Earlier today up here in Canada a young hockey player passed away after sustaining a severe head injury during an on-ice fight in a men's senior hockey game three weeks ago. See link for more info:http://www.tsn.ca/canadian_hockey/story/?id=261626&lid=headline&lpos=topStory_mainhttp://www.thestar.com/sports/article/560798My questions are as follows: what role, if any, should fighting have in hockey? Is it a necessary part of the game?Now this was not an NHL player biting the dust so it probably won't get major media play down in the States, however I can tell you the media up here in Canada is going crazy over this, and will continue to do so for some time.As you might expect, the anti-fighting crowd is up in arms and is going to attempt to use this tragedy as a way to advance their cause and push for the complete banning of fighting in hockey.While I personally don't think that this will change all that much in the NHL, besides a rule possibly being brought in preventing the voluntary removal of helmets during fights, the question remains: does fighting have a place in the game of hockey? I'd be curious to hear some views of hockey fans on this board.
1/2/2009 2:56:35 PM
i'd like to see the royal rumble on the ice that is usually reserved for comedy movies
1/2/2009 2:58:37 PM
fighting is part of the game...as long as there continues to be people taking runs at superstars, there will be fighting
1/2/2009 3:01:11 PM
Fights in hockey are like crashes in NASCARIf they didn't happen, they'd lose half their fanbaseThis will be brushed under the rug lickity split
1/2/2009 3:01:42 PM
pretty sure boxing and mma are still around after fighters have died.
1/2/2009 3:05:15 PM
^^^see I tend to believe the same thing. However, you see the Olympics take place and there is not one single fight in the whole tournament while the best hockey you could ever hope to see is played. Right now, the World Junior Hockey tourney is going on -- again, not a single fight has taken place in the tourney and the hockey is outstanding.If the refs called the slashing and all the other nonsense that goes on and there were heavy suspensions/fines for taking runs at superstars then perhaps fighting becomes obsolete.I always believed hockey was a game of controlled violence, thus the occasional fight was bound to happen as a result of things getting out of control. But then again, there's rugby, football, and other contact sports where fighting doesn't really play a part in the game to the extent it does in hockey.[Edited on January 2, 2009 at 3:09 PM. Reason : ..]
1/2/2009 3:09:07 PM
they didn't ban skates after that dude's throat got sliced, so why ban fighting
1/2/2009 3:10:01 PM
while there is little all out fighting in rugby, there is a lot of illegal contact and revenge hits
1/2/2009 3:11:19 PM
^^you know that is a valid point to be made. Fighting is a "risky" part of the sport. You do it and you could get hurt, like laying down to block a shot or simply trying to legally check someone into the boards. Accidents happen, so where do you draw the line?[Edited on January 2, 2009 at 3:12 PM. Reason : ..]
1/2/2009 3:12:18 PM
I once went to a fight and a hockey game broke out.Rodney Dangerfield
1/2/2009 3:14:58 PM
1/2/2009 3:15:46 PM
^^^I take the same view as in baseball...in game regulation. You hit one of our guys, we're gonna get one of yours....within reason of course (no intentional head throwing, just like no hockey cheap shots like the one that paralyzed that guy). Imo that keeps players honest much more than fines, suspensions ect...every hockey team has an enforcer to protect thier star players.[Edited on January 2, 2009 at 3:19 PM. Reason : ^ditto]
1/2/2009 3:18:51 PM
1/2/2009 5:14:16 PM
1/2/2009 5:47:56 PM
Although it is despicable- no other major sport allows, much less condones fighting (unless you count boxing/ufc where the opponents probably sign something consenting to not take legal action if they are killed/injured), the NHL is having a hard enough time staying afloat economically. It would be very difficult to take away a long-time tradition and something that attracts viewers/fans, and it would be hard to enforce such a rule. At the same time I don't think a ban on fighting would hurt the NHL as much as many would think- I can't really remember watching or hearing about a lot of fights in the playoffs/finals and those are the most watched games of the year. Fighting is risky, however it is not a part of the sport- it is a sideshow that entertains drunken fans of brutality.[Edited on January 2, 2009 at 9:07 PM. Reason : You draw the line when play stops and people are punching each other as opposed to legal checking.]
1/2/2009 9:03:43 PM
1/2/2009 9:18:01 PM
1/2/2009 9:42:59 PM
I have always been a big fan of fighting. Self policing a lot of times is necessary. In baseball if you throw a pitch at another team's star player, your star player will get the same treatment the next inning. I think this self-policing is necessary. It's basically an immediate payment for your dirty play. Tonight Ray Whitney was crosschecked from behind and Scott Walker immediately wanted to fight the Blues player. It's a way of sticking up for your player without cheap shots (which to me beaning players in baseball is).I think that if fighting was eliminated, there would be more dirty shots as the suspensions/fines for taking a run at a guy are laughable. When the Hurricanes won the Stanley Cup, they lost Erik Cole back in January to a broken neck and Brooks Orpik got 3 games for doing it. The only way to eliminate it would be to make it so the player must sit out until the player they injured came back (which will probably never happen). I don't see the problem in sticking up for a teammate that was cheap shotted (or even a clean hit and knocking them out) and going after the person who did it, but then again I've played hockey since I was 5 and have always felt things like this were a part of the game.
1/2/2009 10:05:09 PM
You guys do you realize that the Instigator Rule has already significantly decreased the amount of fighting in the NHL, thanks Gary Bettman(rot in hell asshole).
1/2/2009 10:13:43 PM
< -- moron[Edited on January 2, 2009 at 11:49 PM. Reason : ]
1/2/2009 11:48:20 PM
Well the risk of a 5 minute major and game misconduct didn't seem to stop Strachan from his hit on Whitney tonight...fighting isn't going anywhere.
1/2/2009 11:52:17 PM
It's always been a part of the game. The fans love fighting. The players don't mind. The coaches like the fights. What's the big deal?Anybody who says they don't like fighting in the NHL has to be out of their mind.
1/3/2009 12:01:19 AM
If you don't get it, I can't explain it to you. It's horrible that a kid died, but he's playing in a goon league. This will only get a seriously look from the NHL, AHL, and CHL when someone in a major hockey league dies in a similar incident, and even then fighting will remain.I've tried to explain fighting to many people, and I've come to the following conclusion: if you've watched 25+ games of hockey (meaning you've likely seen at least one incident of severe boarding or headhunting) and you still don't understand fighting, I can't explain it in a way that will make you understand.
1/3/2009 12:35:41 AM
Fighting is allowed so that skinny little guys who are fast on the ice can play. What other contact sport has players who can't take a hit so they must have goons baby sit them? They need to outlaw fighting and let the puny little punks that they call superstars get hit. I still wouldn't watch it but I'd have much more respect for the game.^
1/3/2009 8:38:46 AM
1. There are no walls in football. Never underestimate the difference between being hit in open space and being hit into an immovable object.2. The size difference between a DB and a WR is nowhere near the size difference between someone like Whitney and Strachan.3. There's also the matter of protecting goaltenders, who are completely vunerable during the play, since they must think of the puck before themselves, wear no protection at all on the backs of their bodies, and wear helmets that do very little to protect from the large, blunt impact of a fist or body. Like I said...if you don't understand after watching the way the system works, I can't describe it in a way that will make you understand. ]
1/3/2009 9:11:02 AM
There are walls in Arena football.Also, there's often a pretty major size difference when you've got wide receivers running crossing routes over the middle, where the linebackers are. This is where some of the biggest hits in football take place, but still no fighting.
1/3/2009 9:26:13 AM
i bet that kid that died wouldnt want to be remembered as the guy that ended all fighting in hockey
1/3/2009 9:34:51 AM
There are padded walls in arena football, and they're not at head height.Don't even get me started on the seamless glass they used to have in NHL arenas.
1/3/2009 10:05:25 AM
Did you just fucking bring arena football into the argument?Hockey has Canadians with blades on their fucking feet, swinging 6 foot long sticks on an icy sheet of concrete surrounded by walls and glass. HOW IS THAT LIKE FOOTBALL?Dirty plays will always happen in hockey... as well as cheap shots. Fighting allows the goons to resolve their issues with their fists... If it weren't for fighting, you'd have more McSorley and Bertuzzi incidents.
1/3/2009 10:18:02 AM
I would like to see an actual hockey fan argue against fights as opposed to just some clown who doesn't like hockey in general complaining against it.Fights, like 5-on-3s and breakaways, are momentum shifters in a game. It's already been properly articulated that once you understand the game you see how fights fit in and that it generally isn't just some guy versus some other guy. There are roleplayers on teams who go out and stick up for your better and/or smaller players. Hockey is a physically demanding sport as it is without contact. If you don't believe that then get off of your ass and lace up some skates. Once you combine the potential for getting plowed over you see that it is important to the longevity of the season not to arbitrarily injure players on the other team.
1/3/2009 11:28:43 AM
1/3/2009 11:33:47 AM
1/3/2009 11:34:23 AM
1/3/2009 11:45:58 AM
1/3/2009 12:07:02 PM
I've played hockey, football and lacrosse. I can easily say that getting hit into the boards in hockey is far more painful than either of the sports when getting hit out in the open. These big hits you talk about in football are not occuring every couple of minutes (and some times every couple of seconds). For the idiot who brought up Arena Football, the claim with walls has already been debunked. Strap on some skates and go play in a dirty league and you'll wish you could fight due to the stupid things people do. Besides why would anyone want to fight in football, between the hard helmet and cage to the ridiculous pads, there is no point as for a real fight you'd have to take that off as a real fight like in hockey would result in broken hands. Look at most hockey pads and compare them to football, if you honestly think football players are tougher overall than hockey players you are simply ridiculous and have never watched playoff hockey.And as was quoted earlier:
1/3/2009 12:15:52 PM
1/3/2009 1:48:38 PM
You're right, dude.The slightest hit in hockey instigates a fight.
1/3/2009 1:55:22 PM
1/3/2009 3:18:35 PM
for the record = sarcasm
1/3/2009 3:20:06 PM
lol
1/3/2009 4:03:23 PM
It's okay, Stein is just angry because he owes me two beers so far this season. But then again I still owe him like 8 from last year. [Edited on January 3, 2009 at 4:39 PM. Reason : .]
1/3/2009 4:38:55 PM
In NHL fight news, Wade Redden just dropped this Clark kid on the Capitals.
1/3/2009 8:07:26 PM
what a dumb thread. you must not know anything about hockey.
1/4/2009 2:33:37 PM
1/4/2009 2:51:39 PM
if you think about it, hockey is the perfect white person sport
1/4/2009 2:58:01 PM
Semins.... "fight"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDRCpN4OMpM
1/4/2009 3:08:05 PM
A must read for this thread http://sportsnet.ca/hockey/blogs/2009/01/05/laraque_last_word/
1/6/2009 12:24:33 PM
1/6/2009 12:24:54 PM
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1/6/2009 12:40:53 PM