No hitting without the puck, that’s interference, no checks to the head, it used to be legal if you used your shoulder, but they’ve changed to it protect health. No jumping into checks, that’s charging. No elbows or knees.
You are correct about not being allowed to check to the head. Only thing I'd add is that you can check to the head if that is the only point of contact (if they're looking down and their head is forward)
Just want to add, no hitting from behind either if it wasn't obvious to some people. Hits from the side are usually at the discretion of the ref. They will decide if the player being hit was defenseless or not.
Blokes, I think you'd like a video that explains the hockey "code", which is the unwritten rules surrounding how the players unofficially police the game themselves. That includes the expectation that you stand up for your teammates no matter who you are. Also, Daz you're right about helmets. They grandfathered them in and there was even one guy not wearing a helmet into the 90s!
I remember, back in 1995, a Boston University hockey player by the name of; Travis Roy was in his very first game. He took to the ice, and 11 seconds later, was checked by an opponent and he went head first into the boards. He shattered the vertebrae in his neck, and sadly became a quadriplegic. He went on to start his own foundation for spinal cord injury research, and raised millions to help find better treatments, assist people with bills, wheelchairs, and accessible housing. Unfortunately, he ultimately passed away. May he RIP. 😢
Stories like this are both inspiring and sad, someone getting so unlucky and having their life altered forever just hits different. I played hockey and only ever suffered minor injuries that fully healed. I also did parkour & climbing when I was younger and sure, I lost half of a finger, but I'm still pretty ok. For some folks though... Great man for making something positive out of it and helping others in need!
Helmets weren't made mandatory until 1979/80, and even then there remained a "grandfather clause" where a player who hadn't worn a helmet up until that point could continue to play without one, but all incoming players HAD to wear one. The last helmetless player, Craig MacTavish, didn't retire until 1997!
The elbow lift is basically part of the "shoulder shiv" where they follow through with the hit and shove off a player during the hit. Also when the game is practically decided in the final minutes, it's considered "cheap" to start throwing bodies at players unless there's some bad blood. Players generally take exception to excessive checks during that time. Love seeing hockey back on this channel. My fav sport.
One of the first things my hockey coach taught me when I was little was to keep your head on a swivel, meaning, don't get caught looking down at the puck. Keep your eyes up so you can see that you're about to get blasted.
U guys have to check out the video How one violent hit snowballed into years of championship hockey between the Detroit Red Wings and Colorado Avalanche, one of the biggest rivalries in the nhl back in the 90's early 2000s
1979 or 80 was the first year new players had to wear helmets. anyone already in the league were never required to wear one. Craig MacTavish was the last player to play without a helmet in the NHL. He retired after the 96-97 season.
@@johnzubil2875 Sure you can get to full speed on foot within a few steps. But on ice/skates there's less friction. You build momentum and inertia. Did you never take a physics class in high school? You can get like 10mph more on skates.
3:26 yes sir it is! ☺️ Dave is right because of the speed they are making contact , the hits are harder. And they might not look it on the ice but in person most of these guys are beasts! Lol
I think it’s about time for an NHL video about skills rather than physicality. I don’t think you Blokes have done one out of all your videos so it’d be nice to see one that showcases what truly makes the game great.
Playing hockey for decades, and I’ll say first hand that open ice hits feel like car crashes. I’d much rather a shoulder into the boards. However, not everyone plays by the rules and I have been hit square in the back multiple times into the boards. It is not a pleasant experience and I’m lucky I still have all my teeth! #1 rule is keep your head up!
You're right Daz, players regularly played without helmets until the early/mid 80's in the NHL. I took my visor off at the first opportunity, aged 18 at Senior level in the UK. It cost me around 30 stitches from 3 sticks to the face which you have probably seen (under my chin, between my upper lip and nose and through my left eyebrow), plus I lost two teeth from a shot puck that deflected off my stick into my mouth. I remember feeling like I had chewed a couple of tic tacs. I skated to the boards, spat them out and lined up for the face off. It was Saturday night and no dentist was open until Monday so you just crack on. It was a badge of honour. I always felt that playing without a visor had a phycological impact on some opponents, especially around 2008 when every player born after 75 in the UK had to wear a at least a half visor. I was born in 74, the year before the rule change and at 34, was one of a handful of players still playing without a visor in the league that year. Check out Dan Cleary (Detroit Red Wings) in the TV series 'Road to the Winter Classic'. He loses 10 teeth, gets stitched up and gets back on the ice in 'time honoured fashion'. Watch the full 2 minutes. ua-cam.com/video/K_rY3AGvpoA/v-deo.html
scott stevens from the devils didnt fuck around when it came to open ice hitting. if you cut inside to the middle of the ice, you were in the danger zone.
8:45 The change to helmets started in the 1970s. If a player started his career not having to wear one, he could continue to not wear one, but for rookies it was mandator, so there were a lot of helmetless players left around in the 1980s. Hell, at one time the goalies didn't wear masks. None of them, which is insane! I think goal masks started circa the 1950s. .o
Ok, time for some NHL skill videos. Watch a video on Bobby Orr, or Wayne Gretzky, and players, who changed the game. Then there’s Goalies like Patrick Roy, Tim Thomas, or Martin Brodeur… I am a lifelong NHL fan. There’s a lot more to the game than just the brutality. There’s a hell of a lot of skill, beauty, and finesse.
at lot of these hits are awesome but if the clips all played out a little longer the replays are even more crazy and worth watching for sure. Not sure why they got cut out of the video you guys watched but still good. Love the content, thanks blokes.
“Holy Mackinaw” is a catch phrase by Toronto Maple Leafs Play-by-play announcer Joe Bowen. “Phaneuf” is defence man Dion Phaneuf. Always happy to translate hockey-speak for you blokes.
A basic summary of the rules for hitting in hockey: - Don't go after someone away from the play. If they have the puck or just got rid of it, they're fair game. - Don't hit from behind, especially around the boards. - Don't hit above the shoulders or below the knees. - Don't use your stick as a weapon or to impede the other player. - Don't lead with the elbow - shoulder or hip first. - Don't accelerate into a hit more than necessary - generally, if you jump into the hit, you're going to get a penalty for charging. - Don't mess with the goalie unless you want the entire opposing team to beat the crap out of you. Daz is right that requiring helmets is relatively recent (1979) - and any players who started playing in the NHL before that time were allowed to continue playing without helmets if they wanted to. The last one played as recently as 1997.
In hockey, there is something called a "suicide pass". It's usually a defenceman passing the puck up-ice to the forwards. Except it's a slow moving pass, and is coming from behind. The forward has to track the puck, instead of keeping his head up to look for opposing players closing in for a hit.
1979 BOTTOM LINE: Helmets in hockey became more prevalent in the 1970s, and their usage was made mandatory in the NHL in 1979. The requirement was prompted by a series of serious head injuries and high-profile incidents, ultimately leading to a safer playing environment for players.
I love hockey by far my favourite sport to play. Love throwing my body around. Plus it’s the only sport you can throw some hands beside MMA and boxing.
1) There was reportedly a discussion in the NHL this season about the perception that more players are "unnecessarily" starting fights after a teammate was hit hard but legally. The referees can issue a penalty for instigating a fight, but they rarely do. 2) The NHL actually prohibits full facial shields and cages unless a player is already injured. I'd love to hear the NHL try to make a sane argument for keeping this rule. Imagine visiting a construction site, and instead of being told you must wear a hard hat, they said you could not have one until you were hit in the head once.
I like you guys a lot, I've watched a ton of your stuff. I love how you watch NFL videos. I am a big time hockey fan. My team did not make the playoffs, so I have not been happy to watch what is going on currently. I hope you can get into hockey. That and NFL football are my favorite sports to watch.
I would love to see you guys react to the career highlights of Dominik Hasek - he was arguably the greatest goaltender ever, and extremely unorthodox style that was jaw-dropping. Love the page
Hockey athletes are by far the toughest. The way I always say it is a hockey player can pretty much play any other sport not professionally, but they can pick it up and do it. You can’t take a player from any other sport put a pair of skates on them and send them out to play a pick up game, it would never happen they couldn’t do it. The speed and the physicality is unmatched not to mention it’s the only sport where on a consistent basis I watch players get cut open, stitched up and get right back out on the ice, fearless.
Holy Mackinaw Is a Joe Bowen trade mark call he use to do the Toronto Maple Leaf games on tv but he now is the radio guy. He uses that call on big hits.
One thing is for sure, you & the local fan blokes don’t want to get in a tangle with a visiting hockey club when they are at the pub after a game. Buy them a cold one instead. Win or lose. They don’t mind serving up knuckle sandwiches and spitting chicklets.
There was one player so feared that no one ever hit him. His last name was Satan. When he retired he said his one regret was that he never got to play for the Devils.
Even the goalies never used to wear helmets... Coined the phrase/s "All goalie have a screw loose in their head to play that position". / "All goalies are crazy/mental" or "They are a different breed of player".
1977 was when they implemented the helmet rule. But if you were in the league prior to that, you could still go without. PS, if a hockey player stays down, he's really hurt.
Illegal hits: from behind, elbows, at the knees, boarding, charging The code exists because player solidarity doesn't extend to other players even though they're all in the same union. The team owners, Gary Bettman and the TV broadcasters like it this way. Not all hockey is and has to be played this way.
The last guy to not wear a helmet in hockey was the mid 90's. He was a defencemen for the Flyers and he must have been in his mid to late 40s at the time. Cant remember the name. Hockey is all about eye for an eye and fulfilling debts. If you level one of the players with a good hit, it doesn't just get accepted as "ah well...good hit". You'll get payback in the game, later in the season or the following season. Hockey players have ridiculous memories for these type of things...they remember things from Youth Minor Hockey. Look up Darrian Hatcher on Jeremy Roenik or Todd Bertuzzi getting revenge on Steve Moore or Marty McSorely on Donald Brashear for extreme examples.
They didn’t mandate helmets until the 80’s, but you were grandfathered in if you didn’t want to wear one. Last player without a helmet retired in the 90s.
The mtl winnipeg one is so dirty. Hit him after the goal was scored, while he was vulnerable. Thats a big part of it. Who did you hit and how vulnerable were they.
I don't know if UA-cam would allow it but the worst hockey accident I've ever seen was a guy's skate come up and hit the juggler of the goalkeeper I believe... So much blood so fast
Oski we we, oski wa wa holy Mackinaw tiger cats eat em raw is a CFL football chant in Hamilton Ontario Canada Mackinaw is a shortened Ojibwe Tribe (indigenous) word for The Great Turtle, we call North America Turtle Island in indigenous culture. Stay blessed 👊🏼
There are rules to hitting. You are right about the one where you can't hit a guy not playing the puck. Also you can't "launch" or leave your skates to hit someone. If a guy is facing the boards you can't run him from behind into the boards. Then there are the high hits and leading with your stick etc....
The last player to not wear a helmet was Craig Mactavish who was the last player from the era where they weren't mandatory to retire. He played on the 1994 Rangers Stanley Cup champs. These are almost all legal hits. Some borderline... but its a shame because you see them almost never anymore because they have made it highly punishable to make anyone's head a first point of contact. On these big hits it's almost impossible to avoid because you're hitting a lot of these guys doing what they were never taught to do: look at the puck with your head down. For what its worth hockey players are incredibly underrated as athletes and are probably the best in the world in many ways. They have to have the strength, the fitness, the toughness, the mental sharpness and focus while being the best skaters in the world and having a special level of hand eye coordination. They can skate backwards better than most people walk forwards. The game is so intense that when someone stays on the ice for more than a minute they are completely gassed. And goalies can lose 10 to 20 pounds in a single game.
If it's a star player an he gets hit really hard then your probably getting beat up regardless of being clean or dirty where as when a tough guy gets bodied his teammates think he will fight if he wants to ahahaha but there's exceptions for that to
Not only did players not wear helmets…….goalies also had no head/face protection!. Also the hockey fights went on longer than they do today. Check out some old videos.
There are a bunch of factors that determine why sometimes a big hit draws a crowd and sometimes is doesn't: is the hit legal?; does the team whose player got rocked keep the puck and maybe get a scorring chance? do the two teams have bad history?; is it the regular season, playoffs of finals?; is the player who got his a skilled star or an enforcer? ; how hurt is the player that got hit?; etc. Beufitully complex game.
Fighting in hockey is a means for the players to police the game because refs never catch everything, there's also an unwritten set of rules around it (unwritten because while it does happen regularly it's still not allowed), but dirty/excessive hits (like the hit on that empty net goal) will be settled by the players before the refs ever get a chance to settle it
Apparently, the big hits are not the ones they worry the most about, not that they aren't concerning also, but its the low grade trauma on every single rep, in both practice and games that contributes. As such, there's far less head trauma in hockey.
No hitting without the puck, that’s interference, no checks to the head, it used to be legal if you used your shoulder, but they’ve changed to it protect health. No jumping into checks, that’s charging. No elbows or knees.
You are correct about not being allowed to check to the head. Only thing I'd add is that you can check to the head if that is the only point of contact (if they're looking down and their head is forward)
I hate people calling the sport "soft" when they want to protect the player's health.
Just want to add, no hitting from behind either if it wasn't obvious to some people. Hits from the side are usually at the discretion of the ref. They will decide if the player being hit was defenseless or not.
@ernieb8490only player in possession of puck can be checked. Or shortly after he played the puck…more like immediately after the play.
"protect health" is code for pussyifying the game.
Blokes, I think you'd like a video that explains the hockey "code", which is the unwritten rules surrounding how the players unofficially police the game themselves. That includes the expectation that you stand up for your teammates no matter who you are. Also, Daz you're right about helmets. They grandfathered them in and there was even one guy not wearing a helmet into the 90s!
ua-cam.com/video/vTSiJ2cIZrk/v-deo.html&pp=ygUMbmhsIHRoZSBjb2Rl
Craig McTavish refused to wear one.
I remember, back in 1995, a Boston University hockey player by the name of; Travis Roy was in his very first game. He took to the ice, and 11 seconds later, was checked by an opponent and he went head first into the boards. He shattered the vertebrae in his neck, and sadly became a quadriplegic. He went on to start his own foundation for spinal cord injury research, and raised millions to help find better treatments, assist people with bills, wheelchairs, and accessible housing. Unfortunately, he ultimately passed away. May he RIP. 😢
Stories like this are both inspiring and sad, someone getting so unlucky and having their life altered forever just hits different. I played hockey and only ever suffered minor injuries that fully healed. I also did parkour & climbing when I was younger and sure, I lost half of a finger, but I'm still pretty ok. For some folks though... Great man for making something positive out of it and helping others in need!
Open ice hits are usually most painful.
Gladiators. That’s all I can say
Travis was giving the hit, missed and went head first into the boards. Tragic nonetheless.
@@thexen3120that is truly sad
Helmets weren't made mandatory until 1979/80, and even then there remained a "grandfather clause" where a player who hadn't worn a helmet up until that point could continue to play without one, but all incoming players HAD to wear one.
The last helmetless player, Craig MacTavish, didn't retire until 1997!
Insane. Why the hell would you want to not use one?
@@Nekotaku_TV you should see his hair
The elbow lift is basically part of the "shoulder shiv" where they follow through with the hit and shove off a player during the hit.
Also when the game is practically decided in the final minutes, it's considered "cheap" to start throwing bodies at players unless there's some bad blood. Players generally take exception to excessive checks during that time.
Love seeing hockey back on this channel. My fav sport.
One of the first things my hockey coach taught me when I was little was to keep your head on a swivel, meaning, don't get caught looking down at the puck. Keep your eyes up so you can see that you're about to get blasted.
"Holy mackinaw, what a hit by Phaneuf!"
U guys have to check out the video How one violent hit snowballed into years of championship hockey between the Detroit Red Wings and Colorado Avalanche, one of the biggest rivalries in the nhl back in the 90's early 2000s
I came here to comment the same. It’s pretty crazy
LGRW
1979 or 80 was the first year new players had to wear helmets. anyone already in the league were never required to wear one. Craig MacTavish was the last player to play without a helmet in the NHL. He retired after the 96-97 season.
RIP Craig…
@@TheAcgtrs He’s alive and well!
I grew up playing football and the hardest hit I ever took was in a pick-up hockey game.
hows that. You cannot run full speed on skates.
@@johnzubil2875 You're faster on skates, genius.
@@johnzubil2875 Because you can’t skate at full speed on feet.
@@HouseOfHockey14 so take your skates, and skate as hard as you can at an NFL Combine. What would be your time? Give me an estimate.
@@johnzubil2875 Sure you can get to full speed on foot within a few steps. But on ice/skates there's less friction. You build momentum and inertia. Did you never take a physics class in high school? You can get like 10mph more on skates.
3:26 yes sir it is! ☺️ Dave is right because of the speed they are making contact , the hits are harder. And they might not look it on the ice but in person most of these guys are beasts! Lol
Yeah not to mention the skates add like an extra 2.5 inches....and what guy wouldn't want that 😛
Truth or Dare? 😉😄
@@TaMara_x 6.25 inches...
wait, dare!
@@willvr4😮 👌😂
From my college hockey playing son, the hits sound harder than they actually are. Of course, the ones here are pretty savage.
Thanks for all 3 awesome reactions today, Esp this one! 🤟🥂❤
I think it’s about time for an NHL video about skills rather than physicality. I don’t think you Blokes have done one out of all your videos so it’d be nice to see one that showcases what truly makes the game great.
Agree…
Pavel Bure highlights ftw
Back in the day the goalies didn't wear masks. When I was a kid some of these guys smoked cigarettes on the bench. These guys are on another level
Playing hockey for decades, and I’ll say first hand that open ice hits feel like car crashes. I’d much rather a shoulder into the boards. However, not everyone plays by the rules and I have been hit square in the back multiple times into the boards. It is not a pleasant experience and I’m lucky I still have all my teeth! #1 rule is keep your head up!
You're right Daz, players regularly played without helmets until the early/mid 80's in the NHL.
I took my visor off at the first opportunity, aged 18 at Senior level in the UK. It cost me around 30 stitches from 3 sticks to the face which you have probably seen (under my chin, between my upper lip and nose and through my left eyebrow), plus I lost two teeth from a shot puck that deflected off my stick into my mouth. I remember feeling like I had chewed a couple of tic tacs. I skated to the boards, spat them out and lined up for the face off. It was Saturday night and no dentist was open until Monday so you just crack on. It was a badge of honour.
I always felt that playing without a visor had a phycological impact on some opponents, especially around 2008 when every player born after 75 in the UK had to wear a at least a half visor. I was born in 74, the year before the rule change and at 34, was one of a handful of players still playing without a visor in the league that year.
Check out Dan Cleary (Detroit Red Wings) in the TV series 'Road to the Winter Classic'. He loses 10 teeth, gets stitched up and gets back on the ice in 'time honoured fashion'. Watch the full 2 minutes.
ua-cam.com/video/K_rY3AGvpoA/v-deo.html
Well, the joke is, "Give Blood, Play Hockey"
scott stevens from the devils didnt fuck around when it came to open ice hitting. if you cut inside to the middle of the ice, you were in the danger zone.
A great joke in America is Canadians are the nicest people you'll ever meet unless you put a hockey stick in their hand
8:45 The change to helmets started in the 1970s. If a player started his career not having to wear one, he could continue to not wear one, but for rookies it was mandator, so there were a lot of helmetless players left around in the 1980s.
Hell, at one time the goalies didn't wear masks. None of them, which is insane! I think goal masks started circa the 1950s. .o
from my experience, open ice hits hurt way worse than if you’re up against the boards. the boards usually absorb most of the impact
Ice hockey is an under appreciated sport, it’s just as physical and physically demanding as NFL, but they play 82 games in the regular season
2:49 "and they're giants!" lmao
Ok, time for some NHL skill videos. Watch a video on Bobby Orr, or Wayne Gretzky, and players, who changed the game. Then there’s Goalies like Patrick Roy, Tim Thomas, or Martin Brodeur… I am a lifelong NHL fan. There’s a lot more to the game than just the brutality. There’s a hell of a lot of skill, beauty, and finesse.
at lot of these hits are awesome but if the clips all played out a little longer the replays are even more crazy and worth watching for sure. Not sure why they got cut out of the video you guys watched but still good. Love the content, thanks blokes.
You should do some NHL skills videos (best dekes, saves, etc)
Yeeeesssss
Craig MacTavish was the last NHL player not to wear a helmet, he played his last game in 1997
Keep in mind NFL plays 17 games, and hockey plays 82 games. That's a hell of a lot more punishment playing every other day.
interesting I didn't know the NHL and the NBA had the same amount of games.
@@SomethingSeemsOff yep
@@SomethingSeemsOff the NBA took a lot of cues from the NHL as far as constructing a season’s worth of games and structure goes
“Holy Mackinaw” is a catch phrase by Toronto Maple Leafs Play-by-play announcer Joe Bowen. “Phaneuf” is defence man Dion Phaneuf. Always happy to translate hockey-speak for you blokes.
@5:49 one of the craziest moments in hockey history. "Off the floor, on the board..."
At 7:18 the Blackhawks player almost died. The game was delayed and he was in the hospital for a couple days.
A basic summary of the rules for hitting in hockey:
- Don't go after someone away from the play. If they have the puck or just got rid of it, they're fair game.
- Don't hit from behind, especially around the boards.
- Don't hit above the shoulders or below the knees.
- Don't use your stick as a weapon or to impede the other player.
- Don't lead with the elbow - shoulder or hip first.
- Don't accelerate into a hit more than necessary - generally, if you jump into the hit, you're going to get a penalty for charging.
- Don't mess with the goalie unless you want the entire opposing team to beat the crap out of you.
Daz is right that requiring helmets is relatively recent (1979) - and any players who started playing in the NHL before that time were allowed to continue playing without helmets if they wanted to. The last one played as recently as 1997.
In hockey, there is something called a "suicide pass". It's usually a defenceman passing the puck up-ice to the forwards. Except it's a slow moving pass, and is coming from behind. The forward has to track the puck, instead of keeping his head up to look for opposing players closing in for a hit.
"Holy Mackinaw" is a Canadian commentary thing 😂. I hear it called every Toronto Maple Leafs broadcast. Heck, we even say it! 🇨🇦
12:40 "Holy Mackinaw, what a hit by Phaneuf!"
The Chara on Pacioretty is one that should be in all these compilations
I guess I could put it like this ice is nature's concrete
about time you did more hockey
1979
BOTTOM LINE: Helmets in hockey became more prevalent in the 1970s, and their usage was made mandatory in the NHL in 1979. The requirement was prompted by a series of serious head injuries and high-profile incidents, ultimately leading to a safer playing environment for players.
I love hockey by far my favourite sport to play. Love throwing my body around. Plus it’s the only sport you can throw some hands beside MMA and boxing.
1) There was reportedly a discussion in the NHL this season about the perception that more players are "unnecessarily" starting fights after a teammate was hit hard but legally. The referees can issue a penalty for instigating a fight, but they rarely do.
2) The NHL actually prohibits full facial shields and cages unless a player is already injured. I'd love to hear the NHL try to make a sane argument for keeping this rule. Imagine visiting a construction site, and instead of being told you must wear a hard hat, they said you could not have one until you were hit in the head once.
They just issued a nasty instigator taking two top defensmen out for a playoff game.
I like you guys a lot, I've watched a ton of your stuff. I love how you watch NFL videos. I am a big time hockey fan. My team did not make the playoffs, so I have not been happy to watch what is going on currently. I hope you can get into hockey. That and NFL football are my favorite sports to watch.
Check out Clint malarchuk Goalkeeper damn near died on the ice (skate to the jugular)
you guys should go to an ice hockey game it's so fun in person
I would love to see you guys react to the career highlights of Dominik Hasek - he was arguably the greatest goaltender ever, and extremely unorthodox style that was jaw-dropping. Love the page
Hockey athletes are by far the toughest. The way I always say it is a hockey player can pretty much play any other sport not professionally, but they can pick it up and do it. You can’t take a player from any other sport put a pair of skates on them and send them out to play a pick up game, it would never happen they couldn’t do it. The speed and the physicality is unmatched not to mention it’s the only sport where on a consistent basis I watch players get cut open, stitched up and get right back out on the ice, fearless.
Dave’s eyelashes are so eye-catching every video I can’t help but look at them
1979 was first year that helmets were required....goalies as well
the old original 6-no head gear....straight up man on man
Watch the greatest goalie saves...
A thing of beauty..
You also got to remember their blades for their skates are super sharp
great collection of hits! that video must have took a long time to make
Holy Mackinaw Is a Joe Bowen trade mark call he use to do the Toronto Maple Leaf games on tv but he now is the radio guy. He uses that call on big hits.
If you liked this check out the end result of Paul Karyias hit by Stevens. One of the most inspirational moments probably in hockey history
open ice hits usually hurt less cuz you can slide on the ice
(Don Cherry rock em sock em ) for a real Big hits montage. This is what every Canadian Hockey player would watch as a kid. ;)
10:14 - Was that Bob Cole's voice I heard? I didn't know he did Leafs games for someone other than the CBC.
#LetsGoCanes
This is the best of 3 Real Manly sports. The other 2, Rugby and Ladies beach volleyball
7:45 he broke his sternum
I like to say that football is a contact sport where as hockey is a collision sport
One of the last players to not wear a helmet was Craig McTavish in the mid 90s
Definitely easier to knock someone down who has all their weight on 3mm blades 🤷🏻♂️
Would love for you guys to listen to some NHL trash talk/chirps videos
One thing is for sure, you & the local fan blokes don’t want to get in a tangle with a visiting hockey club when they are at the pub after a game. Buy them a cold one instead. Win or lose.
They don’t mind serving up knuckle sandwiches and spitting chicklets.
Happy Mother's day everyone!
There was one player so feared that no one ever hit him. His last name was Satan. When he retired he said his one regret was that he never got to play for the Devils.
Remember too that in hockey your landing on ice not grass. No forgiveness from the ice
Helmets became mandatory for the 1980 season. Older players were grandfathered to the old rules and not required to wear one.
Even the goalies never used to wear helmets... Coined the phrase/s "All goalie have a screw loose in their head to play that position". / "All goalies are crazy/mental" or "They are a different breed of player".
1977 was when they implemented the helmet rule. But if you were in the league prior to that, you could still go without. PS, if a hockey player stays down, he's really hurt.
I think you guys would like the video “The Code: The Unwritten Rules of Fighting in Hockey” Its a great video and will answers your questions.
Illegal hits: from behind, elbows, at the knees, boarding, charging
The code exists because player solidarity doesn't extend to other players even though they're all in the same union. The team owners, Gary Bettman and the TV broadcasters like it this way. Not all hockey is and has to be played this way.
The last guy to not wear a helmet in hockey was the mid 90's. He was a defencemen for the Flyers and he must have been in his mid to late 40s at the time. Cant remember the name.
Hockey is all about eye for an eye and fulfilling debts. If you level one of the players with a good hit, it doesn't just get accepted as "ah well...good hit". You'll get payback in the game, later in the season or the following season. Hockey players have ridiculous memories for these type of things...they remember things from Youth Minor Hockey.
Look up Darrian Hatcher on Jeremy Roenik or Todd Bertuzzi getting revenge on Steve Moore or Marty McSorely on Donald Brashear for extreme examples.
Hockey players used to not wear helmets. Even when I was a kid in the 90s there were still a few players who chose not to wear helmets.
And the NHL regular season is 82 games too 😂
They didn’t mandate helmets until the 80’s, but you were grandfathered in if you didn’t want to wear one. Last player without a helmet retired in the 90s.
There is a video called 'The Code' that will give you all unwritten rules for fighting
Craig MacTavish was the last NHL player to play without a helmet. He retired in 1997.
The mtl winnipeg one is so dirty. Hit him after the goal was scored, while he was vulnerable. Thats a big part of it. Who did you hit and how vulnerable were they.
I don't know if UA-cam would allow it but the worst hockey accident I've ever seen was a guy's skate come up and hit the juggler of the goalkeeper I believe... So much blood so fast
Oski we we, oski wa wa holy Mackinaw tiger cats eat em raw is a CFL football chant in Hamilton Ontario Canada Mackinaw is a shortened Ojibwe Tribe (indigenous) word for The Great Turtle, we call North America Turtle Island in indigenous culture. Stay blessed 👊🏼
There are rules to hitting. You are right about the one where you can't hit a guy not playing the puck. Also you can't "launch" or leave your skates to hit someone. If a guy is facing the boards you can't run him from behind into the boards. Then there are the high hits and leading with your stick etc....
It's funny how a hit that is merely considered a "check" in Hockey would likely get a footballer ejected and maybe suspended.
essentially Shinty and Hurling on ice, with more teeth.
The last player to not wear a helmet was Craig Mactavish who was the last player from the era where they weren't mandatory to retire. He played on the 1994 Rangers Stanley Cup champs.
These are almost all legal hits. Some borderline... but its a shame because you see them almost never anymore because they have made it highly punishable to make anyone's head a first point of contact. On these big hits it's almost impossible to avoid because you're hitting a lot of these guys doing what they were never taught to do: look at the puck with your head down.
For what its worth hockey players are incredibly underrated as athletes and are probably the best in the world in many ways. They have to have the strength, the fitness, the toughness, the mental sharpness and focus while being the best skaters in the world and having a special level of hand eye coordination. They can skate backwards better than most people walk forwards. The game is so intense that when someone stays on the ice for more than a minute they are completely gassed. And goalies can lose 10 to 20 pounds in a single game.
Hockey video you should watch. Playing through the pain
7:08 The covid games look funny, with no fans in the seats. .o
Last player to play without a helmet was 1997. Not that long ago which is crazy!
Ok I have to ask since we are in hockey now. Please check out the Clint Malarchuk incident.
Did he just come off after a power play? You are learning the game fast!
"What is this?..." THATS A LEAFS FAN YOR YA
Spittin' Chiclets
If it's a star player an he gets hit really hard then your probably getting beat up regardless of being clean or dirty where as when a tough guy gets bodied his teammates think he will fight if he wants to ahahaha but there's exceptions for that to
Have you guys watched the playing through the pain vids or worst injuries vids?
Not only did players not wear helmets…….goalies also had no head/face protection!. Also the hockey fights went on longer than they do today. Check out some old videos.
Craig MacTavish was the last player in the NHL to without a helmet in 1996/97.
There are a bunch of factors that determine why sometimes a big hit draws a crowd and sometimes is doesn't: is the hit legal?; does the team whose player got rocked keep the puck and maybe get a scorring chance? do the two teams have bad history?; is it the regular season, playoffs of finals?; is the player who got his a skilled star or an enforcer? ; how hurt is the player that got hit?; etc. Beufitully complex game.
Fighting in hockey is a means for the players to police the game because refs never catch everything, there's also an unwritten set of rules around it (unwritten because while it does happen regularly it's still not allowed), but dirty/excessive hits (like the hit on that empty net goal) will be settled by the players before the refs ever get a chance to settle it
Apparently, the big hits are not the ones they worry the most about, not that they aren't concerning also, but its the low grade trauma on every single rep, in both practice and games that contributes. As such, there's far less head trauma in hockey.
When I first started to watch Hockey the Goalies didn't wear facemasks.