FanHouse

FanHouse Roundtable: NHL Playoff Officiating



It's the gargantuan adult zebra in the left-wing corner.

We're all hockey fans, and as such, it's hard to imagine a ton of pleasure with how the playoffs have been officiated. We've had blood-drawing high-sticks ignored. We've had countless obstruction and interference penalties that should have been called but weren't. There have been controversies over allowed and disallowed goals.

Sunday, there were two games. In one of them, the only third-period penalty was a high-sticking penalty that had to be called because blood was drawn. In the other, there was nothing called (NOTHING!) between 12:08 of the second period and 3:00 of the third overtime. That would be a span of over 70 minutes.

I've passed the point where I trust these guys to get the calls right. You're not going to get every interference or hooking call, nor should you. However, we've reached a stage where the officials are completely devoid of any guts to make tough calls in close games. They'll call the delay of game on a puck shot out of play, too many men on the ice, high-sticks that draw blood, and the occasional dangerous hit, but not much else.

What say you, FanHousers, on the quality (or lack thereof) of officiating in these playoffs?

Pat Lackey: I won't deny that the officiating has been incredibly inconsistent in these playoffs because it certainly has (the Drury/Malone high stick incidents are more than enough proof of that), but is it really worse than any other year? (not rhetorical: I'm really asking for an opinion) I could be wrong, but I can remember wailing and moaning about officiating for as long as I've been watching playoff hockey (which is the early-mid '90s ... I'm a young'n). Either a call is made that some fans feel shouldn't be made, or the call isn't made and the other fans are upset. The problem is that no official wants to make a ticky-tack call late in a close game, but each official seems to have a different definition of what's acceptable to call and what isn't and they're influenced by a ton of different things (home crowd, where things happen on the ice, how late in a game it is, etc.). You can push for more even application of the rules, but it's still subjective to the referee in question. I don't really know what the answer is here, to be honest.

Jes Golbez: I'll have to agree with Lackey, in that I don't really see a big difference between this year's officiating and previous years. The NHL has always had problems with consistency and, despite having TWO refs on the ice, seems to miss an awful lot of stuff that they should be getting.

The NHL has gone to great lengths to emphasize that they constantly monitor their on-ice officials and go through video with them to 'teach' the on-ice to do a better job.

Now, until this process gives us more transparency, we can't really see if it is effective or not. Maybe the meddling from the offices in Toronto and New York causes the refs to do a worse job? Maybe the refs just get confused with all of the mixed messages, or perhaps the teaching system is just poor? Perhaps the media ought to demand some accountability in the way the league handles its officiating.

Bruce Ciskie: What amazes me, Pat, is that you hear all the time about how the officials "don't want to decide the outcome of a game by calling a penalty". Then you get a game like last night.

The call on Grossman in the third overtime had to be made. No issues there. The call on Campbell was ticky-tack, and was probably let go a half-dozen times already in the game. It was only called because the officials felt they had to issue a make up call for a good call. Amazing.

As for the answer, I have no clue. I do think it starts with more turnover in the playoffs. I'd rather have a young, less experienced official screw up a playoff game than Don Koharski, who's screwed up more playoff games than I can count.

Pat Lackey: I'm not disagreeing with you on that first point, Bruce. My point is that if you asked the ref who made the call on Campbell about it (and I apologize for not knowing who it was off the top of my head), he'd tell you it was a call he thought had to be made. The severity of a penalty and the necessity of calling it is completely subjective, especially at ice level without the aid of a replay. That's really the problem here that doesn't have a clear answer, especially because those things change depending on game situation.

Earl Sleek: I guess I might be a bit contrarian here, as I'm not that upset with the officiating we've seen thus far these playoffs (note: I'm mainly commenting on the western games here). Is it inconsistent? Yes. Does it have a feel of manipulating a game to get to an exciting result? Yes. But is it unexpected? Nope, in fact it's nearly exactly what I expected.
Refs have been walking a fine line between "calling a game tightly" and "not deciding a game" since forever, especially since the rule changes after the lockout, and it's not something that I envy. With the addition of a lot of soft calls, a referee could probably whistle teams for twenty infractions apiece, which would lead to more goals, but I think it would cripple the game. Not only would games get largely decided on power play percentages, but I don't think the games would even be that watchable. Maybe I'm cynical, but I think that an oversaturation of power plays makes for very unexciting hockey--it becomes a bunch of set plays with hardly any hitting, and the killing team gets to ice the puck freely. There's hardly any back-and-forth aspect to power play hockey, and with enough power plays the importance of 5-on-5 scoring would diminish a bunch (and I think it already has taken a hit).
I'm also a bit stumped as to what the "solution" is, but I don't know that I'm upset that a set of referees is trying to remain relatively unnoticeable in the face of so many possible infractions. I think inherently that's what hockey fans/players/coaches still want and expect from referees, and I don't think anybody's been hugely surprised at how games have been called. Yes, it's a system that feels more political than it should, but if it were a case of "everything gets called", I'd probably stop watching. A great power play or a great penalty kill is fantastic to watch, but it needs to be done in moderation.
(I am not advocating putting the whistles away for 70 minutes, however. The refs last night seemed set on not letting the Sharks' season end on a penalty kill, which (a) didn't work, and (b) carries its own set of headaches.)

Bruce Ciskie: I've always been upset with a lot of the stuff that's let go. This year seems worse to me, probably because I made more of an effort to watch regular-season games this year (we had Center Ice for the second half of the season, and I watched games all the time, whereas I used to only watch the occasional Wild and national TV game in years past). I'd never noticed the difference between regular-season and playoff officiating like I have this year.

My angst tends to come from A) the selective nature of most of the calls, and B) the idea that if you buckled down and called the rulebook for one season, players would adjust and you'd have a better game.

Maybe B is wrong, but we'll probably never know. They've never bothered to try.

Another log on the fire, perhaps: What about the disallowed goal in Game Five of Dallas-San Jose? The league insists the ruling was correct, and I'm inclined to pretend they're right for a second. Assuming that the ruling is correct based on the letter of the law, should the "kicking motion" rule be looked at and perhaps revised to include wording about intent?

Earl Sleek: That in my mind was the worst call of the playoffs I've seen, and had it gone against anyone except Dallas I would have raised a bigger stink (I think Dallas
is probably five years away from escaping the infamous B. Hull allowed goal controversy in my mind). I have no doubt that the hugest factors in that goal were (a) the series score and (b) the game score. It was complete baloney.
That said, I have been an advocate for including the word "intent" in that kicking rule for some time now, as I think it adds a useful complexity that lends itself to allowing more goals. I think the Morrow goal was a good goal even without that clarification, though, and I'm not proud of the league's call on that play AT ALL.

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