British Guy Reacts To THE CODE (The Unwritten Rules of Fighting and Retribution In Ice Hockey)

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Mert Salih

Mert Salih

Жыл бұрын

British Guy Reacts To THE CODE (The Unwritten Rules of Fighting and Retribution In Ice Hockey)
This is my reaction to THE CODE (The Unwritten Rules of Fighting and Retribution In Ice Hockey)
Original Video - • THE CODE - The Unwritt...
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British Guy Reacts To THE CODE (The Unwritten Rules of Fighting and Retribution In Ice Hockey)

Пікірлер: 239
@KB_-_
@KB_-_ Жыл бұрын
I’d love to see him react to “How one violent hit snowballed into years of championship-grade hockey beef | Red Wings vs Avalanche”… so see how all this can plays out 😂
@JackyJames1
@JackyJames1 Жыл бұрын
good idea!! I certainly agree ! The best American rivalry in hockey by far! ( mostly Canadian players) Still, hopefully he will react to it :)
@redmoongaming7122
@redmoongaming7122 Жыл бұрын
That video is amazing if he hasn’t done a video on it yet he should (binge watching)
@bencracknellCA
@bencracknellCA Жыл бұрын
I'm a Wings fan and I still say "f*ck Colorado"
@nerdingout3560
@nerdingout3560 Жыл бұрын
Those playoff games were the best in the early 2000s
@michaelmacintyre6996
@michaelmacintyre6996 Жыл бұрын
Being Canadian, I feel pride when someone actually takes the time to understand “The Code”. Once you understand Canada/hockey, you will come to realize why people know that Canada always punches above their weight.
@jemal999
@jemal999 11 ай бұрын
Canada follows the same code.. whether in Hockey, War, or Comedy. Punch up, not down.
@TheDylls
@TheDylls 5 күн бұрын
Sometimes you gotta punch a FRIEND before you can comfortably hang out with them later on. Someone punching outside of The Code needs to be shut down immediately or else it ruins it for all of us and we can no longer punch out friends anymore 😅❤
@svntn
@svntn Жыл бұрын
we almost had a goalie fight in the nhl yesterday, but the ref separated them for some odd reason us fans don’t understand. broadcasters said it was bad for the game, but i think any hockey fan can agree that goalie fights are some of the most entertaining moments in hockey
@jordanhayward7283
@jordanhayward7283 Жыл бұрын
That game was hectic, but my thoughts on the bad for the game meant specifically for the teams as then both teams would have lost their starting goalies and neither team would get the powerplay
@thecaffeinequeen
@thecaffeinequeen Жыл бұрын
HONESTLY everyone was grilling that announcer for saying it was "bad for the game". It all started because of a sucker punch to Kopley, which started a helluva scrum at the crease and then the opposing goaltender came to center ice, rapped his stick at the line like he was ringing a dinner bell. Kopley's reaction, just popping up from the stack of humanity like a cartoon character was honestly HILARIOUS, too. I'm sad the refs stopped those two from fighting. Kopley's suspension was unfortunate but fair cause he was whacking people with that blocker before one of the refs ripped it off.
@danbaker300
@danbaker300 Жыл бұрын
Some of this is a little outdated now - removing your helmet before a fight is an extra minor penalty in addition to the major for the fight itself, so that doesn't happen anymore. And a couple of the other things mentioned (no sucker-punches, stop once someone goes down) are actually written rules, in that there is an explicitly larger penalty for doing so (a game misconduct - ejection - in addition to the major, and in the case of a sucker-punch you can expect a long suspension from the league office as well). But for the most part, it's still accurate. Goalie fights are quite rare; they're usually when a game has gotten completely out of hand and there's a full-on line brawl taking place, and even then they will usually stay out of it. But occasionally if there's enough bad blood between the teams, the goalies will decide they're feeling left out and have at it (usually late in the game, as goalies fighting almost always get a game misconduct in addition to the major).
@Timmycoo
@Timmycoo Жыл бұрын
Yeah, it's hard to have a video that will always be up to date but it's a good backbone because most of the videos that have fights (in compilations) aren't from the last couple seasons.
@JackyJames1
@JackyJames1 Жыл бұрын
I'm Canadian and i certainly respect you alot for doing those videos about our National Sport ! Thank you
@Charlie_Kelly666
@Charlie_Kelly666 Жыл бұрын
*Most popular
@jayfedder1578
@jayfedder1578 Жыл бұрын
Yeah our national sport is technically lacrosse for some dumb reason
@Charlie_Kelly666
@Charlie_Kelly666 Жыл бұрын
@@jayfedder1578 It was first played by the natives back in like the 17th century that's why
@Bruhaha9
@Bruhaha9 Жыл бұрын
The enforcer whose only real job is to enforce is extinct now. There are still tough guys that can step up, but everyone has to be able to play hockey now. That was a natural evolution of roster makeup recently.
@laurentco
@laurentco Жыл бұрын
"The Code" is endlessly fascinating. One thing that the video doesn't address is how a fight (or lack of a fight) can affect a game. For example, say your team is down 2 or 3 goals in an important match. A good fight, particularly where the losing (on the scoreboard) team's player does well, can turn the game's tide. Or, in the opposite scenario, a star player gets abused, and nobody responds; it signals that there are big problems with that team and that they are unwilling to stand up for each other. If a star player gets hit with a dirty hit, often the players on the ice settle it right then and do not wait for the enforcer to do the fighting. This can only be seen as a good thing for that star player's team. There was a great example of that in a game I watched recently. The star got hit with a borderline dirty hit, and a large but relatively skilled player (certainly no goon) took it upon himself to fight the guy who hit the star. That's golden for that team. It's also good for the game in general because the stars are ultimately what put fans in the seats. If the stars get injured and can't play, everybody loses.
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
Do you have any evidence that these effects are real, and not just cherry-picked examples of confirmation bias? What research is there to demonstrate this effect is actually real, rather than just imagined? You remember the times that you think you saw it make a difference, and forget all the times that it didn't.
@laurentco
@laurentco Жыл бұрын
@@puckerings hahaha. I know what confirmation bias is; I'm all about science, data, and evidence. And no, I don't know of any scholars who study the effects of fights on the momentum of games, so no there is no empirical data, but I'm pretty sure you knew that when you asked the question. So without data, we don't know whether any of this has an effect, but we don't know that it doesn't.
@davidedwards3838
@davidedwards3838 Жыл бұрын
We are taught at a young age these rules without ever being told it's a code. It's just the way the game is played here. We are also taught at a young age to play through pain. That is why you pros getting KO'd losing getting stitches and the jumping right back in. I think this is the reason soccer hasn't taken off in Canada. The whole flopping about over nothing isnt how we are taught to play sports. We are taught to play through pain not flop about and over react.
@danielzerbe8567
@danielzerbe8567 Жыл бұрын
"If you can't beat 'em in the alley, you can't beat 'em on the ice" This was very true from the sixties/seventies, and the movie Slapshot (starring Paul Newman) exemplified the minor leagues of that time. You can read up on his respect for the minor league players he worked with during this film and the way he enjoyed the genuine decency of the players. A first reaction to this film (which is a cult film for all professional hockey players), would be enjoyable. Lots of laughs and some insites to the players who luved the game and lived the dream of professional hockey in the NHL!!
@SuperballsSupervidsOnYT
@SuperballsSupervidsOnYT Жыл бұрын
RIP Bob Probert, best fighter ever in the NHL.
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
This is pretty tasteless, given that Probert's brain showed evidence of CTE. So many hockey fighters have suffered terrible brain injuries because of their fighting. It should NOT be celebrated.
@frankstared
@frankstared Жыл бұрын
@@puckerings You are quite right. Anyone who celebrates fighting is sociopathic to some degree. Bob Probert was a gentle soul who was exploited endlessly by business psychopaths and sociopathic fans. It is beyond tragic what happened to that human being, repeatedly treated like garbage by Canadian society.
@SuperballsSupervidsOnYT
@SuperballsSupervidsOnYT Жыл бұрын
@puckerings except it should be celebrated. Probert was a hero and kept many great players from sustaining major long term injuries at his own expense. He knew damage well what he was getting into. Look at players like Sidney Crosby who hasn't had an enforcer to protect him. He's had more concussions in some years than Wayne Gretzky had in his career.
@SuperballsSupervidsOnYT
@SuperballsSupervidsOnYT Жыл бұрын
So all boxing and MMA fans are sociopaths? You realize that Probert relished his role and he willingly out himself in harms way to protect others. If anyone made a cheap shot on Yzerman the next time they played Detroit they would have Probert haunting their dreams the days leading up to that game. You both sound like raging pussies. I bet your wives fight for you.
@williammontroy9024
@williammontroy9024 Ай бұрын
Get the hell out of here with this being tasteless .. bob knew what he was getting himself in to and not only did it well but wouldn't have it any other way . He'd honestly be offended at your comment here . What's tasteless is criticizing someone saying rest in peace to a deceased player . Do better
@mattc2824
@mattc2824 Жыл бұрын
When the narrator says "it's a way for the players to police the game themselves" that's the best descriptive term of why fighting is allowed. Even during the fight, when it's over, it's over. No one ever gets excessive and starts beating someone after they go down. I love soccer too, but in hockey, players who dive or take a cheap shot are extremely shamed by the community. Even the greatest skill players would be too ashamed and embarrassed of themselves to dive like Neymar or Robben. And when they do, there's a fight and the other person on your team who has to fight in your place will be like "no more of that shit"
@neilpk70
@neilpk70 Жыл бұрын
Rules that every elementary school kid on the Canadian prairies used to know by heart.
@body_by_depuy
@body_by_depuy Жыл бұрын
Goalie fights are pretty rare. They usually only happen when there's a long-term beef between the teams. (See the Detroit Red Wings vs. Colorado Avalanche, 1997-now. There's a pretty good goalie fight between Patrick Roy and Chris Osgood.)
@MissJoaniB
@MissJoaniB Жыл бұрын
Ray Emery v Martin Biron 2007 is my go-to on goalie fights. Mainly because the smile on Emery's face: he was looking forward to it.
@TheWctman
@TheWctman Жыл бұрын
A couple of things. At 5:07, todd bertuzzi suckerpunched steve moore, knocking Moore out and then falling to the ice on top of him, breaking some neck bones and ending Moore's career. Second, goalies usually get involved at the mayhem stage, where every player on the ice is already fighting or paired up to possibly fo so. For a segment on goalie fights, look up Patrick Roy vs Mike Vernon.
@vancouvervixen4253
@vancouvervixen4253 Жыл бұрын
Love that you reacted to this, and I feel like you actually really get it! I personally think fighting / the code is VERY important in hockey and the sport would be MUCH more dangerous without it. Plus it’s entertaining as hell, being in the crowd when there’s a fight is amazing!! I’m sure you’ve heard the saying by now, “I went to a fight and a hockey game broke out” 😂😂 And you’re totally correct this should be Scotland’s national sport! 🙌🏻🍻
@dejakiara8749
@dejakiara8749 Жыл бұрын
So glad that you got to this one. It makes the fights on the ice make more sense. Protect your team!
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
Protect your team from the other team's "enforcer". Makes total sense.
@GiuseppeDAntelmi
@GiuseppeDAntelmi Жыл бұрын
I remember a game between the Penguins and the Islanders in 2011. There was some really bad blood between them thanks to some questionable hits in their previous meeting. It all boiled over in spectacular fashion. 65 penalties for a grand total of 346 penalty minutes. 15 "five for fighting" major penalties. 21 game misconducts (red cards). Each team starts with 20 players. By the end of the game the Penguins had 7 players and the Islanders had 9. Great example of what happens when the code is not obeyed.
@Cashcrop54
@Cashcrop54 5 ай бұрын
In 1967 I started watching hockey. We had a team in the IHL (International Hockey League). I saw bench clearing brawls erupt because a player was high stacked, or boarded, and no penalty was called. You could be sure back then it would result in a big fight for sure. Fighting keeps players honest .
@thebelovedone2
@thebelovedone2 Жыл бұрын
I think this is the perfect example of the code, Wheeler vs Malkin. In the previous game Malkin hit Wheeler with a “bad hit” (ie to the head). He accepts Wheeler’s challenge, and although Malkin does not throw a punch in return, he also does not turtle. kzbin.info/www/bejne/a5-8YZiipJmWpJo After the game, Malkin admitted he accepted the fight out of the tremendous respect he had for Wheeler: kzbin.info/www/bejne/kInUhXisipKphdk
@Gnomojo
@Gnomojo 22 күн бұрын
I love this so much. I’ve been watching your videos for a bit now. In Canadian. And Scottish by descent. In a campbell. Hate me or no. That’s my family history. I also love all your videos. Watching you react to how savage we are is a nice little joke for us. Yeah. Don’t mess with Canadians.
@patsow4797
@patsow4797 Жыл бұрын
As a Canadian, it’s obvious that I’m a huge hockey fan. The quality of the sport in a skill and finesse required is unparalleled. The code is the best way to keep the game and players in check. A few minutes in the same bin is nothing compared to getting punched out or having your head run into the boards for being a cheap shot artist. Trying to intentionally injure someone should have immediate retribution from the opposing team without question. Glad you were making these videos and becoming more conscious of the sport of professional hockey . Feel free to stop calling at ice hockey as people in North America. Just refer to it as hockey. #FunFact
@chadjmoore
@chadjmoore Жыл бұрын
Lmao so Canadian of you to gently ask to drop the "ice". I thought about it but decided to wait to see how long it would go.
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
"The code is the best way to keep the game and players in check." Absolute horseshit. Research has demonstrated that the players most likely to engage in dangerous penalties (head shots, slashes, hits from behind, etc) WERE THE ENFORCERS. So you needed a player like Bob Probert to protect your team from players like Bob Probert. The idea that enforcers kept dirty play is check is received wisdom at best, and a complete fantasy at worst. The enforcers were, in fact, the dirtiest players on the ice.
@lathamroman4599
@lathamroman4599 6 ай бұрын
So proud of you liking our hockey... And the unwritten... I'm glad that you think it works well... So do I
@kickinacoustic6119
@kickinacoustic6119 Жыл бұрын
Goalie fights are fairly rare however when they do happen everything else on the ice tends to stop to watch it. I definitely recommend watching a video on them.
@MrMccarthycdxx
@MrMccarthycdxx Ай бұрын
Goalie fights are rare but are some of the best things to see in a game.
@chadjmoore
@chadjmoore Жыл бұрын
Dude I really enjoy listening to you get excited over hockey! I played goalie growing up. Never once had to fight. Enjoyed watching retaliation for getting jammed into the mesh. Lol
@Garkimyer
@Garkimyer Жыл бұрын
These rules apply in all levels of hockey after hitting is introduced, with the exception that fist fighting is a 1 game suspension instead of a 5 minute penalty in junior hockey so the other team will just remember who you are and do their absolute best to hurt you with a clean hit for the rest of the game. The kind of exception is if you hit the other teams goalie. That will get you hit from behind, cross checked, dog piled on, and often punched once you’re playing at a competitive level. Ref’s don’t usually call penalties on players who are protecting their goalies since its much easier for a goalie to get hurt from a hit than the rest of the players; their helmets focus almost exclusively on protection from the front so if they get knocked over backwards they often get concussions.
@sakomanlee
@sakomanlee Жыл бұрын
What we need is: "NHL goalie reacts to hurling goalkeepers' 'protective' equipment!"
@choppsuey4626
@choppsuey4626 9 ай бұрын
As a goalie, it's extremely rare that we fight, usually happens in what's a called a bench brawl, or bench clear
@knightamongknaves
@knightamongknaves Жыл бұрын
There are two movies "Goon" and "Goon : Last Of The Enforces", classic Hockey Movie "Slap Shot" (1977) with Paul Newman Old hockey fight videos under "Don Cherry's Rock'em Sock'em Hockey", Don Cherry was former coach of NHL Boston Bruins team and former co/host of Coach's Corner usually shown between the first and second period of Saturday Hockey Night in Canada games. Also a Canadian TV show called "Letterkenny" introduces a character called "Shorsey" which now has his own character/TV based show on fictional Hockey League in Northern Ontario, there is a Season 2 currently ordered / in production.
@danlang1978
@danlang1978 Жыл бұрын
Funny that as a 40ish Canadian, that as watched hockey all my life, I understand the unwritten rule more than the faceoff rules
@willbutler6261
@willbutler6261 Жыл бұрын
It's so cool you are getting so into this! I love how open minded you are.
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
When it comes to fighting in hockey, keeping a mind open enough to accept this horseshit means letting your brain fall out. "The code" is ad hoc bullshit, made up on the spot at times, selectively applied, and makes no sense to boot.
@Coreadrin
@Coreadrin Жыл бұрын
Hockey needs a release valve for players and internal policing. You are on something almost as hard as concrete, carrying something that can be used as a weapon, playing a full contact sport at crazy high speeds. You are surrounded by the boards - there's no place to escape. It's a pressure cooker waiting to blow up if there aren't policing mechanisms. Hockey has moved much more towards a skill game over the last decade where even enforcers/tough guys need to have a higher minimum skill level and contribute to stay in the game. Not sure if this trend will continue or if it moves in cycles, but time will tell. If you want to see probably the craziest era of hockey fighting look up some brawls from the Broad Street Bully philadelphia flyers era. Wild times.
@ericjackson637
@ericjackson637 Жыл бұрын
Check out “Ice Guardians”, a lot of great interviews with current and former enforcers. Some of the toughest guys to ever play the game including the guys tasked with protecting Wayne Gretzky, Dave Semenko especially.
@Shortsac72
@Shortsac72 Ай бұрын
A prime example is "Fight Night in Hockeytown" It started a full year prior.. Then it got dealt with! Players have LONG memories when payback is due 😉
@JimmyS.25
@JimmyS.25 Жыл бұрын
Hockey is the perfect sport. Its unbelievably hard, but fair. Its pacey, but also incredibly tactical. Its a bit violent, but the players generally are honorable good people. I'm so glad I discovered this sport a few years ago.
@sid7088
@sid7088 Жыл бұрын
The sport of Canadian box lacrosse also has the exact same code. Both are Canada's national sports ( hockey - winter, lacrosse - summer).
@webcrawler2007
@webcrawler2007 Жыл бұрын
So pumped that you covered this one! You definitely covered it from my suggestion, not others lol
@lathamroman4599
@lathamroman4599 6 ай бұрын
Thank you for highlighting this I have joined your channel and liked your video
@bebedenham362
@bebedenham362 Ай бұрын
hello!!! You are adorable! I thoroughly enjoyed your reaction and your genuine interest in the contents within. In any case....well done mate!
@Mellmick26
@Mellmick26 Жыл бұрын
I recently watched a hockey game on tv where one member of the opposing team was in a outrage against one player and instead of joining the fight the remaining players surrounded the player he was trying to fight with so officials could remove the aggravated player …once he was off the ice they all shook hands 👏🇨🇦🫶🏻
@zacharyliles8657
@zacharyliles8657 Жыл бұрын
eI'd HIGHLY recommend Secret Base's video on the Red Wings-Avalanche rivalry from the late 90s and early 2000s. It was one of the greatest rivalries in all of sports and a perfect example of upholding The Code. I think you would really enjoy it
@nfbuckeye
@nfbuckeye Жыл бұрын
Goalie fights are very rare, but when they happen, it gets the whole building fired up!
@jsuperflyc
@jsuperflyc Жыл бұрын
Retaliation prevents players from throwing elbows or using the hockey stick as a weapon, which is unfair. If you take a big hit because you had your head down, your team will still jump in to your defense, but that's really on you.
@goreilly2005
@goreilly2005 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing this. There are so many people that don't understand hockey.
@ajaytazzdemona8360
@ajaytazzdemona8360 Жыл бұрын
Goalie fights are the mother of pearl of hockey fights
@meanmutton
@meanmutton Жыл бұрын
Interestingly, there are very few pure enforcers in the game today like there was in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. Everyone needs to be able to play with skill. That said, there are quite a few modern players who are in the old "Gordy Howe" mold of being great fighters and great scorers.
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
Thank fuck for that. The league is finally rooting out the ridiculous violence that has plagued the game, especially since the 1970s.
@jawstrock2215
@jawstrock2215 11 ай бұрын
Another very important rule, that is unwritten, but very well known: -What happens on the Ice, stays on the Ice. Meaning if something happens during a game, you deal with it within the game. Don't take any of the negativity/competitiveness outside of it.
@logwog1991
@logwog1991 Жыл бұрын
Went to a fight, and a hockey game broke out. 🤣🤣🤣
@tonylloy327
@tonylloy327 9 ай бұрын
About the dis on Crosby in the video you're commenting on...just to be fair...this video shows how he was targeted as a rookie when he came into the league, because no one on his team enforced 'the code'. So he had to learn to do it himself. In the highlights shown here, you'll see some insane hits, but also see how despite having lost two teeth from the abuse he remained in the game and scored the winning goal. Crosby knew the code and re-wrote it, for the better. kzbin.info/www/bejne/j6GqpqWfjM2AsKM
@contranimal
@contranimal Жыл бұрын
One of the many great things about hockey ... Most other sports if you get in a fight you get ejected from the game, ice hockey, ya go sit for 5 minutes or so, think about what you did, then go back out on the ice.
@TCoSDecoyIV71
@TCoSDecoyIV71 Жыл бұрын
He did miss an honorable mention which ties in with the “don’t hit the star player” and it don’t hit the rookie
@rachelwoodward5476
@rachelwoodward5476 Жыл бұрын
As a proud Canadian I am not ashamed to admit I LOVE hockey fights. But to be honest when they go to long then I start getting nervous for the players To answer your question about goalie fights: no. I think I’ve only seen a handful throughout the almost 20 years I’ve been watching
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
You should NOT love hockey fights. Hockey fights result in concussions. SO MANY ex-enforcers have brain trauma that led to drug addiction and suicides, and other early deaths. Loving something that causes so much harm to the people that do it is shameful.
@rowdyharger2799
@rowdyharger2799 5 ай бұрын
Final game off the season, 4-4 tie, 2:12 minutes to go in game. Winner takes 1st place into play-offs. Fights break out all over the ice, lights turned off. Game called. Officials didn't even want the game to start due to bad blood. God I loved playing hockey. (67 yrs. Old)
@Lionlover666
@Lionlover666 Жыл бұрын
To answer your question on goalie fights. No they are not common. They only really happen when everyone else on the ice is already fighting. Or the other Goalie is already fighting. Goalie fight etiquette is that if you wanna fight the other team's goalie as the Goalie. You head to center ice and wait to see if they accept. Or if the other goalie is already fighting. You may skate all the way down the ice to initiate.
@andrewanderson5297
@andrewanderson5297 Жыл бұрын
Tiger Williams, Wendal Clark and Tie Domi some of the best. The other stuff was the Toronto and Philly games.
@Simone-uu8ne
@Simone-uu8ne 5 ай бұрын
The main difference with soccer is that, in hockey, the rink is much smaller, and the players are skating 30+ mph one near the others. On the other hand, in soccer, 20 players run around a bigger pitch for much longer and bigger distances. There is some physicality in the latter, but that'd mean being one man down for the whole game or without a change.
@vizzini589
@vizzini589 Жыл бұрын
Couldn't stop laughing when you said it should be Scotland's National game.
@brianschaffer9220
@brianschaffer9220 Жыл бұрын
The problem with if they handled soccer disputes like they do in hockey, in soccer, you are limited to what is it, two substitutions, and they play all the time. In hockey, if a fight happens, they just go to the penalty box for 5 minutes and then back to play. Plus, they can switch out players however often they want, as long as there isn't never more than 5 skaters and a goalie on the ice at once. (or on occasion 6 with no goalie if a team is down by 1 or 2 late in a game, they will have a 6th skater, to create an advantage in getting a possible goal to tie. Just have to make sure the puck stays down on your end and not get down on the other end and have the puck going in your own goal.)
@Jon-hz3iu
@Jon-hz3iu Жыл бұрын
There are some fine points or nuances about the sport of hockey that almost necessitate the existence and the rationalization of "enforcement" - which gets mischaracterized as those players called "goons". There are some parallels in other sports. Hockey has some aspects that are unique within the entire scope of the sport, that generate the justification of a "code". First of all, the sport is played on ice - anything that happens in hockey first revolves around the exceptionally high skill level of skating first. Secondly, while there are multiple lines of players - the goalie is static. Thirdly, the game is within a physical boundary of the rink and boards. Fourth, sticks are used for the puck but can be manipulated as a potential means of personal interference / "weapon". Fifth, the measurement of offside (as deemed unto the ball or puck) is entirely different in judgement in hockey as compared to all of rugger, soccer or American football. ALL of these elements - create a set of playing circumstances that enable a lot of room in hockey to abuse an opposing player. If the goalie or a major finesse player are shut down or removed by a penalty or a misconduct (especially in the playoffs) it can change a team's season, never mind one game. Soccer, rugby, football, basketball - all have distinct levels of contact - but none of these can break down as egregiously as hockey. There are vast role differences in hockey. A major finesse oriented, smaller individual on skates can have a massively different role tnan a towering defenceman and may have a drastically different skill set all within the context of what can be done on skates. Stick handling, shooting, positioning players in relationship to the boards and fighting all occur on skates. Protecting the goalie, protecting extremely impactful scorers and the heightened physical element introduced by sharp blades, hard boards, slipping (balance), equipment; make enforcement justifiable by morals and human ethics that transcend the simple aspect that are within a game. It is a very tough game that has a governing aspect of getting the crap pounded out of you that, if removed from the game, will spiral the game into a far more abusable format and be dominated by mediocrity. Some of the best teams have relationships that form between enforcers and goal scorers. Odjick and Buré, Gretzky and Semenko, are two of them. If a player went after Buré or Gretzky - they would get their lights punched out. Other sports also have critical physicalities and a game within a game such as the critical performance of the front row in the scrum in rugby or the protection of a quarterback in football. Next time you watch a hockey fight - remember that it is happening on ice on metal blades first with total disregard for knuckles smashing bone and protective padding. And if you want to watch some old school competiton? Canada vs USSR - 1972 footage with Phil Esposito shouting across the ice from bench to bench - looking for a fight. Madness.
@christophermerlot3366
@christophermerlot3366 Жыл бұрын
Funny enough retired goon George Parros (seen at the beginning of this video) is currently the NHL's Director of Player Safety.
@kentgrady9226
@kentgrady9226 Жыл бұрын
Hockey players are by far the toughest athletes I'm aware of. The sport itself is incredibly demanding and violent - potential for injury on par with rugby and American football. (Hardcore hockey people believe it's more dangerous than football... Debatable, but not really my point). What makes hockey players so tough is a combination of the hardship of the sport and the number of games played. A full hockey season can potentially last up to nearly 110 games. It is furthermore a ruthless combination of aerobic and anaerobic effort. For the uninitiated, hockey allows unlimited substitutions, which occur on the fly. With a game divided into 3 twenty minute periods, it is common even for stars to play less than half the game. Even so, twenty five minutes of game play spread over two hours of real time (including intermissions between periods and game stoppages) is exhausting. Hockey players are absolute gladiators.
@ronemtae3468
@ronemtae3468 Жыл бұрын
You know it’s funny I read your comment and it never occurred to me how tough I thought you was because it’s the only sport I ever played and I played in the metropolitan league here in New York and Wood up to Toronto and play some junior and I bounced around but 160 games and Junior and head up or do you want scholarship here in the college in America and it never occurred to me how really tough the game what is till I sat down one night with my wife and went over how many injuries I had and the whole thing with the teeth and I got a tell you if I had any idea How much damage would be done to me I might have serious reservations about continuing after college you just don’t think about it because it’s a culture you get into and you don’t play any other sport after the age of say 17 or 18 because you have to focus 100% and you have to rest when you rest
@briangraham1024
@briangraham1024 Жыл бұрын
I went to a fight and a hockey game broke out! 🇨🇦😂🇨🇦
@kentzepick4169
@kentzepick4169 9 ай бұрын
Absolutely love your channel.
@StephaneMorin-jn6hh
@StephaneMorin-jn6hh Жыл бұрын
I'm 60 years old and I've been playing hockey for more that 50 years. The CODE was always part of the game and passed from father to son. I never backed down from a fight even when the other guy was bigger. Took some beatings but always had the respect of my teammates. That's what its all about. BEST GAME ON THE PLANET !!!
@jgriffin282
@jgriffin282 11 ай бұрын
Goalie fights are very rare. Everyone goes crazy for them though.
@I_am_chuckiebrown
@I_am_chuckiebrown Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed the reaction!
@annetteconway4722
@annetteconway4722 Жыл бұрын
and goalie fights are a big treat...they dont happen too often
@elimacdo
@elimacdo Жыл бұрын
You've pbably noticed that they always hang onto eachother while they are throwing fists. This is so they don't fall down as the fight ends once someone is down
@erikhusa5139
@erikhusa5139 Жыл бұрын
React to players coming home and playing against the team they got traded from.
@dianeladico1769
@dianeladico1769 Жыл бұрын
I saw a great example of #6 closely followed by #2. DH's alma mater (high school) game. Our team had a very small player-not powerful but quick and a good, clean player, nicknamed Mouse. One of the bigger guys on the other team decides targeting Mouse is a good idea. He laid Mouse out, Mouse did not have possession at the time. Refs didn't see it. The other team's coach kept him in. Shortly after, three of our guys put him into the boards. Refs *somehow* didn't see that, either. Kid went to his coach having a fit. Coach's body language was basically 'you asked for it'.
@beni908
@beni908 Жыл бұрын
As someone who grew up in the state of hockey. These rules you will see off ice. These are the rules most people up here go by in day to day life.
@pattaccone5347
@pattaccone5347 9 ай бұрын
11:08 during playoffs this year after Draisaitl got slashed really bad , Mcdavid went after Petro- prime example
@miloc9900
@miloc9900 3 ай бұрын
The code isn’t limited to hockey for Canadians - it’s a way of life!
@bartjopling4886
@bartjopling4886 Жыл бұрын
You don't have to play hockey to know the code and live by it. You will find people living by the code in most bars in Canada any given night
@TheCanadiangirl4
@TheCanadiangirl4 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, there's definitely a rule of standing up for your friends if they need it.
@ADub187
@ADub187 Жыл бұрын
Defenceman are my favorite players. They don't get appreciated as much as the other positions (goalie maybe). Tall to small, Zdeno Chara 6'9, Torrey Krug 5'9. & the goats like 🐐 Bobby orr 🐐, lidstrom, Robinson
@webcrawler2007
@webcrawler2007 Жыл бұрын
Goalie fights are really rare. Maybe one a year, league wide
@johnandangiecrowley6816
@johnandangiecrowley6816 Жыл бұрын
You keep saying that Hockey should be "Scotlands national sport", well surprisingly hockey did originate from Scotland from the late 1800 century. So thanks Scotland from Canada, our national sport. :)
@tavisenloe2020
@tavisenloe2020 Жыл бұрын
Theses are essentially playground rules. Kids these days aren’t being taught the rules. Dudes become lifelong friends under unspoken rules. Builds character.
@barbarae-b507
@barbarae-b507 Жыл бұрын
There are specific players on hockey teams that are partly there basically to fight.
@heatherm6105
@heatherm6105 Жыл бұрын
And the fight is over when they hit the ground because those skates are razor blades and ppl have bled out on the ice before just on accidental cuts from the skates but in fighting they must end it when they fall off the skates. The Oilers witnessed this in October last year where one of the players fell onto the ice during the game and a player from the other team stepped over him but not good enough and sliced every tendon and nerve down to the bone as well as arteries in the wrist. Gruesome!
@NovaDexter
@NovaDexter Жыл бұрын
Crosby is from Nova Scotia.
@dannyking4736
@dannyking4736 10 ай бұрын
Our game. Our rules. CHEERS 🇨🇦
@jkoll42
@jkoll42 Жыл бұрын
I can tell you as a former goalie (not NHL level) your teammates will go to war if you get hit and if you get hit you will remember that person to the end of time and blocker punch kidneys, slash, whatever you can do when they are in the crease and the ref isn't looking and it's completely acceptable. The other player understands why you are doing it, they would never tell a teammate or complain. 99% of the time hockey is self regulating (aside from stuff like offside or technical stuff the refs have to monitor) It's fast, it's sometimes violent, the amount of skill involved is mad. It's really a great sport.
@ronemtae3468
@ronemtae3468 Жыл бұрын
I played competitively probably for almost 19 maybe 20 years and I always wondered why are we so upset with the goalie get it he’s got most of the equipment on and it was meant to be funny at the same time you’re right when Goalie gets touched the switch goes off, especially if you’re a defenseman the switch goes off in your head and now you know they’ve started something and if we can’t get satisfaction, guess which goal is gonna get run in a couple of shifts
@jkoll42
@jkoll42 Жыл бұрын
@@ronemtae3468 Because the goalie is only responsible for stopping a puck / redirecting a puck. They have a crease around them where no contact can happen and there is an unwritten rule if they are outside of the crease you don't go after them because unless there is an empty net situation there is no way they can score.
@MrMpa31
@MrMpa31 Жыл бұрын
@@ronemtae3468 Goalies are in very vulnerable positions and easy targets. If it was open season on goalies, injuries would be massive and severe. Also, you only have 2 of them.
@andrewdurden5230
@andrewdurden5230 Жыл бұрын
You should read the NY Times online article about enforcer Derek Boogaard. It was a tough job.
@puckerings
@puckerings Жыл бұрын
"It was a tough job" is a rather shameful way to describe "it literally killed him, and many others like him."
@sj4iy
@sj4iy 3 ай бұрын
I’m going to argue pointing out crosby. He may be a generational player, but he’s taken a ton of cheap shots and missed a lot of time from severe concussions and injuries. He’s also the team captain and he stands up for his teammates.
@REIDiculous64
@REIDiculous64 Жыл бұрын
Also it use to happen but it’s a huge penalty if guys on the bench come out to fight, so if your on the ice be prepared there’s no one coming to help you.
@NicStryker1027
@NicStryker1027 Жыл бұрын
Do not turtle.... proceeds to show picture of Turtlechuk (Tkachuk)😂
@TheDylls
@TheDylls 5 күн бұрын
Baseball and basketball have their own "Codes". Baseball's is really out there, and basketball's seems to be largely "no showing off when you're winning"
@darthcanadian007
@darthcanadian007 Жыл бұрын
dustin byfuglien “HERE COMES THE BOOM” is a MUST watch
@lyndsayhorrigan1372
@lyndsayhorrigan1372 Жыл бұрын
If you want to see a good fight, look up the oilers vs atlanta bench brawl! I have never seen anything like it. An Oiler was fighting even after being knocked into the players bench!
@brenthenderson3983
@brenthenderson3983 Жыл бұрын
You must check out Bob Probert vs. Marty McSorely... Feb.4 1994, watch what happens at the end!!
@grahambrisebois3068
@grahambrisebois3068 8 ай бұрын
The coffee is perfect
@brentdallyn8459
@brentdallyn8459 Жыл бұрын
Enforcers were everywhere in the 70s -90's, If I remember right one team in the 70's signed a guy who could barely skate but was a boxing golden gloves champ, good trade off.
@frankstared
@frankstared Жыл бұрын
The surest measure of a society is how it treats its most vulnerable. And this is the generational lesson Canada has for its youth: if you aren't fast enough, skilled enough, you can become a fighter who risks health to entertain drunk business-people. No structural solutions to poverty needed. a self-perpetuating cycle of marginalization, exploitation and inequity.
@jimbodiced5979
@jimbodiced5979 Жыл бұрын
3:15 You just summed up in a few seconds what this video needed 10+ minutes to do. Granted, they go into a lot of the unwritren conduct. Similar to the old school "Gentleman's dual." Refs, in any sport, are always going to be somewhat limited to administer real consequences (outside of a full ejection). Ice hockey is played at such a fast tempo (hence why you often only play for a minute or so at a time before going to the bench), and guys get running around, and the nastiness and cheap shots become inevitable. The Enforcer is there for when things really get stupid, and the Refs can't squash it for an entire bench of guys (there's only so many guys you can jam into a penalty box, or warrant an ejection for), and this is why some players take it into their own hands. To, in hopes, intimidate other players from taking too many liberties, and seriously hurt somebody in an illegal way.
@jimbodiced5979
@jimbodiced5979 Жыл бұрын
*Duel
@punkybru5061
@punkybru5061 Жыл бұрын
I've only got to 12:41 but have to say so far just the most polite fair Canadian fighting rules lol.
@maureen4914
@maureen4914 Жыл бұрын
Enforcer.....such a more refined name than ......Goon. Watta great sport. 🇨🇦
@ericalbert4111
@ericalbert4111 Жыл бұрын
Your allowed fighting in box lacrosse as well you should check that out
@StephenMcguire-zk7kj
@StephenMcguire-zk7kj Жыл бұрын
The original Wolverine you like dynamite ? kzbin.info/www/bejne/kJmQcqmNg5KGosk
@tomtorres212
@tomtorres212 Жыл бұрын
A goalie fight is the rainbow-colored unicorn of hockey fights - it almost never happens ;)
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