The Telegram (St. John's)

Sticks and slashes break bones

NHL aims for less pain, so it will be cracking down on flagrant slashing this year

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

When slash after slash broke one of Johnny Gaudreau’s fingers, he called it part of the game.

The Calgary Flames winger known as “Johnny Hockey” is one of the NHL’S most marketable players, so broken bones should be a problem.

Slashing has become such a regular element in NHL games that it necessitat­ed 791 minor penalties last season with countless more going uncalled. Gaudreau’s broken finger and Marc Methot’s lacerated pinkie brought enough attention to the issue that the league is taking a stronger stand on flagrant slashing this year to cut down on injuries and obstructio­n.

“I think it’s tough for the refs to make those calls in games: You don’t really know how bad a slash is,” said Gaudreau, who sat out two and a half weeks after surgery to repair a fractured finger on his left hand. “But if they can harp down or look at it a little more closely, I think it might cause a little less injuries. Guys won’t be missing substantia­l time. I think it’d be huge.”

It was impossible to ignore slashing when Sidney Crosby sliced Methot’s finger open during a game in March, forcing the defenceman to miss three weeks. No penalty was called, and Crosby didn’t receive any supplement­al discipline.

After members of the league’s competitio­n committee recommende­d a closer look at slashing, officials have been instructed that it’s OK to call it more this season. NHL director of officiatin­g Stephen Walkom said the rise in slashing over the past decade came about after the stricter enforcemen­t of hooking and holding following the 2004-05 lockout with players finding new tactics to slow the game down.

“Players started slashing in between the hands and on the hands, and the whacking became hacking became something that became the norm in the game,” Walkom said. “It’s time to have a stronger enforcemen­t to let the players know what they can and can’t do. If you’re going to be whacking a player’s hands six, eight feet from the puck, there’s a good chance that you’re going to be penalized if it’s seen by the officials on the ice.”

So many slashing penalties were called in the first few preseason games that it was somewhat comical. Philadelph­ia Flyers defenceman Shayne Gostisbehe­re understand­s slashing but said he doesn’t know if it should be a penalty when no one knows why the whistle was blown.

Walkom sent a note reminding referees that the intent was to focus on slashes around the hands, not every time a player’s stick hits an opponent in the heavily-padded pants. Slashing at players’ hands will not only be an area of emphasis on the ice but also from the league office where new vice-president of player safety George Parros is watching closely.

The former enforcer said slashes delivered with greater force or directed at players’ fingers will be met with fines and/ or suspension­s.

“We’re going to try and change player behaviour,” Parros said. “We’re certainly trying to get rid of a pattern of a certain type of slash. If that’s like a harder slash on the fingertips as opposed to maybe in the elbow pad or something, that might be something we look at. And if it’s a pattern of a certain type of location slash or if it’s a pattern of a player, we’re going to look to eliminate both of those.”

Reducing unnecessar­y injuries is just one piece of this tighter enforcemen­t. As with the crackdown on the hooking, holding and interferen­ce that mucked games up in the late 1990s and early 2000s, fewer slashes should open the ice up for offensive players at evenstreng­th and potentiall­y lead to more power plays.

“In some ways it’s going to put even bigger premium on getting body position and not being stuck in a position where you have to reach for a guy,” Carolina Hurricanes forward Jeff Skinner said. “Usually that’s a positive sign for getting more opportunit­ies to produce.”

St. Louis Blues coach Mike Yeo said he already noticed players slashing less often a few games into the preseason. That’s one of the intended consequenc­es of calling certain types of slashes more.

“The players are the smartest people in the game relative to the game and they will adjust because nobody wants to sit in the penalty box,” Walkom said. “A lot of it’s reflex and habit, but the players will break old habits with a consistent enforcemen­t.”

Old habits die hard, but it’s easier than healing broken bones.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Dallas Stars defenceman Esa Lindell gets his stick up on Nathan Mackinnon of the Colorado Avalanche in an NHL pre-season game this week. The league will be clamping down on the stickwork this season, especially slashing.
AP PHOTO Dallas Stars defenceman Esa Lindell gets his stick up on Nathan Mackinnon of the Colorado Avalanche in an NHL pre-season game this week. The league will be clamping down on the stickwork this season, especially slashing.

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