Windsor Star

NHL to study changes to 3-on-3

- STEPHEN WHYNO

When the NHL implemente­d 3-on-3 play in overtime nearly a decade ago, the idea was to see the speed and skill hockey had to offer.

In recent years, 3-on-3 has slowed down, leading league officials to debate rule changes, such as not allowing the puck to go back past the centre red line like overand-back in basketball. The 3ICE league has had that rule from the beginning, and its return for a third season this spring and summer is another chance for the NHL to see how the experiment works for potential future use.

“That's one of my favourite rules,” Hockey Hall of Famer, four-time Stanley Cup champion and 3ICE coach Larry Murphy said, adding he'd support the NHL making that change. “What's great about the red line over-and-back rule is it puts a little more pressure on the puck — the team with the puck, the possession team. They've got a smaller area to work with.”

Murphy's team won the Patrick Cup as 3ICE champions last year, and he's back to defend that title for the league's third season, which runs from June 12 to Aug. 14. He's one of six hall of fame players serving as coaches for the eight teams, joined by Ray Bourque, Joe Mullen, Grant Fuhr, Guy Carbonneau and 2023 inductee Pierre Turgeon.

Adding to the group this season is retired New Jersey Devils defenceman Ken Daneyko, who despite being a rough-and-tumble player, likes what the NHL has done with 3-on-3 and wants to get through some coaching before recommendi­ng rule changes to the top league in the world.

“I don't think it's taken away from the excitement,” Daneyko said. “The rules of 3ICE, I think it's the right thing for the league, and if the NHL likes it as well and adopts it, OK, I'd be all for it.”

Colorado's Cale Makar, the 2022 playoff MVP and Norris Trophy winner as the league's top defenceman when the Avalanche won the Stanley Cup, plays plenty of 3-on3 OT and is content with how it's currently constructe­d.

“I am indifferen­t on that,” Makar said. “You utilize (speed) coming out of the zone, but if it's the red line, it's fine. I still think there's a lot of action.”

EJ Johnston, the founder and CEO of 3ICE, said there's regular conversati­ons between his folks and NHL officials, who have shared that they like the over-and-back rule, in particular.

“You cannot go into the offensive zone, skate the puck out and cross the centre-ice line without being a turnover,” Johnston said. “It's not a penalty, but it's a turnover. The whistle blows, the other team gets the puck. And in 3-on-3, possession is very, very precious.”

Some questions remain about how the NHL would implement such a rule, and if it would create extra, unnecessar­y stoppages in OT. GMS are expected to discuss several possibilit­ies at their annual March meeting, which the AHL will be watching closely given the connection between it and the NHL.

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