The Hit That Literally Ruined A Man's Career

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  • čas přidán 30. 08. 2023
  • #nhl #hockey #torontomapleleafs #montrealcanadiens
    Eric Lindros was one of NHL hockey's greatest power forwards. However, one hit would change absolutely everything.
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Komentáře • 2,8K

  • @GP-tt2te
    @GP-tt2te Před 8 měsíci +1028

    I lived in Philly during the Lindros era. The organization and its medical staff completely ruined this man. Those people were totally incompetent.

    • @woudytreez2755
      @woudytreez2755 Před 7 měsíci +37

      BS - He was a whiner extraordinaire and his parents were no better. He was a kid, treated like he was a jewel by his parents and he thought that he should be counted as a diamond.

    • @darthollpheist1156
      @darthollpheist1156 Před 7 měsíci +89

      That's not true. They didn't know the extent of head injuries. But other teams were told to aim for his head to take him out of the game. And the NHL backed it all.
      I honestly think that if you do something dirty that ends a player's career, the punishment should be, banishment from the league. Not fines or a few games out. That's nothing to these guys. You need to hit them where it actually hurts. Hell, some of these dirt balls will do something dirty just to get some time off. (half joking).

    • @skepple1554
      @skepple1554 Před 7 měsíci +71

      @@woudytreez2755he was a literal first overall pick and a generational talent. He was a diamond..

    • @patersonplankrd
      @patersonplankrd Před 7 měsíci +18

      Lindros and his Brother , Brett both had multiple concussion through their respective careers. Brett had I think seven. He was told by his doctors he HAD to quit hockey. Or the next concussion could leave him permanently disabled. Eric was pretty much in the same boat. I think both brothers may have had a genetic propensity to be concussed from contact.

    • @darthollpheist1156
      @darthollpheist1156 Před 7 měsíci +40

      @@patersonplankrd Maybe. But Eric was fine until he got to the NHL when people started targeting his head every chance they got.
      I remember those days. He was 100% ended out of poor-sportsmanship and malice. He was too good. And he was going to break records. The NHL hated him for choosing to basically hijack the draft and basically chose where he wanted to play instead of doing the right thing. If they would've just gotten over it, he would have scoring records for sure. He had the hands of Gretzky the size of Mario and was tougher than most of the enforcers in the league. They hated him so they allowed his career to be ended. The refs let other teams assault him all the time.
      But when Crosby would hit someone from behind or slew-foot them, they would get a penalty instead of Crosby.

  • @gordonmacdowell8117
    @gordonmacdowell8117 Před 7 měsíci +534

    He almost certainly had more concussions than the official injury record. Opposing players would launch at him from the other side of the ice on a regular basis to try to take him out and usually bounce off, but those kinds of jarring hits can give concussions too. He probably played so many stretches of games concussed that it became the new normal for him.

    • @robrosborough2553
      @robrosborough2553 Před 5 měsíci +16

      He never learned to keep head up as he was so big so early. He had trouble when playing against equal size men.

    • @ChrisEightyNine
      @ChrisEightyNine Před 5 měsíci +40

      so tired of hearing the blanket keep head up, EVERYBODY looks down at some point, when you have master predator like Stevens who specifically picked his moments based on when the opponent was looking away, you're going to catch guys hard. i still don't get how tough guys are thought of as tough guys when really all they're doing is looking for blind spots rather than going eye to eye with guys. oh and the whole triple teaming... it takes such a real hard man to come in as the 3rd guy on a player that's already under double coverage. SO tough and hardcore.

    • @maximedavid6411
      @maximedavid6411 Před 5 měsíci +20

      ​@@ChrisEightyNine minor hockey coaches repeat 8 year olds all the time to keep their heads up. It's not only because of the dirty hits, it's just basic hockey IQ. In the end that's what separated the all time greats from Lindros, his lack of awareness on the ice. There were a lot of hard hitters like Stevens back in the days (Konstantinov, Hatcher, Neely, Kasparitis, etc..) AND the dead puck/neutral zone trap era made it even more important to keep the head up and be aware of your surroundings. You may be tired of hearing it but it is what it is, he played himself in the end and it was not just because of Stevens.

    • @alexandreducharme4811
      @alexandreducharme4811 Před 4 měsíci

      @@robrosborough2553 Okay. If I see you on the street and you have your head down, it's totally okay for me to hit you in the face for no reason? That's your logic.

    • @hibbidyjibbidyy
      @hibbidyjibbidyy Před 3 měsíci +5

      when you have your head down whils cruising center ice, while scott stevens is around.....look the fuck out

  • @JFK762
    @JFK762 Před 4 měsíci +360

    I liked Theo fleurys explanation that the reason why lindros never skated with his head up was because he grew up being the biggest and strongest person on the ice until he got into the NHL, so he's never had to keep his head on a swivel

    • @hibbidyjibbidyy
      @hibbidyjibbidyy Před 3 měsíci +11

      that makes sense, theo is smaller than me, yet excelled at a game where 250lbs monstes are cruising around at high speeds

    • @hibbidyjibbidyy
      @hibbidyjibbidyy Před 3 měsíci +2

      he s skating with dude like scot stenens a probert, boruqe, try to avoid them lol

    • @isaboteur2562
      @isaboteur2562 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yea that definitely makes sense. B4 the NHL nobody could even move him no matter if he was perfectly balanced or not.

    • @isaboteur2562
      @isaboteur2562 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@hibbidyjibbidyyyea ur right. Theo was small...I always looked up to guys that size because I'm small. Remember Sergei Samsonov? Boston Bruins...that man was tiny

    • @rephlex66
      @rephlex66 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm 6 ft and too heavy, but when you play against somebody that has his size, and he skates faster than you can, you've never heard that sound on that ice

  • @catherinesanchez1185
    @catherinesanchez1185 Před 7 měsíci +213

    I was watching a lot of hockey during this time period. given what we know about concussions now, it's like they did everything WRONG . The worst thing is that it's not over. Concussions, especially repeated ones can have serious life long consequences especially when you get older with dementia etc . I hope he's going to be okay, even though I was obligated to hate him at the time (Penguins fan)

    • @LiqdPT
      @LiqdPT Před 4 měsíci +11

      I remember at the time saying that Lindros shouldn't be playing. And that was given how much less seriously we took concussions.

    • @hibbidyjibbidyy
      @hibbidyjibbidyy Před 3 měsíci +1

      yyou had lemioux and brouq ad jager, stop complainin, but yea, i hear you

    • @hibbidyjibbidyy
      @hibbidyjibbidyy Před 3 měsíci +3

      imagine jarmi jager is the 2nd best player on the team. wtf

    • @hibbidyjibbidyy
      @hibbidyjibbidyy Před 3 měsíci +1

      and our defenceman scares eveyoiune away froom the net, and scores a shit tonne of goals

    • @iamoasis
      @iamoasis Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@@hibbidyjibbidyywhat are you even saying? Are you speaking english?

  • @OJPulp22
    @OJPulp22 Před 8 měsíci +500

    crazy how if concussions didn't play such a big role in many players careers that some of them could still be playing or just recently be retiring

    • @1993Kire
      @1993Kire Před 8 měsíci +30

      Indeed. Remember ten years ago when Crosby had multiple concussions and there were lot of concern that his career might end prematurely? Thankfully that didn't happen.

    • @Slidezy
      @Slidezy Před 8 měsíci +7

      All injuries are like that somewhat... Knees, shoulders...

    • @dennis_burgess
      @dennis_burgess Před 8 měsíci +33

      @@SlidezyI don’t think you realize the point of how much more impactful head injuries are that there’s no reason to compare them.

    • @Dee_Just_Dee
      @Dee_Just_Dee Před 8 měsíci +5

      Also, just imagine how many hobby/amateur/junior league players could have been somebody if not for racking up concussions.

    • @DM0407
      @DM0407 Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@Slidezy True. They used to say it was less dirty to go high than to go after the knees. Neely's and Orr's career were both ended by knee on knee hits.

  • @funjunk2835
    @funjunk2835 Před 8 měsíci +340

    The craziest thing is he did that scoring pace during the dead puck era.

    • @v4v819
      @v4v819 Před 8 měsíci +2

      It was called the "Clutch and Grab" era... Don't be anti-semantic!

    • @luapg15
      @luapg15 Před 8 měsíci

      @@v4v819 lmfao 🤡

    • @yugishorts
      @yugishorts Před 8 měsíci

      Not really crazy but ok

    • @jesterbob828
      @jesterbob828 Před 8 měsíci +12

      ​@@yugishortscasual

    • @yugishorts
      @yugishorts Před 8 měsíci

      @@jesterbob828 🤣

  • @frankferraro1332
    @frankferraro1332 Před 7 měsíci +18

    As a native Flyers fan, I’m a huge Lindros fan and is by far, my favorite player. I wish nothing but the best for Eric and his family. Miss you wearing black and orange!

  • @christopherwood8760
    @christopherwood8760 Před 6 měsíci +138

    As a former football and hockey player, I am going to go out on a limb and say those were not his first concussions. Any time your head hits the ice, glass, other helmets, and/or fists, that is a tiny concussion that builds into serious, long term, brain injuries.

    • @bufnyfan1
      @bufnyfan1 Před 6 měsíci +16

      This year QMJHL 19-year-old player Lane Hinkley (who played for the Charlottetown Islanders) retired from hockey altogether. He said": “Too many hits, too many punches, too many concussions that I didn’t properly heal from. The doctor said my MRI showed there was a 25mm by 17mm lesion on my brain… Currently, I am at risk for CTE and early dementia.” I just wonder how many other junior players are at high risk of CTE/dementia

    • @christopherwood8760
      @christopherwood8760 Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@bufnyfan1 Sadly, all of them.

    • @timharper4246
      @timharper4246 Před 4 měsíci +4

      ​@christopherwood8760 unless a guy has been a couch potatoe his ehole young life, pretty much all young men have had dozens of small concussions and a handful of legitimate ones simply from bike crashes and accidental headbutts from wrestling around. If you've played a contact sport in hs, you've had a dozen concussions

    • @geofflepper3207
      @geofflepper3207 Před 3 měsíci +4

      ​@@timharper4246
      Somehow that's not very comforting, even if true which it could be.
      When a medical team was studying a team of soccer players
      to record concussions and were getting frustrated because
      none of the players were having major blows to the head
      the medical team decided to see what the impact of
      players repeatedly heading the ball in practice was
      and found that just that activity was enough to cause
      "mini" concussions.

    • @geofflepper3207
      @geofflepper3207 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I believe that one of Bill Masterson's teammates said that they thought
      that he died not just because of a blow to the head in a game
      but because he had suffered a bigger blow to the head
      shortly before in a team practice.
      I would think that a lot of boxers who die in the ring
      die not just because of one hit or even one fight
      but because of all the hits they have taken
      in other fights.

  • @romangagne5842
    @romangagne5842 Před 8 měsíci +271

    The biggest explanation for why Lindros had the habit of skating with his head down mostly comes from him being bigger than most of the others in the OHL that they usually just bounced off him.

    • @davidford3968
      @davidford3968 Před 8 měsíci +17

      Yes!!!!!
      I've been saying that for years.
      The extra year he spent there really hurt him because it kept him with his bad habit of playing that way.

    • @hhiippiittyy
      @hhiippiittyy Před 8 měsíci +6

      I cant jive with that.
      He's big, sure, but the OHL has plenty of big dudes in it.
      He'd be encountering a whole lot of guys that wouldn't just bounce off him.
      It might just be a bad habit.

    • @georgesparrow2839
      @georgesparrow2839 Před 8 měsíci +10

      He thought he could bull his way through everything.
      He had a target on him

    • @iancormier7550
      @iancormier7550 Před 8 měsíci +4

      ​@hhiippiittyy they have them, but they aren't on that kind of level. They likely didn't make the cut and stopped shortly after regardless. They likely couldn't touch him due to speed , skill, and him still able to out power

    • @chrisstone7368
      @chrisstone7368 Před 8 měsíci +8

      100% - Insert, Scott Stevens

  • @MmaFan34
    @MmaFan34 Před 8 měsíci +136

    That goal from Kariya after the Stevens hit is ICONIC! Kariya and Lindros were 2 of my favorite NON Red Wings players.

    • @BlkwtrPrk
      @BlkwtrPrk Před 8 měsíci +1

      I was at UMaine when Kariya was there, he was obviously NHL level talent even then.

    • @BRuane-pw6xq
      @BRuane-pw6xq Před 8 měsíci +12

      Scotty Three Cups hit in Devs sweep over Red Wings was iconic

    • @tommyplays131
      @tommyplays131 Před 8 měsíci

      Two candy asses

    • @YankeesLife
      @YankeesLife Před 7 měsíci +8

      The crazy part is that Kariya doesn’t even remember that goal, game 7 or the following week after

    • @fescueme1081
      @fescueme1081 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Red Wings fan and I loved Paul Kariya.

  • @the_eaglefan
    @the_eaglefan Před 4 měsíci +15

    I still say that he developed that habit as he grew up in hocky. Being the biggest and best at lower levels meant that he wasn't risking as much as the smaller players would bounce off him at those levels. Then when he got to the NHL where he was now playing against players who were closer in ability and size it became a risk but by then he had already fully developed the habit of not being afraid to have his head down that much. Just a hypothesis at least.

    • @davidford3968
      @davidford3968 Před 2 měsíci +1

      You’re absolutely right he developed that habit at an early age because he was always so big and never completely got out of it and that is what ruined his career

  • @-BUGZ-
    @-BUGZ- Před 5 měsíci +43

    As a Red Wings fan who watched them in the mid to late 90s to now, we definitely feared Lindros and respected the hell out of him even though we didn’t like Philly too much. Love ya Philly 🧹

    • @-BUGZ-
      @-BUGZ- Před 5 měsíci +1

      Ohhh he talked about it too, lol my bad I commented that before he even brought the sweep up.

    • @insigbabl
      @insigbabl Před 2 měsíci +1

      That hit that Konstantinov laid on him in the finals was certainly his first major concussion. I didn't think he was ever the same after those finals and Vlad was the primary reason.

    • @-BUGZ-
      @-BUGZ- Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@insigbabl Well, you’re probably right. And even though I love Vladdy (I literally had a dog named after him called Vladdy) he got his own karma in a worse way, sadly. But yea, you’re right.

    • @MrGuanYu1
      @MrGuanYu1 Před 2 měsíci

      As an Avs fan I liked Lindros for entirely different reasons. So much talent gathered through all the picks, players and cash that was garnered in the trade to Philly.

    • @buffalobell22
      @buffalobell22 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I was the same way. Huge Red Wings fan as a kid, but absolutely loved Lindros and Adam Foote. You don't have to dislike the players, just the team.

  • @tdineen12
    @tdineen12 Před 8 měsíci +68

    The flyers ruined Lindros. Team Doctors covering it up to make him play while outside doctors say he can't play, a big scandal. I'll never forget the hit.

    • @KevinniveK2112
      @KevinniveK2112 Před 8 měsíci +15

      As a Flyers fan, I hate to agree with this, but it is totally true. And the thing is, the team made him out to be a villain in all of this. There were sections of the fanbase that hated Lindros because they thought that he was weak because of all of these concussions. Meanwhile himself and another former Flyer who had career ending concussion issues, Keith Primeau, are pioneers in leading the charge for the current concussion protocols in the league. The Flyers organization of the early 2000's just look like total monsters in hindsight.

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@KevinniveK2112 This is one of the biggest reasons I can't root for Philly teams, fans totally bought into the narrative & turned on him on a dime, it was so frustrating. It wasn't just Snyder that drove him outta town, the media gassed up the vehicle & the fans helped push.

    • @KevinniveK2112
      @KevinniveK2112 Před 8 měsíci +7

      @@chizorama I hear you and totally understand. It's hard to defend for sure. It doesn't help that there was a clear conflict of interest with the fact that the only sports radio station in the city at the time was basically owned by the team. The team had total control over the message and the players were more anonymous for better or for worse. In this age of social media and instant information this has really been turned on its head. Not saying the fans aren' t susceptible to this still, though.

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@KevinniveK2112 Yeah WIP really put the kabash on some careers.

    • @yomommashaus
      @yomommashaus Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@KevinniveK2112 yeah it's unfortunate but social justice movements can be powerful tools and the team used it - it's easy to look back and point fingers at the fans but most of them did not have all the facts

  • @invisibl3enemy
    @invisibl3enemy Před 8 měsíci +23

    Absolutely terrifying that Kariya couldnt remember the following 3 days. Wild.

    • @JonHop1
      @JonHop1 Před 8 měsíci

      He probably took the hardest hit in nhl history.

    • @invisibl3enemy
      @invisibl3enemy Před 8 měsíci +1

      @JonHop1 easily. The fact that he came back and scored that beauty is a masterpiece by itself. But still, unfortunate outcome.

    • @pjpredhomme7699
      @pjpredhomme7699 Před 8 měsíci +3

      that was not the worst one - - Gary Suter got him once much worse - it was the one that really shortened his career . Such a shame too Karyia was such a incredibly skilled player - but back in those days - that meant it was open season on a player. It is hard to believe hockey lasted as long as it did - with Rules that put targets on the back of the most talented - and made guys with little talent be able to open season on them with little impunity - it was so dumb

    • @JonHop1
      @JonHop1 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @pjpredhomme7699 completely disagree. Scott Steven's hit was so hard, he literally stopped breathing.. The damage the Steven's hit caused was much more severe. He had severe memory loss from it and a slight brain bleed.

    • @MrOctober44
      @MrOctober44 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@JonHop1An elbow to the head from a guy who's skating at 20 mph and weighs 215 pounds. Scary.

  • @MJR_ATX
    @MJR_ATX Před 7 měsíci +5

    I’m 6’9”. Over 7’0” on skates and I was a wing because I’m a fast skater but I never had much puck handling skills so I would always skate with my head down. Players would have to try to get to my head though. I was in a game where two players tried to run at me and both got their elbows so high that they both were called for majors. They hardly connected. This was high school. If I were in the NHL I’d be Lindrosed out of there in my first game

  • @michaelpiascinski8719
    @michaelpiascinski8719 Před 7 měsíci +20

    We were season ticket holders and my friend was sitting behind the Flyers goal . Her face says it all . Scott Stevens was at that time one of the best defensemen. The definition of "never skate with your head down" Lindros play made us all stand whenever he got the puck. It was an unforgetable time as a Flyers fan . The 4-0 sweep by Detroit was sad. My heart hurts seeing this video and it is an excellent documentary. I also for the record remember the Flyers were on a role and doing fine without Eric playing and the sudden insertion of him in this game kinda blew the season most likely. Thank you for this.

    • @bonzo20122
      @bonzo20122 Před 6 měsíci +18

      Scott Stevens was nothing but a cheap shot player...........He was just out to injury players coming into the zone.........

    • @Plague073
      @Plague073 Před 5 měsíci +7

      ​@@bonzo20122that was hockey buttercup

    • @zachmontminy
      @zachmontminy Před 5 měsíci +14

      ​@@Plague073no that was blatant disregard for the health of anyone else. If the dude played today he'd he wouldn't have made it past the AHL and been suspended 10+ times.

    • @Plague073
      @Plague073 Před 5 měsíci +5

      @@zachmontminy but he didn't play today.

    • @FLGirly
      @FLGirly Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@Plague073so it’s ok to want to end someones career and cause them health issues just because “they didn’t play in todays hockey?”

  • @Ba1th1azar
    @Ba1th1azar Před 8 měsíci +38

    ive always felt that the whole lindros thing was a cumulative failure of all of his coaches throughout his career. he played his minor/junior career during the whole keep your head up at all times and because he outsized his opponents he never had to adapt. its tragic but ultimately its on both him and his coaches, and IMHO the league overcorrected because players were leading with their heads. you would NEVER see players in the 80's cross center ice with their head down because you'd get killed, hell even gretz the one time he did it got blown up.

    • @michaeljoseph8674
      @michaeljoseph8674 Před 5 měsíci +1

      All facts here, I played in the 80s and noo way geeting caught with head down coming up the middle. I say the same thing because of his size he did not have to adapt yup and it produced a terrible habbit that cost him no doubt

  • @Brocuzgodlocdunfamdogson
    @Brocuzgodlocdunfamdogson Před 8 měsíci +63

    I went to a stick handling camp a few times as a kid. One of the biggest things they stressed was *don’t skate with your head down* . A puck on the toe of the stick feels completely different than when it’s on the heel. They tried teaching us to know where the puck was by feel, not sight.
    Even with this training, I’d still catch myself with my head down on occasion. It’s a tough habit to break, kids should learn to skate heads up as soon as possible.

    • @augustdrums1247
      @augustdrums1247 Před 7 měsíci +8

      And don't elbow people in the head. There is a reason hits like that are outlawed.

    • @patersonplankrd
      @patersonplankrd Před 7 měsíci +1

      I never had formal training. HOwever, I watched a lot of NHL. Also had books written by NHL greats. One such book was by Bobby Orr. Simply entitled "4"....Most of the content was a 'how to' of hockey.
      That book taught me tons.

    • @randyoney8793
      @randyoney8793 Před 7 měsíci

      Lindros headbutted the beast and the beast won total payback for lindros headbutting him

    • @augustdrums1247
      @augustdrums1247 Před 7 měsíci

      @@randyoney8793 they definitely trading blows over their careers, I enjoyed watching them.

  • @Sullyman19
    @Sullyman19 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Great video! I really enjoyed it. You have a great way of story telling.

  • @tonys7675
    @tonys7675 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Between growing up in Minnesota playing hockey through my sophomore year of college and 30 years in the army with three combat deployments, I can tell you that the more concussions you get, the easier it is to get the next one and they get more severe each time. I had 10 that were diagnosed (two from car wrecks, six from hockey and two from Iraq/Afghanistan) and a brain MRI showed a blackened area in the front left part of my brain. I learned so much from the Army medical personnel and the Fort Riley TBI clinic that I didn't know. These things really change your life. Having said that, you learn early and often in hockey to keep your head up. That's an immensely critical mistake for a player to make, especially entering the other team's zone with the puck.

  • @CounterSniper67
    @CounterSniper67 Před 8 měsíci +47

    Keeping your head down isn’t a “tiny" flaw. Many careers have been cut short because of that.

    • @Van020280
      @Van020280 Před 7 měsíci

      But they wouldn't have today....

    • @amazonamazon4872
      @amazonamazon4872 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​​@@Van020280lol, sure they would...theres a reason you dont put your head down when a 6'2" 215 lb freight train is coming at you at 25-30 mph.

    • @_Alias_
      @_Alias_ Před 6 měsíci

      I’m pretty sure he’s being sarcastic

    • @From-North-Jersey
      @From-North-Jersey Před 2 měsíci

      @@Van020280 They should today , that is why hockey ratings are way down. The took the man out of mens sports. The NHL wants to mix women into the rosters I am convinced that is why they are making defense illegal. Modern icecapades hockey sucks.

    • @Kaliblister
      @Kaliblister Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@From-North-Jersey damn was reading the comments everytime someone is saying something stupid i see your name. quite impressive.

  • @USCxGAMECOCKS1801
    @USCxGAMECOCKS1801 Před 8 měsíci +11

    One thing I find fascinating about concussions and sports is how it's "new" that they understand how bad they are. I mean we're not talking 500 years ago, we're talking 15, 20, 25 years ago and they(all sports in general) just didn't seem to care about concussions. And to me, being a normal not super smart person, it seems like common sense that if you get knocked out, that's probably not great. It's just weird that head injuries were just not taken seriously until very very recently.

    • @shortfuse1993
      @shortfuse1993 Před 8 měsíci +3

      That is so true. I was listening to Dale Jr and his concussion journey with NASCAR and his team had to refer him to the doctor that works with the steelers and penguins. Because apparently no one in North Carolina is as good with concussions as that doctor is. His story is wild when it comes to this.

    • @royjonzejr
      @royjonzejr Před 8 měsíci +3

      Back then a head injury was referred to as "having your bell rung" and he just needs to get back out there once the initial shock of being hit wears off. People didn't really get that sending a guy back out there to play after receiving a brain injury is like a guy breaking his leg and sending him back out to skate on the broken leg.

    • @elifishwhat
      @elifishwhat Před 24 dny

      and there's still stuff like Anthony Rizzo's concussion where they send him back in to play. it's better now but we've got a long way to go, especially in the NFL too

  • @hejdingamleraev
    @hejdingamleraev Před 4 měsíci +13

    As is mentioned in the video, when you play as hard as Lindros was doing, opposing teams will not be easy on you. It was also an era when hockey was as much about dominating physically as puck control.

    • @stevebell4853
      @stevebell4853 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I have limited sympathy, he wasn't shy about dishing it out. In fact, I'm wondering how many concussions he dealt out to others that nobody is sat here crying about because their name aint Lindros. Live by the sword, die by the sword. Thats hockey.

    • @jetjan
      @jetjan Před měsícem

      no sympathy -he was a very dirty player

  • @Willl_b_
    @Willl_b_ Před 5 měsíci +20

    i was a kid and watched every game that season. when lindros finally came back i was so excited. and when he got taken out by stevens, i was heartbroken! i remember that game so well.

    • @47tooter
      @47tooter Před 2 měsíci +3

      I thought it was great ! Get rid of that snob who was way over-rated.

    • @Willl_b_
      @Willl_b_ Před 2 měsíci

      hahaha typical tooter 🤣 How is Stacy doing?? @@47tooter

    • @TheSkunow
      @TheSkunow Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@47tooter just had a huge bottle of Haterade?

    • @kenw2225
      @kenw2225 Před 2 měsíci

      47tooter, youre a soap dropper

    • @darnellpistachio2991
      @darnellpistachio2991 Před měsícem

      ​@@TheSkunownaw lindros a bum

  • @RobotShlomo
    @RobotShlomo Před 8 měsíci +50

    Pat LaFontaine was a similar case. He suffered I believe 8 concussions in his career with the Islanders, and then the Rangers acquired him from Buffalo. I don't remember specifically who put the hit on him, but someone laid him out on the ice rendering LaFontaine unconscious. Watching it unfold on television I immediately thought the worst.

    • @kevinmach730
      @kevinmach730 Před 7 měsíci +9

      I played with him in the early years (pre NHL, we grew up in the same area) and just a few weeks ago, my g/f bought a car off of one of their families car dealerships. I wasn't close friends with him, but we knew a lot of the same people and I was tempted to ask how he was doing when we there a few weeks ago, but it just seemed inappropriate. I remember hearing stories about he was so depressed from the concussions, he would literally not get out of bed for days, coudlnt remember things. It sounded awful.

    • @alanpaul9481
      @alanpaul9481 Před 7 měsíci

      czcams.com/video/2J_tf2NcNUQ/video.html

    • @MadmanLink
      @MadmanLink Před 7 měsíci +9

      8 concussions that we know of. Back then you were just told to shake it off.

    • @kopkid203
      @kopkid203 Před 6 měsíci +5

      @@kevinmach730 Shame... Even worse is the story of Derek Boogaard who's concussion symptoms drove him to heavy oxy reliance and eventually, suicide.

    • @kevinmach730
      @kevinmach730 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@kopkid203 I saw that story not long ago in a video, it was terrible.

  • @TheMrTwizter
    @TheMrTwizter Před 8 měsíci +97

    I grew up watching the flyers, lindros was really the reason i got into hockey.
    The concussions, the bad medical staff, the fights with management, it was all just too much.
    Oh what could have been

    • @chrisbarnett5303
      @chrisbarnett5303 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Same man. That 97series against NY made me a fan

    • @mikebarnett7976
      @mikebarnett7976 Před 7 měsíci +7

      My father was the Flyer fan. But Lindros just himself almost made me a Flyer fan. If Lindros was given the Crosby treatment when he got his. I truly believe in 2000-2005 the Flyers win two. It wasn't until 97 that he truly started to have the pieces around him. Once you guys got Reechi back and moved on from Hextall. The Flyers had great d B+ goal tending and more then the legion of doom. Roenick in 2001 would of gave you guys three scary lines for any team to face. Plug in a healthy Lindros from 2000-2005. The Avs or Wings wouldn't be deep enough to beat them.

    • @phillyghost1256
      @phillyghost1256 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @TheMrTwizter Nice seeing you over here👍And don’t forget to add to your list of the obvious Scott Stevens head hunting tendencies! ( He absolutely targeted Lindros to take him out of a game 7 )

    • @TheMrTwizter
      @TheMrTwizter Před 7 měsíci +3

      @phillyghost1256 it's funny, I see you on every flyers comment section 🤣. And yes, Scott Steven's is a war criminal

    • @phillyghost1256
      @phillyghost1256 Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@TheMrTwizter I’m all for tough & rough hockey Honorable battles between individual players and teams but I cannot respect the tactics of one Scott Stevens who was a weasel as he took advantage of many many players in a vulnerable situations to lower the boom…he’s a Punk A** player in my book! LOL just last night I was watching The Flyer fights of the teams from the mid “1980’s the Tocchet & Brown era and Scott Stevens was a weasel back then! ( you get around also!😂 ) see you on the next Chris show🏒👋

  • @thomasfrayne6684
    @thomasfrayne6684 Před měsícem +3

    I remember watching the Stevens hit live and thinking that I just saw someone die in a hockey game.

  • @acadmus
    @acadmus Před 7 měsíci +2

    Lindros and Kariya weren’t the only ones. Pat Lafontaine was being described as the greatest American born player in NHL history when concussions took him out of the game in the early to mid 90s. The Panthers had a gem of a player in David Booth in the early 20-teens whose fearless and hard working play made him a perennial 20-30 goal scorer until an open ice blindside hit to the head by Mike Richards (who never even got suspended for it as I recall) ended one season early and he was never able to return to form after. For two decades the league turned a blind eye to these dirty hits that were taking out their star players while mystifyingly cracking down on enforcers (the guys whose job it was to make other teams not want to play dirty because they’d become targets) and then complaining about scoring being down.

  • @sydisticsandman
    @sydisticsandman Před 7 měsíci +23

    There's always someone bigger, or at least as big. ALWAYS skate with your head up. Lindros story reminds me of Forsberg in that they both coulda played so much longer if not for the injuries. mad respect to both the.

  • @jesterman1302
    @jesterman1302 Před 8 měsíci +60

    I remember watching this game live. He actually had an extremely decent season after this with the Rangers, going 37-36-73 for more than a point a game in 72 contests... But after that the concussions caught up to him, same as his lesser known brother.

    • @tmac6688
      @tmac6688 Před 8 měsíci

      The flyers were up in this series 3-1. After that hit you just knew the Devil's were winning this game

    • @JGB798
      @JGB798 Před 8 měsíci

      Ngl I’m only 17 so I didn’t even know he had a brother but I saw looked his stats and in junior he was pretty good and in the NHL the points don’t stand out but his pims do so u know what he was on the floor for

    • @zx10rgofast
      @zx10rgofast Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@JGB798the points don’t tell the story because he was injured so much. He averaged 1.33 PPG that should stand out to you. Growing up a young hockey fan in the 90s, Lindros was my absolute favorite player. I been a Bruins fan my whole life but watching Lindros play was similar to watching Kobe. Even if he didn’t play for your team, watching him play was an experience in itself. He was unlike any other player in the league. He had the size to devastate and the speed and skills to snipe incredible goals. His game was a lot like Ovechkin, not quite the offensive skills, but much more physical. He was like a created player on a NHL video game that had 99 for shooting and 99 for hitting.

    • @JGB798
      @JGB798 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@zx10rgofast oh I wasn’t talking bout Eric I meant his brothers

    • @kopkid203
      @kopkid203 Před 6 měsíci

      @@JGB798 as an Islander fan I can tell you, dont bothor trying to look up any Brett Lindros highlight reels as none exist

  • @craigfazekas3923
    @craigfazekas3923 Před 5 měsíci +3

    I was a life long Flyers fan during Mr. Snyder's tenure. It ended for me a few years ago.
    I never liked #88, Bonnie Lindros. I hated the fact that he'd given the finger to the Nordiques.
    I like the optics of the franchise moving to Colorado & winning a Cup a few years later, and Bonnie sitting at home & watching it.
    I loved the line with LeClair, Renberg & Bonnie- they dominated there for a couple of years.
    I didn't cheer when his career ended. It was messed up. Bonnie was all about Bonnie & if you're gonna be that way ? You have trouble earning my respect...
    I cannot afford NHL games any longer but I still love the sport; always will.
    Now I get to as many AHL games as I can. The level of play isn't as good- but the players aren't spoiled & still show plenty of grit !!
    There's the trade-off, right there...
    Great upload, so thank you !!!
    🚬😎👍

  • @seanelgie
    @seanelgie Před 8 měsíci +21

    My favourite player. That was the hit that ended his career but he had been horribly miss managed by the flyers, his parents were right to speak up at the time and the man just couldn’t say no to lacing the skates up.

    • @muadhib001
      @muadhib001 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Maybe they were but his parents also stunted his mental development and professional independence being overly involved in his career starting by the Quebec Nordiques situation. But I get your point

    • @XxCorvette1xX
      @XxCorvette1xX Před 8 měsíci +1

      Lmao his parents were divas who treated the team like a vessel for their son, with no regard or respect for the team and dynamics within it..
      Clarke was right to tell them to blow it out their ass, there’s no room for princesses on the Flyers

    • @mikebarnett7976
      @mikebarnett7976 Před 7 měsíci +5

      ​​@@XxCorvette1xXI won't disagree that his parents needed to stay out of his business. There over involvement ruined realtionships. Defenitly took advantage of there own son as his agent. But if you think for one second the Flyers and Clarke handled any of his injuries correctly. They literally almost killed him in 99. If it wasn't for his roommate forcing him to go to the emergency room to find out he was internally bleeding he would of died. LeClair himself openly said they forced Lindros to play against the Devils. Stripped him of his C on live tv. He suited up for his teammates. Treated every concussion like it was a headache. He had like 4 or 5 in less then 5 months something like that. That Stevens hit if he was a lesser man could of killed him. He litterly still had one. Your Flyers win one with Lindros possibly two had they let him heal. 97/98 is when they started to get the pieces they gave away to get him. Acquiring Reechi back with LeClair was almost enough. Hextall was your weak link then. But as soon the Flyers moved on from him you finally had goalies good enough to win playoff games. But 2000 you win line one healthy Lindros,LeClaiir,Reechi. Line two Primeau,Gange,Tocchet/Williams. First time in Lindros career the Flyers would be two lines deep. With great D and B+/A- goal tending. You also get Jermey in 01 which would of made you guys deeper then the Wings.

  • @SLagonia
    @SLagonia Před 8 měsíci +78

    Jeff Beukeboom was one of my favorite players growing up. He was a powerful enforcer, but always hit clean. He'd knock you right out of your pads, but it would be a legal hit every time.
    His career was ended on a cheap shot... Just sad.

    • @jamesrempel8522
      @jamesrempel8522 Před 6 měsíci +19

      Thing is, Scott Stevens' hits were legal too. But they still caused concussions, maybe intentionally. Legality is not the question here.

    • @rpierce3336
      @rpierce3336 Před 6 měsíci +13

      You come across the ice wth your head down you'll regret it every time

    • @Love.America
      @Love.America Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@jamesrempel8522💯

    • @Ralfscho
      @Ralfscho Před 5 měsíci +7

      Fun fact is that Beukenboom is Dutch for beech tree but beuken as a verb means to bash. In other words those players got bashed by a tree 😂

    • @scottinnh88
      @scottinnh88 Před 5 měsíci +3

      As a child Cam Neely was my guy he got taken out by a cheap shot also. Then he came back for 50 goals in 50 games. But he was hurt again.

  • @jetjan
    @jetjan Před 6 měsíci +1

    mad magazine said "hitting in ice hockey is legal if it is a clean hit, see guy unconscious with all the teeth knocked out of his mouth, very clean."

  • @Jidds
    @Jidds Před 3 měsíci +2

    Seen this at 999k views hoped to be the millionth but I’ll come back soon, congrats on your first million view vid you have an intriguing style of making content

  • @ATHIP12
    @ATHIP12 Před 8 měsíci +62

    At the time I hated Lindros because I thought he was a baby for not playing for Quebec. In recent years I've been horrified to learn about his concussions and how they impacted him. I almost couldn't watch this video. Great job on the video, BTW. It made a compelling statement about concussions and how they were poorly handled.

    • @DM0407
      @DM0407 Před 8 měsíci +8

      The Lindros trade set off a series of events that lead to the Av's winning two Cup and greatest team fight ever.
      In the trade the Nordiques got Forsberg and Ricci and two first round picks. One they drafted Thibault and then traded him to the Canadians for Roy. The second pick they flipped for Wendel Clark who was traded for Claude Lemieux.
      Lemieux was instrumental to the 1995 Devils Cup (playoff MVP) and the 1996 Av's cup, and then buried Chris Draper into the boards which lead to the Red Wings Av's team brawl.
      He was later traded back to the Devils for Brian Rolston who was traded for Ray Bourque who helped the Av's win in 2001 again.
      Would the Nordiques ever of moved if Lindros signed with them? Would they have the trade chips to build a contender? Who knows.

    • @MrOctober44
      @MrOctober44 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @ARW1234567: You didn't like Lindros but you didn't know about his concussion issues?

    • @Manuel565
      @Manuel565 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@MrOctober44 Its a cheap shot today. I think it was pretty standard for the time. The main issue for Lindros is the poorly treated concussions. Nobody knew how bad they could be and I believe if he'd had the treatment options they have today would have had a much longer career.

    • @MrOctober44
      @MrOctober44 Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@Manuel565 Certainly the protocols are much different, Lindros being a huge part of that. The Kasparitis hit was clean. I've never thought the Stevens hit was. He was always a cheap shot headhunter

    • @martinlebreton6391
      @martinlebreton6391 Před 8 měsíci

      If you look at the guy that owned the nordiques, Marcel Aubut, an alleged serial rapist.
      You understand why his parents had bad vibes about going to quebec city.

  • @Marinoninewb
    @Marinoninewb Před 8 měsíci +6

    I remember when he got drafted by the Nordiques. He refused to sign with the team supposedly because of the distance, lack of marketing potential, and having to speak French. Everybody got pissed at him when he left Quebec for Philadelphie. We didn't know at the time that it was because his mother had had ''advances'' by the then owner Marcel Aubut. He lied to protect his mom while enduring all the hate.

    • @LeCommieBoi
      @LeCommieBoi Před 7 měsíci +1

      Id like to say that he should have reported it, but the truth is if he did, Aubut would have to sell the Nordiques earlier. In the end, Lindros may have tried to save the team by refusing to sign

    • @alienrefugee51
      @alienrefugee51 Před 6 měsíci

      That is very interesting. See, everyone draws conclusions when they don't know the whole truth. That makes me respect and feel for Lindros even more now. That's a selfless, standup guy and at a young age.

  • @-_-Code-_-
    @-_-Code-_- Před 7 měsíci +14

    Scott Stevens laid some absolute bombs, now the league is so different his hits would be illegal. After Savard lost his career over a hit like that I'm glad the league woke up.

    • @brentwillems726
      @brentwillems726 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I stopped watching hockey years ago but its watching talent leave the game due to savage hits which really turns me off. Winning means taking out the other guy.

    • @mcwilliams9113
      @mcwilliams9113 Před 2 měsíci +7

      Even then most his hits were ilegal, this was 100% a elbow to the head. Stevens is a POS

    • @TeeMost
      @TeeMost Před 28 dny

      100% POS. Headhunting with the intent to injure.

  • @bellaing6963
    @bellaing6963 Před 7 měsíci

    This was well done. Ty 👍

  • @mizrahimjew9351
    @mizrahimjew9351 Před 7 měsíci +32

    Lindros was my uncle Chris favorite player. Had his jersey and watched every game that was showed on tv. That mid to late 90s era of hockey was phenomenal! Take good care of yourself, EL.

    • @alienrefugee51
      @alienrefugee51 Před 6 měsíci

      90's hockey was the best hockey era and NBA too. Hell maybe even the NFL? It's amazing to think how many amazing players the 90's produced and in a time that still had a good balance of physical play and scoring.

    • @ronfroehlich4697
      @ronfroehlich4697 Před 5 měsíci +1

      That era of hockey sucked. All clutching and grabbing and neutral zone trapping. There was actually a book written at the time titled The Death Of Hockey, that all about how mid to late nineties era hockey was ruining the NHL.

    • @mizrahimjew9351
      @mizrahimjew9351 Před 5 měsíci

      @@ronfroehlich4697 and you read the book and basing your stupid statement from that? Your saying an era with Yagr, Federov, Modano, Kariya, Selaane, Sakic, Forsberg, Chelios, Lemiux, Yzerman, and so many others (along with the Red Wings vs Avalanche matches) sucked? Please video yourself telling these HOFers that their era sucks.

    • @ronfroehlich4697
      @ronfroehlich4697 Před 5 měsíci

      @@mizrahimjew9351 There were some true all-time greats playing in that era but hockey in the mid and late nineties was boring compared to the fire wagon style of previous eras. Again, way too much clutching and grabbing, way too much neutral zone trapping; that was when goalies equipment really started to balloon in size, there were too many low scoring games. Also, Mario Lemieux came from the 80's and retired prematurely (1997) because of how bad hockey sucked in the mid to late nineties.

    • @ilarinikkarikoski4765
      @ilarinikkarikoski4765 Před 4 měsíci

      Now I feel like I know your Uncle. Cool.

  • @BKHockeyTalk
    @BKHockeyTalk Před 8 měsíci +4

    Just wanted to say how quality your content is. Ur doing it differently from all these other hockey CZcamsrs. Really digging the stuff bro. Keep up the good work. 💪🏼

  • @TranslatedAssumption
    @TranslatedAssumption Před 3 měsíci +2

    I always found it interesting how Bobby Clarke incessantly questioned the toughness of Eric Lindros when he was regularly getting rocked and suffering concussions.

    • @78Boston
      @78Boston Před 2 měsíci +1

      Bobby Clarke has questionable regard for anyone and anything.

  • @add3to6
    @add3to6 Před měsícem +1

    I'm from the UK and I know next to nothing about hockey, but this was a well explained video that I found engaging. Has Eric Lindros remained healthy since his retirement? I ask because many rugby players from Europe have suffered debilitating effects from sustaining high levels of concussions in the early 2000's. I am glad to see both games taking the issue seriously.

    • @GOFLuvr
      @GOFLuvr Před měsícem +1

      I couldn't find anything on Eric Lindros' post-retirement health. I do remember Eric's younger brother Brett Lindros going high in the NHL draft, and then playing all of two seasons for the New York Islanders before retiring due to concussion issues.

  • @donaldleider7382
    @donaldleider7382 Před 7 měsíci +8

    I’ve been coaching youth hockey going on forty years now. The most important thing you can teach players is to skate with their heads up at ALL times! Eric Lindross was so big and strong that he got away with skating with his head down at every level EXCEPT the NHL. Hope he’s doing alright now.

    • @patriciawatson-roberts81573
      @patriciawatson-roberts81573 Před 7 měsíci +4

      He's doing good. He's married has three kids two boys and a girl and he coaches youth hockey. He, his wife and his kids were at several Flyers games last season and he was at Citizens Bank Park with his family to see the Phillies in the World Series last year. He's still a big presence in the Philadelphia area community.

    • @alienrefugee51
      @alienrefugee51 Před 6 měsíci

      @@patriciawatson-roberts81573That's so cool that he stayed in Philly after all this time. That means he really loved playing for that city.

  • @adamrichmond6348
    @adamrichmond6348 Před 8 měsíci +72

    I remember watching him play jr for the generals when they came through north bay. He was amazing... skilled and genuinely invincible on the ice. Everyone knew his head was down, even as a kid I would point it out but even big d men like Darrien Hatcher couldn't seem to catch him clean when he got a head of steam. Obviously that changed in the NHL. It was sad to see his career fizzle this way (even for a pens fan) but I am glad to hear he has been feeling well and doing such great charity work post career. All the best to Big E

    • @glengabruch4664
      @glengabruch4664 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yes, exactly. I saw him play at the World Juniors in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. As you said, he was absolutely dominant, but his head was ALWAYS down as he carried the puck. Once he reached the NHL, where EVERYONE is phenomenal and rugged, his days were numbered. Despite such, I always enjoyed #88.

    • @stephenedgecock
      @stephenedgecock Před 7 měsíci +5

      he was overrated

    • @RandyQuaker
      @RandyQuaker Před 7 měsíci

      Poor guy

    • @John-kq9oo
      @John-kq9oo Před 7 měsíci

      he sucked at hockey, r e t a r d

    • @andrewpotok2661
      @andrewpotok2661 Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@stephenedgecock u need professional help

  • @EricSmith-yg6nu
    @EricSmith-yg6nu Před 2 měsíci

    Great video. I was a huge Lindros fan back in the day and it sucked to watch the concussions take its toll.

  • @Djjoeyd1167
    @Djjoeyd1167 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Man! I’m a Caps fan & that should say enough right there when it comes to Philly or any of their teams 😂 but man, I loved Lindros ❤️ By far the only flyer I really ever liked, well loved! I had so many of his rookie cards! Was very sad to see his career cut so short! 😢 Still love watching highlights of his dominance when he was healthy! ❤

  • @kevinmach730
    @kevinmach730 Před 7 měsíci +90

    It wasn't just this hit, it was a bunch a hits and earlier concussions / near concussions that finally caught up with him. Everyone seems to forget too, he used to drop the gloves quite a bit too, I am sure that didn't help matters.

    • @okyouknowwhatever
      @okyouknowwhatever Před 4 měsíci +1

      Absolutely. The Scott Stevens hit gets dramatised by the mainstream because it's Scott Stevens (big bruising Canadian HHOF defenceman) but the more serious hit came way earlier courtesy of Darius Kasparaitis. When the Stevens hit happened, as you point out, Lindros had already suffered many concussions and other serious injuries and had already started to decline.

    • @argetect2847
      @argetect2847 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Are you watching the same video as us?

    • @From-North-Jersey
      @From-North-Jersey Před 2 měsíci

      @@argetect2847 Yes he is but he knows what the entire league was like back then, you only know modern icecapades lady bing style hockey.

    • @From-North-Jersey
      @From-North-Jersey Před 2 měsíci

      Exactly, lindross showed up as a rookie ready to tear the league a new one and the league took offense to the young punk acting like he was the end all be all of hockey players. Once they saw he couldn't puck handle without staring at his stick like a special needs child watching a Ferris Wheel the players sort of put lindross out of everyone's misery.
      Lindross was a very hateable person , he impregnated Rod Brindamours wife and when the locker room found out about it the flyers started hating lindross worse than the other teams did. In response the Flyers traded Brindamour to carolina and made Lindross the captain again at which point the flyers players stopped talking to lindross all together. They also stopped inviting him to off season social gatherings because they didn't want him near their wives.

  • @modernwarfaremaniac12
    @modernwarfaremaniac12 Před 8 měsíci +17

    Your videos are usually great but this one was top notch.

    • @jameiealehandro
      @jameiealehandro Před 8 měsíci +3

      this guys last 5 videos are absolutely remarkeable. the suspense he build is one of the greatest.

    • @benjaminmiller788
      @benjaminmiller788 Před 8 měsíci

      Almost all of his videos are enlightening and rarely "clickbait."

  • @dealy9268
    @dealy9268 Před 6 měsíci +3

    You failed to mention the concussion he got in his own locker room after it was found out that he slept with a teammate's wife.

  • @Derek70388
    @Derek70388 Před 7 měsíci +9

    This was a horrible situation from everyone start to finish. Eric’s parents babying him, Eric skating with his head down, the Flyers damn near getting him killed on the ice

    • @maxaffe3195
      @maxaffe3195 Před 4 měsíci +1

      babying him? what did they do?

    • @From-North-Jersey
      @From-North-Jersey Před 2 měsíci

      @@maxaffe3195 If you have heard of "Stage Moms" and how they destroy kids by pushing them into acting to support the family you basically have the Lindross clan but with hockey.

    • @powerbomb8485
      @powerbomb8485 Před 2 měsíci

      His mother told him not to play in QC after the owner joked to his colleagues in French about his mom… and by joked, I mean made a sexually explicit comment because he thought she didn’t know French… the guy was the Harvey Weinstein of hockey and everyone knew he was problematic

  • @SRQBID
    @SRQBID Před 8 měsíci +14

    Noticeable how important video review is to modern head contact player safety rulings. That Kasparaitas hit looks clean on the first angle, but in the second we see initial head contact. **back in this day, this was 100% clean, didn't matter where initial point of contact was

    • @johan1840
      @johan1840 Před 8 měsíci

      And the puck was lost behind him.

    • @devilsmetsfan6393
      @devilsmetsfan6393 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Look at the hit on Meier by Trouba in game 7 of rags vs Devils, it was a total head shot and no penalty was called on Trouba. It is total BS.

    • @ollibo
      @ollibo Před 8 měsíci

      Kasper's half height cant even imagine the head before his shoulder until other player are not complete imbecile

    • @RoyalMela
      @RoyalMela Před 8 měsíci +1

      Principal contact to the head is still clean, unless you clearly target the head or launch yourself.
      Otherwise players could just skate with their head down and get opponents ejected from every small contact.

    • @bluntx123
      @bluntx123 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@RoyalMela This is the thing I hate about the NHL these days. I never liked targeting a players head on purpose and always thought it should be a major penatly (ex. Domi's elbow) but if a player skates with their head down and is rocked by a clean shoulder hit to their head, its their own fault. The league has decided to reward players who make fundamentally bad decisions in order to prevent the possibility of a franchise player like Lindross, Crosby, etc. being put out of commission. Its a contact sport, people get hurt.

  • @amazingronaldo9656
    @amazingronaldo9656 Před 7 měsíci +22

    I remember watching that game. I thought he was done after that and he was, though I didn't think he would linger so long trying to play. He just had a bad habit of keeping his head down, and against a D like Stevens who loved to come laterally across his zone just inside the blue line, it was just a recipe for disaster!! Stevens was a devastating checker!! You didn't want to be head down with him prowling that blue line!

  • @hughjass1044
    @hughjass1044 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I was watching this game and saw the hit start to finish. In a way, I was almost expecting a hit like this because the guy just would not keep his head up.
    You're on the same ice as Scott Stevens, you're a threat to score and you let your guard down? It's only a matter of time. This was a Stevens specialty.

  • @8r0o8k
    @8r0o8k Před 7 měsíci +2

    Got to see 88 in his return from that concussion against the AVS and he got a standing O on our home ice! We appreciated him no matter the playoff role he would or wouldn't play. I took my mom to that game and she didn't know how cool it was to see one of his last appearances. Yes our Avalanche won the cup that season 2000 - 2001 and everyone couldn't stand Stevens at that point!

    • @jayhopkins6990
      @jayhopkins6990 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Who couldn't stand Scott Stevens? He was one of the best open ice hitters ever .Even if you're a big player like Lindros you don't go up the middle in a game this fast when someone who's one of the greatest open ice hitters ever. I don't care who you are.🇨🇦😊

    • @jetjan
      @jetjan Před 6 měsíci

      Lindros missed many games before that stevens hit with a concussion in nhl regular season game, than another concussion in practice, only to play 2 straight games in nhl & had his 3rd concussion in last 3 games of nhl-he could never be in game shape with all the games he missed & should have rested for next season-lindros never should have played in nhl cause he always skated with head down & in nhl very dangerous

    • @jetjan
      @jetjan Před 6 měsíci

      @@jayhopkins6990 Lindros missed many games before that stevens hit with a concussion in nhl regular season game, than another concussion in practice, only to play 2 straight games in nhl & had his 3rd concussion in last 3 games of nhl-he could never be in game shape with all the games he missed & should have rested for next season-lindros never should have played in nhl cause he always skated with head down & in nhl very dangerous

    • @EerieVonIII8574
      @EerieVonIII8574 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Everyone couldn’t stand Stevens?? Bwahaha…..right. Only whiny flyer fans.

    • @NJDEVILz86
      @NJDEVILz86 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Stevens was not just D even lead NJ in scoring 1 yr
      You may not know 88 got brindamours wife preg...many of his teammates didnt speak to him

  • @nuudelz3711
    @nuudelz3711 Před 7 měsíci +23

    I was nicknamed lindros in minor hockey. Had 9 concussions before I was 17, before any protocols and mouth guards were still questioned. He’s lucky he at least made a few million to sit on and deal with the side effects

    • @greglee1465
      @greglee1465 Před 4 měsíci +4

      My friend played shortstop and throwing errors in our town had his last name attached to them... Kids are mean..lol

    • @sylvainlariviere264
      @sylvainlariviere264 Před 2 měsíci

      Nicknamed lindros?
      Poor you 😔

  • @KS-xk2so
    @KS-xk2so Před 8 měsíci +4

    I feel like this video portrays Scott Stevens in a needlessly negative light. I'm not saying Stevens didn't throw headshots, because he did, everyone did..... but like for this hit... genuinely what else can he do? Lindros is entering the zone leading with his head, which is down. The only other option Stevens has is not hit him and let Lindros past to score.... its a playoff game, thats not happening. Lindros chose to play this game already hurt. Lindros put himself into this vulnerable position with his head down. None of that is on Scott Stevens. Including the part with Kariya makes it seem like Stevens was just a headhunting goon, when he was par for the course of the time, and a former Conn Smythe winner, who was a first ballot Hall of Famer.
    Also, Lindros' PPG was nowhere near that high. He's in the Top 20 I think, but barely. Personally, I'd have also included the VERY well known rumour of the time that Lindros' first concussion that year actually didn't come from any hit on ice, but from his teammate Rod Brind'Amour kicking his ass in the dressing room for sleeping with his wife lol but I get you wanna stick to the provable facts I suppose.

  • @Niklas-bk7nu
    @Niklas-bk7nu Před 7 měsíci

    Amazing mini doc. That 1.33ppg stat is insane… Dont be shy with cool numbers and stats like that!!!

    • @Niklas-bk7nu
      @Niklas-bk7nu Před 7 měsíci

      oh and really nice short video, got me sold on watching a video of someone Ive never heard of or really could think I care at first.😂

  • @chazmichaelmichaels88
    @chazmichaelmichaels88 Před 7 měsíci

    9 years of youth/adult ice hockey. Whenever I had concussions, I was jist told to stay awake a while longer. 29yrs old now, wife and three children. I have so many memories that are gone. I still dont remember things very well. Early 2000s was just a different time where head injury wasn't taken so seriously. I still love the sport, but I refuse to play full contact and if my children ever play, ill be keeping and extremely close eye on them. Sports are great, but everyone should avoid head injuries as much as they can. If not, you may forget your childhood, your first childs birth, you might eveh forget what you ate a few days ago.

  • @pellelindbergh4455
    @pellelindbergh4455 Před 8 měsíci +7

    what a great vid!! we see this story many times ,but your breakdown is amazing ,nobody have ever done this way.great job!why can't you work for the NHL network!!?

  • @darthandeddeu
    @darthandeddeu Před 8 měsíci +22

    Lindros played a very physical brand of offensive hockey at a time when the game was in flux from the rough and tumble game of the early 80s to the stickwork/speed of today.
    He wasn't afforded the whistle like Gretzky because of his size and physical play.

    • @chizorama
      @chizorama Před 8 měsíci

      He also didn't have anybody watching over him like a Semenko/McSorley that Gretzky had, he was his own enforcer, the Flyers did nothing to protect him.

    • @loilt5091
      @loilt5091 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Neither was Super Mario, yet he wasn’t the bully Lindros was, putting up numbers he could only dream of.

    • @oasisbeyond
      @oasisbeyond Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@loilt5091hmm Lindros was great for his era stop it.

    • @loilt5091
      @loilt5091 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@oasisbeyond
      Do some homework regarding his selfishness & drop your naive, juvenile bias 🍼
      He refused to go to his initial drafted team in both the OHL & NHL…establishing a selfish, punk reputation, negatively influencing others. Ironically, he could dish it out, but couldn’t take it.
      In the end, his numbers were never even close to the HYPE‼️

    • @Heytherebuds
      @Heytherebuds Před 8 měsíci +6

      ​@@oasisbeyondwell he has a point though. Lindros was no innocent lamb. He just became a victim more than the villain in the end. He played tough hockey and would crush guys too. But the Steven's hit is what made the reels and because it was Steven's, one of the hardest open ice hitters of that generation or ever, he immediately fell under the same category as Kariya. Just another Stevens victim. They couldn't be further apart in playstyle and physicality.

  • @Redrum9899
    @Redrum9899 Před 2 měsíci +2

    What I remember about the time was the Devil’s Trap. The neutral zone trap caused the Flyers problems. Back then we didn’t have a second and third line defensemen who could skate through the neutral zone. Our only defensemen who could skate through zone was Eric Desjardains . Hence this video. I remember listening to the local sports station (WIP). And I recall the radio personalities saying at thr time Eric would have to skate through the neutral zone because he was one of the only few players who could stick handle through the neutral zone. Well, the rest was history. If Eric would’ve had the same career as Mario or Jagr, he would’ve been one of the great ones. I also blames Flyers management for loading the second and third line players with “muckers and grinders” and not getting another defensemen who could skate through the zone.

  • @garylandriault5146
    @garylandriault5146 Před 7 měsíci +1

    That was a great moment, to see him go down. I couldn't stand him and I was waiting for someone to take him out for good

  • @supersoul4541
    @supersoul4541 Před 8 měsíci +5

    In the ohl, he was drafted by ssm but failed to report so was traded to Oshawa. He had talent but was a prima Donna

    • @billvill61
      @billvill61 Před 6 měsíci

      He had mommy and daddy running his career and feeding him BS advice.

  • @StevieY24
    @StevieY24 Před 7 měsíci +5

    What a great video. From what I read the Philly staff told him to get back to Philadelphia via plane when he sufferet the collapsed lung, which could lead to disaster. It is absolutely crazy how incompetent they were back then.

    • @jetjan
      @jetjan Před měsícem

      a medical doctor in Nashville said if he'd go on plane to Philadelphia he'd be dead-his own teammate said he's not going on a plane-he's seeing doctor now

  • @donmckay7742
    @donmckay7742 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Ended by a dirty hit maybe, but I remember my uncles really did not like Lindros cause he injured many players who were much smaller than him. Think they called it karma and big hitters started targeting him more for that. I was still fan of Lindros, I really wished he had a longer career, he was like an aggressive Lemiux.

  • @patmccrotch5373
    @patmccrotch5373 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank God he's still alive today, it's crazy to think people used to look at players that were prone to concussions as 'soft'

  • @greghernquist3694
    @greghernquist3694 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Maybe if you didn't sleep with your teammates wife (Rod Brind'Amor), the rest of the league wouldn't have targeted you...

    • @KS-xk2so
      @KS-xk2so Před 8 měsíci +3

      Yeah, I heard his first concussion wasn't from any hit on ice. It was from Rod kicking the shit out of him in the dressing room.

  • @mcdbq_
    @mcdbq_ Před 7 měsíci +20

    306 games missed is almost 4 seasons. Damn shame. Also, I hope he’s doing okay.

    • @NotoriousOne617
      @NotoriousOne617 Před 3 měsíci

      thats a bs number go look at his stat page ffs

    • @brvynky
      @brvynky Před 2 měsíci

      a quick search on wiki will show how well he's doing. His career was far from ruined.

  • @jbellflower83
    @jbellflower83 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I was watching the devils run that year and i remember that hit. That series in general was amazing. I didnt realize all the concussions he had prior (i knew he had been concussed prior but i didn't realize till watching this that he'd had that many). Seems like it was an accumulation thing and Stevens just put the nail in the coffin.

  • @chancell0r_djs4
    @chancell0r_djs4 Před 3 měsíci

    Great summation of one of my favourite players

  • @patersonplankrd
    @patersonplankrd Před 7 měsíci +10

    Lindros had always been the biggest kid through his development. He was able to skate with the puck freely. Defenders would see this huge kid skating at them and just get out of the way. That continued into his early NHL career. What Lindros never seemed to learn was that NHL guys don't get out of the way. In fact "keep your head up" was an unwritten rule . Lindros never was able to grasp that. Every so often, he'd pick up the puck and carry it into the neutral zone, cross the attacking blue line only to get nailed . He never learned. Then Scott Stevens came along. KNown as one of the NHL's most devastating checkers, he'd wait until a guy carried the puck laterally into the attack zone, and Stevens would just set himself , well balanced and let the puck carrier skate right into his chest The puck carrier's own momentum would knock him silly. Oh , there were plenty of times when Stevens would add his own forward momentum and trolley track the puck carrier. THIS...was one of those times.

    • @robertf3042
      @robertf3042 Před 7 měsíci +9

      You had to know where no. 4 was on the ice at all times and not play with your head down - you can hate stevens as much as you want but if he was on your team hoisting the cup all would be good.

    • @RVRV-mz8yw
      @RVRV-mz8yw Před 3 měsíci +1

      He had it coming due to all the dirty hits he put on smaller guys.

    • @From-North-Jersey
      @From-North-Jersey Před 2 měsíci

      @@RVRV-mz8yw The Flyers bench cheered the Stevens hit on Lindross because of the way Lindross impregnated his teammate Rod Brindamours wife. The City eventually turned on lindross when flyers management traded Brindamour to alleviate the tension in the locker room over the half lindross half cheating bitch brindamour baby.

    • @jasonalun
      @jasonalun Před 2 měsíci +2

      Scott Stevens was a mean S.O.B. and a dirty hitter.

    • @famousmortimer7933
      @famousmortimer7933 Před měsícem +1

      It was a stunning cheap-shot…only a turbo-dullard would have trouble grasping this.

  • @The_Punisher_969
    @The_Punisher_969 Před 8 měsíci +27

    Dude your videos have always been really good but the ones you made this off-season are off the charts man. You've really stepped it up and we absolutely love to see it 💯

  • @k-9mantrailing324
    @k-9mantrailing324 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Big time Flyers fan. I watched this game the day I got back from a vacation. I missed games 1-6 but was really pumped for game 7. I can still see this hit today. Loved Lindros as a player, but have to say the players the Flyers traded to Quebec- they might have been better off keeping the 5 of them.

  • @sh987
    @sh987 Před 8 měsíci +9

    What Lindros pulled on the Nordiques was the same thing he pulled with the Sault St. Marie Greyhounds when he was drafted by the OHL.

    • @billsouza4457
      @billsouza4457 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Yeah I blame his father most of all.

    • @MrTedMcForehead
      @MrTedMcForehead Před 8 měsíci

      it was his mother actually.@@billsouza4457

    • @thepcguy007
      @thepcguy007 Před 7 měsíci

      @@billsouza4457 if I remember correctly, wasn't it actually his mom?

    • @GOFLuvr
      @GOFLuvr Před měsícem

      Lindros certainly did the Nords a favor. The Nords got the core of the Philly franchise, and Philly got a player good enough for a single Hart Trophy season.

  • @DB-gr7ch
    @DB-gr7ch Před 8 měsíci +5

    Lindros made NO friends among active NHL players with his months long, draft prima donna stunt.
    So as a big, physical player, he entered the league with a huge self-engraved target on his back.
    He played with fire, and got burned.

    • @dubiousdistinction6500
      @dubiousdistinction6500 Před 8 měsíci

      how exactly do u know he made NO friends?

    • @DB-gr7ch
      @DB-gr7ch Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@dubiousdistinction6500 Just like I know we won't be friends.

    • @dubiousdistinction6500
      @dubiousdistinction6500 Před 8 měsíci

      @@DB-gr7ch jeezus einstein, thats it? thats all u got? keep talking your shiite..lmao

    • @dewaynemisterek4682
      @dewaynemisterek4682 Před 7 měsíci +1

      He certainly didn't make freinds with Rod Brindamour!

  • @rootchino
    @rootchino Před 4 měsíci +2

    Thank you for this video, growing up in Detroit I was a massive Wings fan but Lindros was my favorite player by far, you couldn't help but see how much excitement he brought to the NHL. I remember being in 7th grade and so torn when Wings and Flyers went to the final. I never realized all he went through as a kid it was difficult to follow the news let alone for a player from another city, this just breaks my heart to hear how much neglect he experienced on so many levels. So many ppl really failed him, I wish I had a time machine.

  • @mikewnek11
    @mikewnek11 Před 8 měsíci +51

    Lindros expected to hit opponents with his 6’4” 240 frame and not get hit back. He dished out plenty of concussions to others. His problem was that he skated with his head down. And yes his injuries were completely and conclusively mismanaged

    • @alexandrelavallee5627
      @alexandrelavallee5627 Před 7 měsíci +6

      He asked for it

    • @SpartacusColo
      @SpartacusColo Před 7 měsíci +4

      With his size, he was pretty much always the biggest dude on the ice: until he hit the pros. By then, habits can be hard to break.

    • @mikebarnett7976
      @mikebarnett7976 Před 7 měsíci +5

      ​@@alexandrelavallee5627nobody asks for career ending injuries. He never hit anyone to end there career. Stevens aimed for guys heads on the regular because that was his style. And in that era it was accepted as a normal hit. The only time Lindros hit anyone semi dirty is when they hit a teammate of his in a vulnerable position. There were also a few plays where his emotions got the best of him. But 95 percent of the hits Lindros gave was to the players core. Not there knees, not there neck and not there head. But he always defended his teammates. This is coming from a Rangers fan. So my opinion isn't some biased Flyer fan. When he played for the Rangers he was no longer that player. Due to the Flyers mismanagement of his concussions. Messier said even when he hit guys then. Lindros had the concussion side affects.

    • @augustushaynes1311
      @augustushaynes1311 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Yep he was fundamentally unsound.

    • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
      @Skank_and_Gutterboy Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@augustushaynes1311
      I just think it's weird how the media always talked him up so much and acted like he was some kind of superstar. His stats sucked, he'd only been to the post-season a handful of times, he was a cancer in the locker room, in his one appearance in the Stanley Cup Finals, he got one goal, one assist, his +/- was -5, and they got swept. This guy is the George Costanza of hockey, his entire career was a lie.

  • @dinglbarry1275
    @dinglbarry1275 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I've never followed hockey, but I've always appreciated what it takes to play that game at a high level. Hockey's brutal

  • @winstonfitzgerald-ns5ms
    @winstonfitzgerald-ns5ms Před 7 měsíci

    correction:
    he wasn t just traded to Philly, he was traded to both New York and Philadelphia. Then came the arbitration hearings and then the finalization trade to the Flyers.
    Jason Wiemer ---------> Weemer

  • @superred5
    @superred5 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I remember watching that game. Stevens was such a tough hitter, but MAN that shot... I was watching with friends of mine and we all thought they were going to have airlift Lindros out of there.

    • @redbaron8130
      @redbaron8130 Před 5 měsíci

      Stevens was a goon. It's amazing that the guy who created this video is blaming Lindros for his own concussions. The problem was people like Stevens were ending careers and happy with it, fucking giddy to be hospitalizing guys, and they were even celebrated for it. Fuck Stevens for all the guys he destroyed, it's not anything to admire.

  • @TheWingus
    @TheWingus Před 8 měsíci +22

    Now do one on Pronger's freak career injury that ushered in a revolving door of horrible trades, signings and draft picks that have ultimately put us out of contention for a decade and still ongoing.

    • @operatingengineer520
      @operatingengineer520 Před 8 měsíci

      Who’s us?

    • @TheMrTwizter
      @TheMrTwizter Před 8 měsíci +8

      ​@operatingengineer520 I'm pretty sure he's talking about the Flyers. I watched the game Pronger had his accident, and that's really what sparked the flyers trying to replace him with a myriad of bad ideas.
      Still paying for it

    • @leafsfanforever2896
      @leafsfanforever2896 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Pronger had concussion problems throughout the 2000s and 2010s, but special mention goes to an eye injury against Mikhail Grabovski’s Toronto Maple Leafs, before being done in by Martin Hanzal and the Phoenix Coyotes later on

    • @TheWingus
      @TheWingus Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@leafsfanforever2896 Yes, the eye injury during his Flyers tenure is what I'm referring to which was ultimately the end of his career, and was horrifying to watch. That scream he lets out just deafens the arena and still haunts me tot his day.
      After which there was a mad dash of spare parts replacements such as Hal Gill, Niklas Grossmann, Evgeni Medvedev, Mark Streit, Michael Del Zotto, Andrew MacDonald, Steve Mason, Dale Weise, Val Filppula, Vinny LeCavallier, Jori Lehtera, Petr Mrazek etc.
      Draft picks and bad gambles during the Holmgren/Hextall eras that never panned out most notably Sam Morin, also Mark Alt, Jay O'Brien, Isaac Ratcliffe, Mark Friedman, German Rubstov, Mikaehl Vorobyev, Phil Meyers. Complete with the blowing up of the team after a Stanley cup final run for draft capital and prospects leading to the absolute squandering of the prime years of Claude Giroux, Jake Voracek, Scott Laughton, Wayne Simmonds and Sean Couturier.

    • @shortchord
      @shortchord Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@TheWingusI was at that Pronger game, and you're right -- that scream was awful.
      I was at the Lindros game too. What the videos of that hit never show is the way his stick flew up in the air, end over end, almost as if it were in slow motion, and ultimately landed at the Flyers' blue line.

  • @TheJpyne518
    @TheJpyne518 Před 8 měsíci +6

    as a flyers fan, this one hurts. ironcially, my dad was asked by a buddy to go to this game but he didnt because it was my 6th birthday party and my mom would have never let him lived it down if he wasnt there lol.

  • @TechTokOffical
    @TechTokOffical Před 2 měsíci

    Lindros will ALWAYS be remembered as a great by may even the greatest generation of fans. The generation who followed him,who grew up watching him literally saved the league. Had the early 2000's not put out the talent, story lines and possibly the best hockey anyone could ask for

  • @fightingidiocy7724
    @fightingidiocy7724 Před 7 měsíci

    I owned a hockey memorabilia store for 5 years (Slapshot Hockey Cards), and have a binder of nearly 700 of Eric's cards, SLUs, sweaters, everything. I bought three binders for ENTIRE career, but only filled up the first.
    I don't care what people say about his dad, he was amazing talent who didn't deserve what happened to him.

  • @gramps5157
    @gramps5157 Před 8 měsíci +28

    Lindros missed ten weeks due to a series of concussions prior to his return for the Devils game where Stevens nailed him. It all started with Darius Kasparaitis blasting Lindros and giving him a concussion. Once he got that one it was the beginning of the end. Once the brain gets rocked the concussions come easier and easier.

    • @dannymundycomedy
      @dannymundycomedy Před 7 měsíci +5

      I remember that. Kasper LAID him out. Lindros didn't know what arena he was in,and from a guy literally half his size. Lindros was never the same after that.

    • @kevinmach730
      @kevinmach730 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Yep, even before clicking on it, I knew it was going to be some younger person telling me this was the hit when it wasn't- there was a long trail leading to this, sadly. But it started long before this one.

    • @bennymac1731
      @bennymac1731 Před 7 měsíci

      @@kevinmach730 this video explains exactly what you're talking about dumb dumb

    • @ZanttuXD
      @ZanttuXD Před 7 měsíci +1

      did you guys watch the video or comment only based on the title?

    • @dannymundycomedy
      @dannymundycomedy Před 7 měsíci

      @@ZanttuXD I commented on the comment.

  • @mikeyg6631
    @mikeyg6631 Před 8 měsíci +9

    True soldier that guy. I've had multiple concussions in my life. When you have one it feels like your under water and things don't feel or seem real. Eric got destroyed while playing and to come back after a few days is truly amazing. I also met his brother Brett when I worked for a paint store.

    • @kevinmach730
      @kevinmach730 Před 7 měsíci

      Great description of what it feel like. It's almost like watching a movie, you're just in a fog.

  • @mashmarttv
    @mashmarttv Před 3 měsíci +1

    collapse lung and concussions ouch the hit was hard but the head back knocking out the ice was herder ! what a great player still had a long carrer playing with dallas and new york rangers ..imagine him with the nordiques..all love to forsberg anyway another legend..fair trade

  • @MrMarioLemieux
    @MrMarioLemieux Před 7 měsíci +1

    Even as a Pens fan this makes me appreciate Ovechkin's durability

  • @benvad9010
    @benvad9010 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Listen Eric’s biggest problem after the “Bonnie factor” was his inability to lift his head up while handling the puck and skating forward.

  • @nowhearthis365
    @nowhearthis365 Před 8 měsíci +7

    The 1996 NHL Eastern Conference Quarter-Finals was the start of teams pushing back on Lindros. Game 1, he was a brutal physical force. Game 2, Igor Ulanov was tasked by the Lightning to take it to Lindros every shift... and there was two hip checks that sent Lindros somersaulting through the air.
    After that game, Lindros cried to the league about protecting its superstars. At that point, every team knew that Lindos would bring violent physical hits and so they targeted him with the same. It's been some time, but that's my memory of Lindros.

    • @DestinyYagami
      @DestinyYagami Před 7 měsíci

      if lindro didnt so called ( Cried ) i wonder if the nhl would be the way it is now

  • @victorracioppi9821
    @victorracioppi9821 Před 7 měsíci +1

    “almost impossible to slow this man down…” till he ran into scott stevens shoulder

  • @RagnarBlox
    @RagnarBlox Před 7 měsíci +1

    If Lindros came into today's league, where you cannot hit like Stevens used to, or touch a guy without a penalty being called he would dominate!

    • @Frank-wg1uk
      @Frank-wg1uk Před měsícem

      And what would Forsberg be then u think 😅

  • @phillylifer
    @phillylifer Před 8 měsíci +4

    Lindros was also sabotaged in the press by the Flyers that year. It was hard to pull again for more than a few seasons after that

  • @macanoodough
    @macanoodough Před 7 měsíci +4

    I was alive, and a hockey fan, and I followed Eric back in the day. We knew enough about concussions to know he kept coming back too early. His docs told him to take 2 years off after his first diagnosis or he would become concussion prone, and suffer worse health issues. I don't remember what year, but it was early on. And his dad was taking him to doctors on the side but it seemed like he was trying to get Eric back on the ice despite his own private doctor's warnings. Each time he got hurt everyone saw it coming, so when the Ranger's signed him fans were furious. And like Messier is quoted, as a Ranger he would get shook up from simple shots he dealt, nevermind the shots he took. It's unfortunate what happened to Eric, but at least his story is taken seriously today so current players can have a safer journey.

  • @katinkaenglish6895
    @katinkaenglish6895 Před dnem +1

    Regrettably Lindros never learned to keep his head up. However, the head hunting that went on during that period of hockey was disgusting to say the least. I still remember the head shot that Paul Kariya suffered from and it was from Scott Stevens as well. Thankfully the league has evolved.

  • @frankez1975
    @frankez1975 Před 28 dny

    Great video! Subbed 🎉

  • @RG-si6dy
    @RG-si6dy Před 8 měsíci +9

    Video starts at 5:35 if you want to get past the 5 page essay about Eric's entire career before the hit.

  • @robertursiny6828
    @robertursiny6828 Před 7 měsíci +16

    I always thought Lindros played and skated like he did because of his size, speed and weight. I think it was a miracle he did not get hurt sooner. Sad story for sure and not my type of hockey, but it happens and it probably will keep happening.

  • @metunz21
    @metunz21 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I like the fact he refused to play for Quebec, then a year or two later Quebec moved to Colorado and Patrick Roy was traded to them..the rest is history as the Avs won the cup that same year. I always wonder what Lindros thought about missing out on all that.

    • @alwillk
      @alwillk Před 5 měsíci +1

      The Avs never would have won withou the haul players they got in the lindros trade.