLY NOT WHAT THE RULE SAYS.
    I've been a fan of Hockey for the majority of my lifetime, played the sport, played the games, watched it etc. And it bothers me that this is so damn complex with so much room for interpretation. This has to change. Its fine to have all these intricate cases, but at least have a rule that clearly states what is happening and make it obvious please. This is getting out of hand with what a kicking motion "should" be and what "attempting possession" should be and what "actual possession" is..
    And for anyone stating he does not have possession, you are opening up an entirely new conversation about what deking is, because if I go from forehand to backhand or vice versa, there can easily be a moment there where I do not have possession of the puck, and that is wrong as hell.

    • @pyRoy6
      @pyRoy6 Před 2 lety +3

      You are correct to point out that Tim is wrong...and spectacularly wrong because he mocks people for thinking he's wrong. Granted, I think the call was correct, but Tim is wrong about what the rulebook says. Tim is absolutely wrong that 83.3 is written only for situations in which the defending team has the puck. It is also for any situation in which attacking players are trying to clear the zone (like this situation). The key to the call, from what I can tell, is that the glossary defines "possession" as being the last player to touch the puck (regardless of anything else), therefore Makar cannot be "attempting to gain possession." It's also worth noting that 83.3 is the only section that can explain when an offside is whistled down.

    • @peterpike
      @peterpike Před 2 lety

      The rule also say, "during the DURATION OF THE DELAYED ONSIDE", which was all of 0.1 seconds. Are you saying the Makar literally made his attempt to gain the puck in that 0.1 seconds, and not before that 0.1 seconds (when it was legal because the puck wasn't offside yet) or immediately after that 0.1 seconds, when it was legal because Nichushkin had tagged up? Because when you look at it frame for frame for that 0.1 seconds, Makar doesn't change trajectory or move his stick at all during that literal blink of an eye.

    • @jkliao6486
      @jkliao6486 Před 2 lety +1

      Because Makar has the possession of the puck. Imo, if Makar has the possession of the puck, he can't attempt to gain possession of the puck, as he can't attempt to gain sth he already had.

    • @SleepyScylla
      @SleepyScylla Před 2 lety +1

      @@jkliao6486 exactly my point, he either has possession or is attempting to gain possession there. Either way, shits offside, and if its really not, the rules are broken to a point where they have WAY too much room for interpretation. Absolutely wild.

    • @unjourdef2
      @unjourdef2 Před 2 lety

      @@SleepyScylla just imagine he Makar had immediately dumped it in the corner instead. The play would have been onside then, right ?
      So where's the difference... it's when he ends up touching the puck inside the zone. And when he finally did (even if he still had possession the whole time, contrary to a dump in), his teammate was out of the zone and back onside. It's a good onside call, but a very obscure situation nonetheless.

  • @robertonievecimamontana7065

    STTTTTEEEEEEVVVVVVEEEEE!!!!!! Every episode is thorough enjoyment!

  • @jkliao6486
    @jkliao6486 Před 2 lety

    18:44 I don't know whether a goal is kicked in or not, because that is subjective. However, I know the instant I watch the slo-mo replay of that Makar goal that it is a good goal because every time this tagged up rule is needed as a reference on an on-side call, there would be a big debate. I didn't know this originally, but I learned that it was deemed onside in this situation when a similar play happened in a Caps vs Isles game during the 18-19 season and the Caps coach didn't challenge the play. The coaching group even explained the reason behind the decision to not challenge after the game. From then on, I learned that this rule exists. If fans can actually learn this rule, there wouldn't be such a big debate every single time this situation happens. And this rule is completely objective. Makar, during the delayed off-side, 1) didn't touch the puck and 2) didn't attempt to gain the possession of the puck because he already have the possession. Therefore, it's onside.

  • @FoCoDRock
    @FoCoDRock Před 2 lety +4

    I thought that goal was coming back, watching makars face he looked like he thought it was coming back as well, but I was happy it was called a good goal

  • @m0RRisC2319
    @m0RRisC2319 Před 2 lety +4

    The "distinct kicking motion" rule has always been absurdly vague but also somehow way too specific. Just make the rule that the puck cant go in after it hits your skate unless your skate is not moving. You must be standing still and if it happens to bounce off of you then it is a goal but you cant be moving while that happens. That seems to be the only realistic rule change that can prevent these ridiculous controversies where the rules seem to change every other day.

    • @CoryCat65
      @CoryCat65 Před 2 lety

      yeah but that's too logical for the NHL lol

  • @kylemiller2920
    @kylemiller2920 Před 2 lety

    Only reason I knew the Makar goal was good is because Giroux did a similar thing against the wild a few years ago. If I recall he nudged the puck over the blue line and sat with his stick blade behind it for a second or two waiting to touch until his off-side player tagged up.

  • @stevehuth7669
    @stevehuth7669 Před 2 lety

    You're completely correct about the rules being confusing and difficult to understand. The Makar goal I can at least understand the rule and say it was interpreted correctly as written-but its a stupidly written rule. The Coleman goal though...I have no idea what is going on there.

  • @SammyNineFingers
    @SammyNineFingers Před 2 lety +5

    I think part of the problem with the rules in the NHL is that some officials go with the literal wording of the rule and some go with the spirit of the rule. In the literal writing of the offsides rule the Makar goal is good because he doesn't touch the puck until everyone has tagged up. In the spirit of the rule the play is offside because Makar is playing the puck forward into the zone while a player hasn't tagged up yet. It really came down to how the officials make their infraction calls based on how they interpret the rules. The Avalanche just got away with murder because they ended up having the officials that focus on the wording of the rule over the spirit of the rule.

    • @christyouredumb956
      @christyouredumb956 Před 2 lety +1

      There’s been multiple calls of the exact same type this year alone. It’s not just this one call which I think everyone is missing. This has been consistent in the way this is ruled.

    • @peterpike
      @peterpike Před 2 lety +1

      I disagree. The spirit of the rule is, you don't want a player camped next to the goalie so they can get a long-range pass and score. Nichushkin was trying to exit the zone and had no impact on the play. Both the spirit and letter of the rule were followed.

    • @Spyderram57
      @Spyderram57 Před 2 lety +1

      @@peterpike I guess they have completely changed the rule since my days watching hockey. It used to be that, if a player was still in the zone, As The Puck Reentered the zone, it was offside. Going by the old rule, This was clearly offside.

  • @carletonrutherford1799
    @carletonrutherford1799 Před 2 lety +3

    13:04 I had not seen the play before. I have no dog in that fight, but THAT WAS OFFSIDE. I do not understand how anyone, and I mean anyone, who watches hockey, could think that was onside. That was an absolute LUDICROUS call!! And then the following powerplay led to another goal by Colorado. A 2 goal spread on 1 play. That was absolutely terrible.

    • @bradleynugent4991
      @bradleynugent4991 Před 2 lety

      except numerous former officials, former players, current video coaches, the commentators on the broadcast, the TNT crew on the intermission including Gretzky all said it was onside, you're just some guy in a youtube comment section i think ill believe the experts on this one, it is a little rare, but this is called onside consistently here is an example: czcams.com/video/ePov14LxKVY/video.html&ab_channel=SPORTSNET

  • @girhen
    @girhen Před 2 lety

    I can see a few rule rewrites to help alleviate the kicking calls.
    1. Your skate can only deflect the puck. Any amount of pushing the puck/moving your skate in the puck's direction isn't legal.
    2. Your skate can deflect or push the puck, but the position, angle, and direction of momentum cannot change while in contact with the puck. Even stopping would not be legal - don't make contact. At least it's a clear(er) line.
    3. Your skate can push the puck, as long as it's in the ice the entire time it does so and without windup/follow through of a kicking motion that takes your skate off the ice entirely or puts your blade more than 30 degrees pitch forward or backward (allows a kick, but keeps that knife on the ground - and touching isn't enough if it's your heel and the rest of the skate is pointing in a dangerous direction.)

  • @elecjess04
    @elecjess04 Před 2 lety

    GREAT SHOW AS ALWAYS STEVE! GO AVS!!!

  • @TheInfii
    @TheInfii Před 2 lety +14

    He literally crossed the foot on the OPPOSITE side of his body to kick that in. I really don't understand anyones point that it wasn't a kick.
    Looks like a clear as day kick to me. 🤷‍♂️

    • @Jabokrazy
      @Jabokrazy Před 2 lety +3

      People are dumb and don't objectively view things.

    • @ivrynite
      @ivrynite Před 2 lety +2

      Especially the side angle from slightly behind really reveals the extra extension that Coleman executed. His eyes on the puck the whole time, knows he can't get the stick on the puck, he extends the leg to push the puck with his skate. I.E. he kicked it in.

    • @Rvezz28
      @Rvezz28 Před 2 lety +3

      I think it's really just the comparison and inconsistency to the other 3 that DID count. If those counted... surely this one should, no? I didn't think it was as egregious as the others for it to be definitively overturned

    • @Jabokrazy
      @Jabokrazy Před 2 lety +2

      @@Rvezz28 The thing that should be pointed out, is that the NHL doesn't know what a kick is. All 4 examples are kicks and should be overturned. Using precedent to make calls is dangerous, because you could refer to a play 60 years ago and call it precedent.

    • @Rvezz28
      @Rvezz28 Před 2 lety

      @@Jabokrazy that's fair but isn't that how rules are made? By previous situations causing the rule? There has to be some consistency and I don't think the league, as a whole, does a good job with it. How can you consistently play a game when you're unsure how the rule will be enforced? You only have previous situations to go by

  • @DangerFieldProd
    @DangerFieldProd Před 2 lety +5

    Calling it a kick bothers me just because if he had fallen forward and his shoulder or other body part hit it, would it count as a goal?

    • @rjwood6314
      @rjwood6314 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes. The kicking rule is to prevent knife feet from going at the goalie.

    • @joon1306
      @joon1306 Před 2 lety

      Lmao the series would not have ended in Calgary’s favor, what?? Whether or not that was a kick, you’re basically looking at Edmonton in 5 or 6. Calgary was amazing in the regular season, but was only slightly better than playoff Florida

    • @DangerFieldProd
      @DangerFieldProd Před 2 lety

      @@joon1306 I was mostly cheering on the Oilers as I've been enjoying seeing McDavid play. As far as the situation, I play goal and I understand the need for safety but I just think these type calls are problematic as Steve said. This wasn't an obvious kick and most likely him just trying to plant his foot down. This is why I stated if it had been his shoulder hitting it (i.e. him falling on his stomach) would it have been a goal? What about if he landed on his knee and it bounced in?

    • @joon1306
      @joon1306 Před 2 lety +1

      @@DangerFieldProd oh I agree that the kick itself was very debatable. I was mostly responding to the other guy who said “the series would have ended in Calgary’s favour” when that’s ridiculous, bc Calgary wasn’t showing up. That’s why I said the really difference was the Oilers winning in 5, or losing bc of the Coleman goal but winning in 6.

  • @barrybrownell3200
    @barrybrownell3200 Před 2 lety +1

    Your argument over the kick with the other samples only made it more obvious that the Coleman goal was the only one propelled into the net by the skate. Every other shot was deflected by a skate moved into position under the pucks momentum.

  • @soulysplays5732
    @soulysplays5732 Před 2 lety

    Lol the commentators were like yup offside 😄

  • @BrettGarnettFilms
    @BrettGarnettFilms Před 2 lety +3

    It’s a kick Steve just calm down. He moved his leg in an effort to put the puck in. If his skate was moving forward but through normal circumstances, that’s a deflection. But if you change the motion of your foot to “kick” the puck in the net, it’s a kick plain and simple.

    • @demonicfork
      @demonicfork Před 2 lety

      " But if you change the motion of your foot to “kick” the puck in the net, it’s a kick plain and simple."
      So literally all the other goals he showed shouldnt have counted then?

  • @bluelion1995
    @bluelion1995 Před 2 lety +5

    All 4 goals were kicks. The NHL got 25% correct. Seems to be their batting average.

  • @Inferno6969
    @Inferno6969 Před 2 lety +2

    "If you're carolina, you're thinking if I can get one in the next 5-"
    "CHYTIL ALL ALONE, HE SCORES!"

  • @maximemounier7184
    @maximemounier7184 Před 2 lety

    Love your videos❤️

  • @jonathondunn3602
    @jonathondunn3602 Před 2 lety +3

    I’m more ok with the onside call than the kick call. But agree that the rule book needs to be cleaned up

  • @kayz420
    @kayz420 Před 2 lety +5

    It would've been a tie game and oilers might have been edmonton who won

  • @hunterlahti6342
    @hunterlahti6342 Před 2 lety +1

    One thing that makes me question that Makar offside call is if Makar had been checked when he "wasn't in control" I'm almost positive it wouldn't have been called an interference penalty even though he "wasn't in control"

  • @schindlj
    @schindlj Před 2 lety

    The issue i have with that offsides rule is does that mean someone can be in conplete control of the puck, stick handling it down the ice. Then once the puck get on the blue line, lift the stick foe a half a socond until the his teammate gets back onside, then touch it again, and it is then onside?
    If that is the case, stick handling it into the zone, you would need a downward camera on both blue lines, because stick handling, the puck isnt always on the stick of the player.