{"id":32697,"date":"2010-11-02T05:00:33","date_gmt":"2010-11-02T10:00:33","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/?p=32697"},"modified":"2010-11-01T21:23:15","modified_gmt":"2010-11-02T02:23:15","slug":"tuesday-morning-quarterback-gray-area-in-head-contact","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2010\/11\/02\/tuesday-morning-quarterback-gray-area-in-head-contact\/","title":{"rendered":"Tuesday Morning Quarterback: Gray area in head contact"},"content":{"rendered":"
Todd:<\/strong> Well, Chris, I’ll start by offering thanks for filling in for Jim Connelly this week. I want to get into some of what we saw last weekend, but first I think we need to send best wishes to Denver’s Jesse Martin, who was hospitalized Saturday with three fractures in his C-2 vertebra<\/a> after a check during the Pioneers’ game at North Dakota. The latest word is that Martin has feeling in his extremities, but still may need surgery, and his season is over.<\/p>\n We’ve heard the call for a few years now to eliminate head contact. But in this situation, I don’t know if there’s 100 percent blame on North Dakota’s Brad Malone. Martin’s head was down, apparently searching for the puck at his feet, when he was hit. Would it have been a clean hit if Martin’s head was up? It’s impossible to know now. But there’s an awful lot of gray area in a pretty important part of the game, isn’t there?<\/p>\n Chris:<\/strong> Some reports said that a penalty wasn’t assessed until the extent of Martin’s injury was clear. Players are getting bigger, faster and stronger, making these kind of high-impact collisions more dangerous. As a result, the same level of hard-hitting intensity can now lead to more injuries. As one coach told me after his player was given a penalty for a hit that seemed clean but resulted in a violent impact and an opposing player being shaken up, “I guess you can get called for hitting too hard.” That has put more subjectivity into the game, but I can see why.<\/p>\n Todd:<\/strong> The referees have to be a little skittish in these situations, too. Our Patrick C. Miller reported in his game story<\/a> that play continued with North Dakota holding the puck for at least five seconds before play was stopped, seemingly confirming that neither referee called the penalty on contact. That’s troubling to me. If it’s a penalty, it’s a penalty regardless of the outcome. If Martin gets up and skates away, maybe we’re not even talking about this today. But people are looking to referees to get these calls right when they happen, and it has to be tough knowing that everyone else is going to get to judge you with the benefit of slow-motion replay.<\/p>\n