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referee that went
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Người gửi:  vv1122365 [ Thứ 7 16/02/19 13:46 ]
Tiêu đề bài viết:  referee that went

KINGSTON, Ont. -- Spencer Watson had two goals and two assists, and Ryan Kujawinski scored twice and helped on another as the Kingston Frontenacs pummelled the Ottawa 67s 8-0 in Ontario Hockey League action on Sunday. Robert Polesello, Samuel Schutt, Darcy Greenway, and Sam Bennett also scored for Kingston (10-8-3), while Michael Moffat added three assists. Frontenacs goalie Matt Mahalak made 24 saves in the shutout. Phillippe Trudeau allowed five goals on 29 shots through two periods for Ottawa (7-12-2). Jacob Blair replaced Trudeau heading into the third period and stopped 11 of 14 shots. --- RANGERS 6 GREYHOUNDS 3 KITCHENER, Ont. -- Nick Magyar scored two goals and assisted on another to lift the Rangers over Sault Ste. Marie. Evan McEneny, Brent Pedersen, Ryan MacInnis, and Radek Faksa also scored for Kitchener (7-12-1), while Darby Llewellyn added two assists. Andrew Fritsch, Alex Gudbranson and Darnell Nurse replied for Sault Ste. Marie (16-4-2), and Matt Murray made 46 saves in the losing effort. Rangers goalie Jordan DeKort played 14:49, allowing two goals on 10 shots, before he was replaced by Matthew Greenfield. Greenfield stopped 17 of 18 shots he faced. --- COLTS 6 BATTALION 0 NORTH BAY, Ont. -- Brendan Lemieux scored his 10th and 11th goals of the season to power Barrie past the Battalion. Tyson Fawcett had a goal and two assists for the Colts (13-8-1), while Jake Dotchin, Justin Scott, and Erik Bradford rounded out the Barrie offence. Colts goalie Daniel Gibl made 23 saves in the shutout. Brendan ONeill played 18:21 in net for Brampton (11-12-1), giving up three goals on 10 shots. ONeills replacement, Jake Smith, stopped seven of 10 shots. --- WOLVES 4 ICEDOGS 3 (OT) SUDBURY, Ont. -- Troy Timpano made 41 saves, and Connor Crisp scored his seventh goal of the season in overtime to lift the Wolves over Niagara. Nicholas Baptiste scored his 16th goal in the first period and his 17th in the third to tie the game for Subury (9-8-6). Mathew Campagna also scored. Jesse Graham, Brendan Perlini, and Johnny Corneil replied for the IceDogs (6-13-4), while Carter Verhaeghe added two assists. Niagara goalie Christopher Festarini made 30 saves. --- SPITFIRES 4 GENERALS 1 OSHAWA, Ont. -- Alex Fotinos made 19 saves, including one a Scott Laughton penalty shot in the second period, as Windsor toppled the Generals for its third win in a row. Nikita Yazkov and Ryan Moore gave the Spitfires (14-7-0) a two-goal lead early in the second period and Slater Koekkoek and Ryan Foss added empty-net goals late in the third. Sam Harding scored the gone goal for Oshawa (18-5-1), which had its four-game win streak snapped. Daniel Altshuller stopped 27 of 29 shots for the Generals. Alex Sandro Jersey . 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Luis Enrique signed the deal with club president Josep Bartomeu two days after it was announced by the club. That was two days after coach Gerardo Martino stepped down when Barcelona finished its first season without a major trophy in six years.Got a question on rule clarification, comments on rule enforcements or some memorable NHL stories? Kerry wants to answer your emails at cmonref@tsn.ca. Hi Kerry, Thanks for your time, even if this doesnt make it to the site, Id love to hear your opinion on this: In the second period during the Blues-Sabres game on Tuesday, the Sabres took exception to a hit at the whistle on Tyler Ennis by Ian Cole. I admit Cole sometimes acts before he thinks but I think this was a clean play, it just looked violent because Cole has 50 pounds on him and the boards broke his fall! The referees arms didnt go up signaling a penalty. As expected, the Sabres took it in their own hands and started a scrum to even the score. I have no problem with that. What I have a problem with is the referees tack on a roughing minor to Ian Cole after the melee? What warranted the penalty call? The fights? I dont see how if it wasnt a penalty before the fight, its a penalty after the fight? Buffalo retaliated, score settled. It seemed futile at that point. And to make matters worse, to start the third period, Buffalos Cody McCormick starts a fight with Alex Steen and Steen gets a double-minor for roughing giving the Sabres a power play. Why? If any extra minor should be called, it should be on McCormick for instigating or roughing! Can you tell me what these referees were thinking? If there is a valid explanation, maybe it will help me stay calm next time? Thank you, Josh Bartlett ----- Josh, I thank you for your question and congratulate you for making it to the Cmon Ref site! Unfortunately there really isnt a valid explanation as why to why the St. Louis Blues received an extra minor penalty in either of these altercations; especially in the second dust-up that was initiated just 17 seconds into the third period by Cody McCormick and Marcus Foligno. None of us can ever know what the refs were actually thinking but let me provide my perspective based on the referees position, focus and their reactions (or lack thereof) to what was taking place in the moment. On the first play in question, at 13:11 of the 2nd period, Ian Cole was in the act of finishing a check on Tyler Ennis after the Buffalo youngster shot the puck. The contact, delivered at the goal line, was more of a shove than a solid body check but caused Ennis to lose his balance and fall awkwardly into the end boards. Based on a resulting degree of awkwardness or violence that a player is shoved, hit or falls into the boards, I have seen occasions when a minor penalty has been assessed; more on the result than the act itself. Referee Gord Dwyer was very close to the incident; so close in fact that when Ennis fell into the boards, his stick blade whacked the referee in the knee. If there was any initial thought process by the referee to raise his arm and assess a penalty to Cole, which I very much doubt, we will never know. Instead of raising his non-whistle hand to signal a penalty, Dwyer used the hand to grab his right knee and expressed a grimacing look of pain on his face. Since we dont know the referees intent beyond the fact that neither of them raised an arm to signal an infraction, it is more probable to sspeculate that the minor penalty assessed to Cole was determined through the conference of officials in the aftermath of the scrum and fights.dddddddddddd While it might not have appeared to be worthy of a penalty in the refs mind initially, I can understand that he might have reflected on how hard Ennis struck the end boards and then changed his mind. Im relatively okay with his prerogative to change his mind. What Im not okay with is the solid pop that Ennis delivered to the face of Ian Cole as he was being engaged by the Buffalo cavalry and in clear view of the referee that went unpenalized. The shot delivered by Ennis on Cole caused Alexander Steen to grab Ennis and resulted in their fight. If Cole was to be assessed a late minor in hindsight or otherwise, then Ennis also deserved a roughing minor. My personal preference is to see a minor penalty imposed against any player who leads the cavalry charge following a hit on one of his teammates; legal or otherwise! Too often, we see a player have to defend himself when he administered a perfectly legal but hard check. The double minor penalty assessed to Steen is beyond confusing to me. In my first season in the NHL, linesman John DAmico gave me a piece of great advice that stuck with me forever. John told me to know what players are on the ice at all times, whether they change on the fly or during a stoppage. John also said that just because the puck isnt moving, that doesnt mean that your eyes and your brain stop moving as well. Once play stopped, John advised me it was time to turn up the radar because things can happen and you dont want to be caught off guard! I never forgot that great advice offered by the future Hall of Famer. At the first stoppage of play, 17 seconds into the 3rd period, Steen came onto the ice with his line for an end zone face-off. On their way to the Sabres players bench, Cody McCormick and Marcus Foligno took a route that allowed them to shove and engage Steen in obvious retribution for his previous fight with Ennis. In this moment, referee Mike Leggo can be seen standing near centre ice, facing the players bench with his arm raised to signal the line change has been completed and could not have possibly witnessed what initiated the altercation. Referee Dwyer is off camera but would have been standing on the goal line on the players bench side of the ice. Given the penalty assessment, referee Dwyer must have been preoccupied and not dialed in to the flow of players coming and going. Once the altercation started, St. Louis had one extra player on the ice as a result of the change and referee Leggo can be seen waving Alex Pietrangelo back toward the St. Louis bench. Steen handled himself very well in containing McCormick during their wrestling match. So well perhaps, that the referees, not seeing who started the altercation, might have assessed Steen an extra two minutes as the aggressor. If either of the referees had enjoyed the benefit of working with John DAmico early in their career, I would suspect that McCormick would have been assessed an extra minor for roughing and quite possibly a misconduct penalty as the instigator of the altercation. That would have been just. Wholesale Hoodies NFL Shirts Outlet Jerseys NFL Wholesale Cheap NFL Jerseys Free Shipping Wholesale Jerseys Cheap Cheap NFL Jerseys China Wholesale Jerseys Wholesale NFL Jerseys Cheap NFL Jerseys China Cheap NFL Jerseys ' ' '

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