Cornell-Clarkson postgame thread

Started by billhoward, March 12, 2005, 09:58:18 PM

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DeltaOne81

Well said...  everyone needs to chill out. Rich has to stop taking things so seriously and thinking that everything is a personal insult and has to be taken so seriously. Here's a hint, pal, never check out collegehumor.com, I'm sure it'd be highly "offensive".

Everyone else, please, lets stop the childish insults, no reason to degrade things any further.

Brett Gobe

A non flame related question:

Was that guy who got hit in the head with the puck on Friday night ok?  I think he was in section D or E.  He got drilled, looked like there was alot of blood.

Avash

[Q]DeltaOne81 Wrote:

 Well said...  everyone needs to chill out.[/q]


http://www.scrolllock.nl/3.cfm



Tub(a)

[Q]Brett Gobe Wrote:

 A non flame related question:

Was that guy who got hit in the head with the puck on Friday night ok?  I think he was in section D or E.  He got drilled, looked like there was alot of blood.[/q]

I'm pretty sure I saw him walk behind us holding a towel to his head, so at least he was conscious and moving.
Tito Short!

pfibiger

I didn't get to watch the game, but was listening to it...Jason Weinstein was getting pretty exasperated with the fact that Traylen kept dislodging his net when Cornell was putting on pressure. Those who were at the game, or watching it on XMI, was it deliberate? Assuming it's against the rules, is a penalty ever assessed? I found reference to it in some minor league handbook, but not with respect to the NCAA.
Phil Fibiger '01
http://www.fibiger.org

Liz '05

[Q]pfibiger Wrote:

 I didn't get to watch the game, but was listening to it...Jason Weinstein was getting pretty exasperated with the fact that Traylen kept dislodging his net when Cornell was putting on pressure. Those who were at the game, or watching it on XMI, was it deliberate? Assuming it's against the rules, is a penalty ever assessed? I found reference to it in some minor league handbook, but not with respect to the NCAA.[/q]

The net came off its moorings a few times Saturday night...there was only one time when I specifically thought it could've been intentionally dislodged, and I wasn't really paying attention to Traylen at that moment.  I'm positive that he didn't try to get the net to fall forward on top of him (though that was the funniest sight of the evening).  That said, I'm pretty sure the refs could assess a delay of game penalty if they wanted to.

Tub(a)

[Q]Liz '05 Wrote:

 [Q2]pfibiger Wrote:

 I didn't get to watch the game, but was listening to it...Jason Weinstein was getting pretty exasperated with the fact that Traylen kept dislodging his net when Cornell was putting on pressure. Those who were at the game, or watching it on XMI, was it deliberate? Assuming it's against the rules, is a penalty ever assessed? I found reference to it in some minor league handbook, but not with respect to the NCAA.[/Q]
The net came off its moorings a few times Saturday night...there was only one time when I specifically thought it could've been intentionally dislodged, and I wasn't really paying attention to Traylen at that moment.  I'm positive that he didn't try to get the net to fall forward on top of him (though that was the funniest sight of the evening).  That said, I'm pretty sure the refs could assess a delay of game penalty if they wanted to.[/q]

Traylen did it once, the Clarkson D did it once or twice. Every time it happened, there was a faceoff in the Clarkson zone, but no penalty, so Feola didn't think they were intentional. I don't think they were blatant enough to draw a call.

Tito Short!

Dpperk29

in USA hockey... the governing body for most youth hockey, and adult leagues... knocking the net off intentionally can warrant a delay of game call. I would assume it is the same in NCAA
"That damn bell at Clarkson." -Ken Dryden in reference to his hatred for the Clarkson Bell.

billhoward

Intentionally dislodging the net calls for a delay of game penalty. But it has to be pretty deliberate as opposed to the incredible coincidence that the net only came loose at whatever end of the ice Clarkson defended. In the era before soft contact lenses, one Cornell goalie used to get a minute's breather late in the game when the contact got dislodged in his eye or once fell on the ice. Some versions of the story have it that he never actually was wearing contacts. This is much better than the goalie's pad strap that waits till the last couple minutes of a close game to come loose but only in close contests.

Al DeFlorio

[Q]billhoward Wrote:

 Intentionally dislodging the net calls for a delay of game penalty. But it has to be pretty deliberate as opposed to the incredible coincidence that the net only came loose at whatever end of the ice Clarkson defended. In the era before soft contact lenses, one Cornell goalie used to get a minute's breather late in the game when the contact got dislodged in his eye or once fell on the ice. Some versions of the story have it that he never actually was wearing contacts. This is much better than the goalie's pad strap that waits till the last couple minutes of a close game to come loose but only in close contests. [/q]
That strap came loose much more often back when there were no timeouts in college hockey.

Al DeFlorio '65

adamw

I was working in the UHL.  It was Game 7 of the finals.  For 6 games, Flint was knocking the net off the moorings intentionally.  There were so many refereeing problems -- not just that -- that the league brought in AHL refs to officiate Game 7.

Consequently, the AHL refs called Flint for intentionally dislodging the net TWICE in a 50 second span of the third period (they were blatant, and deserved, but still a gutsy call).  On the subsequent 5-on-3, Quad City didn't score, but scored on the 5-on-4 to tie the game ... and we won in overtime.

College Hockey News: http://www.collegehockeynews.com

andyw2100

[Q]Brett Gobe Wrote:

 A non flame related question:

Was that guy who got hit in the head with the puck on Friday night ok?  I think he was in section D or E.  He got drilled, looked like there was alot of blood.[/q]

He was fine. He sits in Section C, two rows in front of me. He's tough. He didn't even want to leave to get cleaned up. He was back 10 minutes after he was hit, and, of course, there Saturday night too.
                         Andy W.


David Harding

[Q]Al DeFlorio Wrote:

 [Q2]billhoward Wrote:

 Intentionally dislodging the net calls for a delay of game penalty. But it has to be pretty deliberate as opposed to the incredible coincidence that the net only came loose at whatever end of the ice Clarkson defended. In the era before soft contact lenses, one Cornell goalie used to get a minute's breather late in the game when the contact got dislodged in his eye or once fell on the ice. Some versions of the story have it that he never actually was wearing contacts. This is much better than the goalie's pad strap that waits till the last couple minutes of a close game to come loose but only in close contests. [/Q]
That strap came loose much more often back when there were no timeouts in college hockey.[/q]

Which reminds me, when did timeouts come to colloge hockey?

David Harding

[Q]Al DeFlorio Wrote:

 [Q2]billhoward Wrote:

 Intentionally dislodging the net calls for a delay of game penalty. But it has to be pretty deliberate as opposed to the incredible coincidence that the net only came loose at whatever end of the ice Clarkson defended. In the era before soft contact lenses, one Cornell goalie used to get a minute's breather late in the game when the contact got dislodged in his eye or once fell on the ice. Some versions of the story have it that he never actually was wearing contacts. This is much better than the goalie's pad strap that waits till the last couple minutes of a close game to come loose but only in close contests. [/Q]
That strap came loose much more often back when there were no timeouts in college hockey.[/q]

Which reminds me, when did timeouts come to colloge hockey?  I was asleep when they snuck in.