San Diego Union-Tribune

IS GAME 4 VICTORY TARNISHED?

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Jon Cooper backtracke­d and shifted a possible missed call to the rearview mirror with the expertise of a coach who has been here before. Counterpar­t Jared Bednar, on the verge of his first NHL championsh­ip, sought to settle the issue once and for all and move on.

Still, the Stanley Cup Final is roaring toward a conclusion full of uncertaint­y about the officiatin­g, which is in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons after Nazem Kadri’s overtime goal put the Colorado Avalanche up 3-1 in the best-of-seven series.

The goal came with what Cooper and his Tampa Bay Lightning thought were too many men on the ice. No penalty was called, and now the Avalanche are one victory away from knocking off the back-to-back defending champions.

“Will one call make the difference in the series? No,” Hall of Fame goaltender Grant Fuhr said in a phone interview. “Colorado was the better team in overtime, there’s no question. Do you hope it doesn’t end on a play like that? Yeah. You hope that it’s something nice and clean and simple because instead of talking about what a good hockey game it was, everybody’s talking about the play.”

The play in question involved Kadri — playing his first game of the final after injuring his right thumb — jumping on the ice for a line change early, with teammate Nathan MacKinnon still roughly 40 feet from the bench. When Kadri scored, MacKinnon still had a skate on the ice, and the joining player isn’t supposed to even touch the puck in that situation.

There’s some leeway for officials to judge too many men on the ice, and Tampa Bay technicall­y had seven, though the players changing for each other were much closer to the home bench.

“You’re changing on the fly, everything happens,” Bednar said. “I count 7-6 at one point, so that is what it is.

That’s the way the game is played. I don’t see it as a break or a non-break. I actually see it as nothing.”

In a statement sent to The Associated Press after Colorado’s 3-2 victory, the league’s Department of Hockey Operations deemed it a judgment call.

“In discussing the winning goal, each of the four officials advised that they did not see a too many men on the ice situation on the play,” the statement read. “This call is not subject to video review either by Hockey Ops or the on-ice officials.”

Notable

Paul Maurice’s journey toward becoming the new coach of the Florida Panthers included a fortuitous flick of

the remote control, plus was aided by a college admissions department. He was watching games one night in January, a month or so after he stepped aside as coach of the Winnipeg Jets. He stumbled upon the Panthers and quickly told his wife that he was intrigued by their club. Fast forward a few weeks, and Maurice’s son got admitted to the University of Miami. It was another sign. And now, he’s in Florida, the new coach of the Panthers. Maurice was introduced Thursday as Florida’s new coach, with the team emphasizin­g it found in a monthlong search his experience — he has the fourthmost games and seventhmos­t wins of any coach in NHL history — makes him the right fit.

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE AP ?? Avalanche center Nazem Kadri shoots the puck into top of the goal past Tampa Bay’s Andrei Vasilevski­y in overtime, but did Kadri jump on the ice too soon?
JOHN BAZEMORE AP Avalanche center Nazem Kadri shoots the puck into top of the goal past Tampa Bay’s Andrei Vasilevski­y in overtime, but did Kadri jump on the ice too soon?

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