Additional suspension for RPI - hit on Scali

Started by sah67, January 17, 2008, 09:58:42 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

sah67

ECAC suspends Eric Burgdoerfer for an additional game beyond the one he already missed against Colgate last weekend under the Game DQ, making him ineligible for RPI vs. Union tomorrow night:

http://www.collegehockeynews.com/news/2008/01/17_ecacsuspends.php

In other injury news, Scali, B. Nash, and P. Kennedy are listed as "probable" for this weekend according to CHN's injury report, but Gallagher and Taylor Davenport are listed as "questionable".

lynah80

Seems reasonable, given what happened.  It's good that Scali wasn't hurt badly.

KeithK

[quote sah67]ECAC suspends Eric Burgdoerfer for an additional game beyond the one he already missed against Colgate last weekend under the Game DQ, making him ineligible for RPI vs. Union tomorrow night:[/quote]
For those who saw the hit was it really worth extra suspensions beyond the original one?  I assume this means the league thought there was intent to injure.

Rules question: I assume the xtra game isn't cumulative with any future DQ's, right?  He would get two games for (e.g.) a fighting DQ, not three.

cbuckser

To answer your questions:  Yes and, I think, yes.

I don't believe that there was intent to injure, but the hit was extraordinarily reckless.  It seemed to me to be significantly more dangerous that most hits from behind into the boards.

I think the ECAC big wigs deserve a lot of credit for handing out supplemental discipline although Joe Scali didn't miss a game.  So often, the consequence of the offending act, rather than the risk that the act posed, provides the primary impetus for the suspension.
Craig Buckser '94

Cactus12

I also agree that the suspension was deserved. I don't think there was intent to injure, but it was an extremely dangerous play. This was not a situation where Scali turned his back to the play. The RPI player had time to let up and instead drilled him into the boards. It's one of those hits where you're glad no one has a concussion.

(As a side note, I think the AHL/NHL would have also handed down a suspension- and I think it's important that hockey at all levels is trying to cut down on these dangerous, disrespectful plays)