@Ducks d'Anaheim

[Cavanagh] Joel Quenneville à propos de l’appel sans givrage qui a précédé le but de Vegas : « Clairement, je ne suis pas d’accord avec l’appel, et c’était clairement… vous savez… du glaçage, mais leur gars a arrêté de patiner, ce qui m’a vraiment ennuyé.


[Cavanagh] Joel Quenneville à propos de l’appel sans givrage qui a précédé le but de Vegas : « Clairement, je ne suis pas d’accord avec l’appel, et c’était clairement… vous savez… du glaçage, mais leur gars a arrêté de patiner, ce qui m’a vraiment ennuyé.


wildwing8

8 Comments

  1. THERAPISTS_for_200

    Can this be reviewable in the future?

  2. Blew_away

    Eichel skates straight towards the goal line, and Lacombe skates towards the puck, that’s quite literally the only reason it looks remotely close. But the puck has already crossed past both of them at the time giving LaCombe the inside lane to the puck.

    I honestly think Eichel also believes it’s gonna be called icing based on his stick position and him not making any sort of hit.

    Absolutely horrendous call given the circumstances and the tie rule. Just a none sense

  3. Live-Cardiologist328

    Let’s not complain too hard and become the oilers fanbase, rough call but the boys stopped playing with no whistle. Troubs steps out of the way for the pass and everyone else was on their heels. Bad call, but they have to play to the whistle

  4. I feel like on top of this, all the dirty hits the Knights did tonight made this game a bit worse for the ducks.

  5. Happened. From the other angle you can see on the NHL recap, it’s 100% icing. But the rule of thumb is always play to the whistle, no whistle you continue playing. We got game 2 with a few adjustments. LGD.

  6. DopedScope338

    The call was brutal, but the guys can’t stop playing because they’re expecting a whistle. Play until the whistle always. Full stop. They let up because they were anticipating a whistle and got beat because of it. If they hadn’t let up and kept position this call is just another innocuous mistake or non-call that happens a dozen times a game and no one is even talking about it right now.

    I get that this may not be a popular opinion, but the Ducks turned a routine non-call into a loss by letting up instead of playing to the whistle as every hockey player has been coached to do since we first learned how to skate. They can’t control the refs or fix the refs’ mistakes, but they can control the way they play and that needs to be the lesson they take away from this, IMO.

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