Vancouver Sun

Markstrom shrugs off pad crackdown

- PATRICK JOHNSTON pjohnston@postmedia.com twitter.com/risingacti­on

Efforts by goalies to employ more than just good technique to stop shots probably date back to the beginning of hockey.

It wasn’t until the very last season of his NHL career that Corey Hirsch really understood how many of his peers weren’t just pushing the limits when it came to the size of the protective equipment goalies wearing, but also blatantly landing themselves far into the cheating zone.

Hirsch, the former Canucks goalie who now works as the colour commentato­r on the team’s radio broadcast, was with the Dallas Stars organizati­on in 2002-03. Signed to be the No. 3 man behind Marty Turco and Ron Tugnutt, Hirsch played in two NHL games with the Stars that season.

“It’s when I saw Marty pull off his jersey for the first time that I realized how much goalies were cheating,” he said this week.

Not only was Turco wearing a big chest protector and a baggy jersey, but he had engineered his oversized goalie pants to have what amounted to a pouch in the front, so that pucks that hit him in the chest would settle there instead of spilling back onto the ice.

“Patrick Roy used to have things sticking out the side of his pants,” he said.

And then he went back to the very start of his career with the New York Rangers: “The base of Mike Richter’s leg pads were 15 inches wide. They were like bells.”

Under the rules at the time, leg pads were supposed to be 12 inches wide.

It’s with all that in mind that we come to the changes in goalie chest, shoulder and arm protection that the league instituted this season.

As goalies have grown in stature and become masters of playing on their knees, their leg pads splayed from side to side, creating a nearly impenetrab­le wall along the ice, the league has become more aggressive in setting limits to how much net goalies can cover simply by showing up.

At the same time, of course, the materials and technology available for goalie equipment has advanced far, far past the horsehair gear of yesterday.

But so has, of course, the velocity of shots, as players have become stronger and stronger, and are now using sticks made of synthetic materials, allowing them to fire shots at velocities unheard of in the days of wooden blades.

Although shooters may be able to shoot harder, goalies wearing better equipment that’s bigger than ever, combined with a focus from coaches on defensive schemes, have driven scoring rates on a downward trend.

A year ago, the league pushed to make goalies wear more streamline­d pants, with less allowance for bagginess. They wanted to force goalies to play more to make saves, to rely less on simply blocking shots.

In similar terms comes this season’s push to make what goalies wear on their upper bodies smaller.

The “floating ” shoulder pieces are narrower than they were before and the arms have been made more streamline­d, inevitably creating more natural gaps for goalies to contemplat­e.

And while Flyers goalie Brian Elliott was very vocal earlier this week about the changes — “I’ve already sent a couple emails to (NHL executive) Kay Whitmore. I’m getting bruised like crazy on my arms,” he told the South Jersey Courier-Post — Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom insists he has no complaints.

“(My gear) is basically the same as last year,” he said. “It was already smaller than others.”

He also said that, while he hates conceding goals, he was resigned to why the league was pushing for changes: “It’s like with the pants last year. You just have to get used to it.”

As detailed by Kevin Woodley and Greg Balloch in InGoal magazine this summer, the league was looking to maintain goalie safety while making pads more formfittin­g.

While Woodley and Balloch noted that Markstrom and his backup, Anders Nilsson, two of the NHL’s biggest goalies by stature, were likely to seem “smaller” under the new rules, they also pointed out that Tampa Bay netminder Andrei Vasilevski­y, another big goalie, played last season in a smaller Bauer-made chest protector and performed so well that he was a Vezina finalist.

Markstrom took a similar angle to the question of what smaller pads do.

“Focus on my technique,” he said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom dives to collect the loose puck against the Flames on Saturday night in Calgary. While some NHL puck stoppers are complainin­g that new equipment rules are offering goalies less protection, Markstrom says it hasn’t been an issue for him.
GETTY IMAGES Canucks goalie Jacob Markstrom dives to collect the loose puck against the Flames on Saturday night in Calgary. While some NHL puck stoppers are complainin­g that new equipment rules are offering goalies less protection, Markstrom says it hasn’t been an issue for him.

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