The Morning Call (Sunday)

Lindblom’s priority is health first

-

them down, they should draw inspiratio­n from the courage one of their brethren is going to have to exhibit.

Here’s hoping No. 23 gets back on the ice again soon, maybe sooner than we think.

Safe to say, the initiative instituted by NHL commission­er Gary Bettman regarding coaches’ behavior as it relates to treatment of players came at a timely moment.

The recent reports of abusive behavior involving several coaches mandated some sort of response.

At the NHL’s board of governors meeting in California, Bettman laid out a four-point plan which pretty much covers the gamut of keeping coach-player relations both civil and above-board.

The plan includes an anonymous hotline for players to report inappropri­ate conduct; team personnel (including coaches and management) will take part in annual training on both inclusion and harassment; poor conduct will result in disciplina­ry measures and, finally, teams will get a big-time penalty for failure to report incidents of unacceptab­le conduct.

Flyers TV analyst Bill Clement, who spent more than a decade in the NHL playing for the Flyers, Washington and the Atlanta/ Calgary Flames, says the NHL’s intentions are good.

He just wonders if Bettman’s action might be a bit of a knee-jerk reaction.

“I just don’t believe in jumping into the pool of political correctnes­s,’’ he said. “Tap the brakes a little bit. You should do your due diligence to support the action that you are about to impose.’’

Clement considers himself fortunate that he played for Fred Shero while with the Flyers. The bespectacl­ed Shero won over players with his intelligen­ce, his wit and his charm. He never had to threaten players or call them names.

“He was never physically or verbally abusive,’’ said Clement, who scored the insurance goal in the Stanley Cup-clinching Game 6 in 1975 vs. Buffalo. “He was a kinder, gentler guy way before his time. That was one of the things that made us love him.”

All that said, those Broad Street Bullies were a pretty rugged bunch and could put up with a lot.

Times have changed and so has our society.

“There are things in sports that are pretty much mirroring the transition to a kinder, gentler culture,’’ Clement said. “We have to get up to speed with that.

“As a coach, I think you can still be as demanding as you want, as long as you aren’t physically abusive or verbally demeaning. If you have to resort to using those tools, you’re a coach without leadership skills, without communicat­ion skills and you don’t have the confidence to get the desired result.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? Cancer has put Oskar Lindblom’s breakout season — and maybe career — on hold.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP Cancer has put Oskar Lindblom’s breakout season — and maybe career — on hold.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States