Quote:
Originally Posted by TussAgee11
My concern is the NHL's "Hand of God" in changing rules without following its own rules in how to to so.
Does Avery's play belong in a hockey game? Probably not. Did it break the rules at the time he did it? Nope.
Remember Mazeroski (2B Pirates) found a similar loophole one time. After a foul ball on a hit and run, he never retouched his base and took a 89 foot lead towards 2nd base. Nothing to stop him from doing it. Not sure when that loophole ended up being closed.
Avery is a bit of an a$$. But he's my team's a$$ Because of who he is, it seems he can do no right. Last night he was getting horse-collared after whistles, and had a big red target on him. Never reacted back. Tried to shake Marty's hand after the game, only to get the ignoring treatment.
He shouldn't be officiated or treated any different than any other player... every game, no matter what the sport, should be a fresh beginning.
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He's my team's a$$ now, it would seem. And now he is suspended by Bettman for using the phrase "sloppy seconds." That, to me, is a little overboard by the NHL commish. I am beginning to believe that Bettman is in complete control of the sport. He obviously has it in for Avery, even though Avery has done his best to draw attention to himself. I just think that any suspension for something of this level is ridiculous. Leave the discipline to on ice events.
Personally, when the OP incident occurred, I was not at all a fan of Avery, but respected his intelligence of the game to know what tactics he could use to give his team an edge, within the parameters of the rules. I thought Brodeur's response (who I did have admiration for as a player at that time) was over the top and childish.