Tag: Ryan Reaves

  • Tom Wilson and his Evolution

    Tom Wilson and his Evolution

    Before last night’s game against the St. Louis Blues, there was a murmur around the city as the Washington Capitals prepared to take on the Blues. The reason was because the last time these two teams faced off, Capitals forward Tom Wilson drilled Blues forward Oskar Sundqvist with an illegal check to the head which resulted in a 20 game suspension, which would then be reduced to 14 games by a Neutral Arbitrator.

     

    Going into this game the storyline was not about Dmitrij Jaskin facing off against his former team for the first time,  but that of Wilson coming to town to face the Blues since his hit on Sundqvist.

     

    Going into last night’s game Blues sideline reporter for Fox Sports Midwest Andy Strickland got a moment to sit down with Wilson for a brief chat which revealed a few things.

     

    The first thing we take away from this tweet is that Wilson has gotten the message from the League, and he is trying to adapt his game accordingly. It’s in his head “100%” while he is playing, and as a result is throwing fewer hits.

     

    Secondly, he stated that he has gotten to the point where he would rather not through a hit in fear that it would be deemed illegal. Now I know a lot of people take issue with this part, but lets be honest here. The lines as to what is legal and what is not are blurred, and that is an issue.

     

    When we saw Wilson get a match penalty against the New Jersey Devils last month for a hit he was trying to avoid it was clear afterwards that he was trying to get out of the way, and he did not make contact with the head, but then fast forward a few games later to when the Capitals faced of against the Vegas Golden Knights we see Ryan Reaves skating around and targeting Wilson with his hit from behind, granted he made no contact with Wilson head, but still purposely delivered a blindside hit that did injure Wilson.

     

    However, there are other examples to where these lines are blurred that we can discuss another time, and we do on this week’s episode of TXHT that is out tomorrow morning.

     

    Tom Wilson has proven since coming back from his suspension that he is trying to change his game for the better, and his numbers are showing such.

     

    In 20 games played so far, Wilson has 11 goals, 8 assists for 19 points which is almost a point per game. Wilson is also a +11, and on special teams has 2 powerplay goals and 4 powerplay points along with one shorthanded goal. Wilson has amassed 48 shots on goal, for a 22.9% shooting percentage, and astonishingly has a 52.38% faceoff percentage.

     

    Tom Wilson is on the rise. He answered the bell last night when he fought Robert Bortuzzo and did so a few games ago when he fought Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Jamie Oleksiak, but overall you can see that he is making an attempt to change his game and become more of a team player and contribute both offensively and defensively for the Capitals.

     

    Tom Wilson will remain a polarizing figure, but if he continues to change for the better, he will definitely repair his image in the NHL.

     

    *Feature Photo courtesy of the Washington Capitals.

  • Player Safety and Why it needs to be fixed

    Player Safety and Why it needs to be fixed

    *Editor’s Note – It has become more and more evident that people’s team “loyalty” has been blinding them from the reality of the issue that the NHL has and that is it’s inconsistency in their Player Safety Department where Mike Matheson of the Florida Panthers will get suspended 2 games for his WWE style bodyslam of Vancouver Canucks rookie Elias Petterson, however, when Josh Morrissey of the Winnipeg Jets did the very same thing to Washington Capitals forward TJ Oshie, all he received was a fine for his actions. It is with this inconsistency that we here at TXHT take issue with, along with some of the blinded comments that we see on social media as well. In the article below, Steve does a wonderful job of breaking down this inconsistency. The uproar should not be about how our teams are getting screwed over by none calls and such. Our upraor should be about something more true, and that is the inconsistency of the NHL Department of Player Safety. – Michael

     

    Over the last few years we’ve heard the NHL preach on the topic of player safety, everything they’ve been saying has been true. Players need to be protected from what could life altering injuries. But I think in the grand spectrum of things fans and the NHL alike has heard so much about Head shots that they’ve forgotten about plays or hits that aren’t head shots but are still suspendable and dangerous.  Over the last few weeks I’ve read comments on other blog articles with fans stating that it wasn’t a head shot so not a suspendable offence or that’s only interference and only a 2-minute penalty. So, let’s take a look this and let’s break it down in a few parts. First, we will take an in-depth look at the rules and what are meant by them, then we will look at some examples that have happened over the last few weeks and use those rules to make justified judgments on some hits. Finally, at the end I will just make a few comments on the whole subject at hand here.

     

    NHL Rules:

    Boarding:

    Rule 41– “A boarding penalty shall be imposed on any player who checks or pushes a defenseless opponent in such a manner that causes the opponent to hit or impact the boards violently or dangerously. The severity of the penalty, based upon the impact with the boards, shall be at the discretion of the Referee.” (NHL, 2018)

    Boarding can be a very dangerous aspect of the game, according to the rules this is an suspendable offence and onus is on the player making the hit or push, while there should be some discretion used as to the position the player being pushed or hit puts himself in. The majority of the responsibility falls on the hitting/pushing player. Let’s make something very clear here one more time for everyone, this is a player safety issue and is suspendable and involved no head contact.

     

    Charging:

    42.1 Charging – “A minor or major penalty shall be imposed on a player who skates or jumps into or charges an opponent in any manner. Charging shall mean the actions of a player who, as a result of distance traveled, shall violently check an opponent in any manner. “charge” may be the result of a check into the boards, into the goal frame or in open ice.” (NHL, 2018)

    Charging is a vicious and egregious example of player safety in the NHL. No head contact is necessarily involved and once again the onus is on the player hitting. Jumping is also included in this rule as players tend to leave their feet when charging. As with the first one the severity is at the Referee discretion and supplemental discipline can be player safety department issue. Another issues that comes into play here is when a player does not have the puck or has passed the puck (the player has about 1 second to finish his check).

     

    Checking from Behind:

    43.1 Checking from Behind – “A check from behind is a check delivered on a player who is not aware of the impending hit, therefore unable to protect or defend himself, and contact is made on the back part of the body. When a player intentionally turns his body to create contact with his back, no penalty shall be assessed.” (NHL, 2018)

    Checking from behind is probably one of the more vicious plays in hockey. Once again the onus is on the hitting player and the discretion how of vicious is with the Referees. The Commissioner or the player safety department can overrule the decision and make a suspension. Once again this is vicious play that does not necessarily involve head contact.

     

    Illegal Head Contact:

    48.1 Illegal Check to the Head – “A hit resulting in contact with an opponent’s head where the head was the main point of contact and such contact to the head was avoidable is not permitted. In determining whether contact with an opponent’s head was avoidable, the circumstances of the hit including the following shall be considered:

    1. Whether the player attempted to hit squarely through the opponent’s body and the head was not “picked” as a result of poor timing, poor angle of approach, or unnecessary extension of the body upward or outward.
    2. Whether the opponent put himself in a vulnerable position by assuming a posture that made head contact on an otherwise full body check unavoidable.
    3. Whether the opponent materially changed the position of his body or head immediately prior to or simultaneously with the hit in a way that significantly contributed to the head contact” (NHL, 2018)

     

    This is the one that everyone talks about rules are completely described the head must be the initial point of contact, as well as the circumstances where that can be changed are if a player changes position last second, opponent puts himself in a vulnerable position or if the head was not the main point of contact. Let me make something clear, just because something isn’t a head shot doesn’t mean it’s not suspendable because it could fall under another category

    These are all the rules that apply to the situations of physical head shots or body contact. Head Butting and Kneeing were also possibilities but for the sake of this and the subject we will discuss those will be left out of this.

     

    Situations:

    1. Ryan Reaves Hit on Tom Wilson – Reaves Hit
    • So lets make some points about this hit
    • The hit is blind side
      • suspendable already
    • Is charging
      • the fact that he came from down below the net with no intent to get the puck but every intent to hit Wilson, the video does not show this but if you watch the game in it’s entirety you will see Reaves was coming from down low.
      • In fact, according to the rule book it was attempt to injure.
    • Side note was Reaves action after the hit, to mock and laugh at individual he injured by signing a picture of the hit with “ He ran into a lion”

    No Suspension handed down here. This is one of the examples let’s look at one where the player was suspended.

    1. Tom Wilson hit on Oskar Sundqvist – Wilson Hit
    • Clear head contact
    • Blind side hit
    • Was in a glide, so is not charging
      • Wilson had no intent to retrieve the puck only to lay a big hit.
    • Difference: Sundqvist had the puck

    Wilson received 20 games suspension. Now let me make it clear Wilson should have been suspended I’m not going to comment on the length of the suspension or anything to that. The Player Safety Department made their minds and I will not contest that.

     

    1. Matt Dumba Hit on Mikael Backlund – Dumba Hit
    • Clearly left his feet
      • Don’t believe it check the picture below
      • Dumba
    • Is Charging
      • Dumba came in from the blue line to intentionally hit Backlund with no intention to take the puck
    • Blind Side hit

    Dumba was not suspended for this hit.

    Now let’s talk about these 3 situations

    • Two were charging (Reaves and Dumba), which is suspendable
    • All three clearly went out of their way to hit the player with no intention to play the puck.
    • 1 involved head contact (Wilson)
    • 2 were not direct head contact but resulted in both Wilson and Backlund being out with concussions (Reaves & Dumba)
    • 1 left his feet (Dumba)

    Weird thing about it is that only one player was suspended. 20 games for Head contact and for having a history. Meanwhile both Reaves and Dumba committed offences that by the Leagues own rules are suspendable offences. Dumba with 56 seconds left in the game decided to run in from the blue with no regard for the puck and destroy Backlund causing injury, leaving his feet as well..  While Reaves came from down low in the Capitals zone and did the same thing to Wilson, having no regard for the puck just to cause pain.

    The definition of body check is to separate body from puck. With the intention to gather the puck and use it to better your teams game. In no way is there an intention to hurt, or cause serious damage to a player with no regard for that players well-being.

    Some people will say why are you sticking up for that scum Wilson, Well see here’s the thing, fans of the sport care for the sport and not their own teams over the sport. If your going to call Wilson’s hits despicable then you better call every hit that is suspendable by the law of the rules the same way. The fact that people in the league would rather stand up for someone who had an intent to hurt someone and yet call someone else who did the same thing scum, is quite hypocritical.

     

    Final thoughts:

    I think NHL fans need to get off their high horse and come back to loving the game rather than a team. The rules state very clearly what is legal and what is not. It’s more than just head shots. It’s how you use your body to attack other players. Separating from the puck is fine but a hit with no regard for the puck is wrong no matter if there is contact to head or not. All 3 should have been suspended.

    NHL needs to get their act together and start following what they write into a rule book. Stop showing that player safety is really a complete joke to the NHL.

  • Game Recap – 12/4/2018 – Washington Capitals v. Vegas Golden Knights

    Game Recap – 12/4/2018 – Washington Capitals v. Vegas Golden Knights

    Washington Capitals (15-8-3 33pts) v. Vegas Golden Knights (14-13-1 29pts)

     

    Game Recap:

    Former Washington Capital Nate Schmidt would net the late game winner and an empty netter to seal the deal for the Vegas Golden Knights against the Capitals, making their return to Vegas an unsuccessful one. The Capitals were unable to capitalize on their powerplay opportunities, and put themselves into penalty trouble once again.

     

    Lineups:

    Washington Capitals:

    Alex Ovechkin — Nicklas Backstrom — Tom Wilson

    Jakub Vrana — Evgeny Kuznetsov — Brett Connolly

    Andre Burakovsky — Lars Eller — Devante Smith-Pelly

    Chandler Stephenson — Nic Dowd — Dmitrij Jaskin

    Michal Kempny — John Carlson

    Dmitry Orlov — Matt Niskanen

    Christian Djoos — Madison Bowey

    Braden Holtby

    Pheonix Copley

    Scratched: Jonas Siegenthaler, Travis Boyd

    Injured: T.J. Oshie (concussion), Brooks Orpik (knee surgery)

     

    Vegas Golden Knights:

    Jonathan Marchessault — William Karlsson — Reilly Smith

    Oscar Lindberg — Cody Eakin — Alex Tuch

    Daniel Carr — Tomas Nosek — Ryan Carpenter

    William Carrier — Pierre-Edouard Bellemare — Ryan Reaves

    Brayden McNabb — Nate Schmidt

    Shea Theodore — Deryk Engelland

    Nick Holden — Colin Miller

    Marc-Andre Fleury

    Malcolm Subban

    Scratched: Jon Merrill, Brad Hunt, Max Pacioretty

    Injured: Erik Haula (lower body), Paul Stastny (lower body)

     

    First Period:

    Capitals Penalty – 1:03 – Brett Connolly 2 minutes for Goalie Interference

    Golden Knights PPG – 2:30 – Ryan Reaves (6) from Cody Eakin (8) and Oscar Lindberg (1)

    Capitals Penalty – 8:05 – Madison Bowey 2 minutes for Holding

    Golden Knights Penalty – 9:43 – Bench (Daniel Carr) 2 minutes for Too Many Men

    Capitals Goal – 15:33 – Jakub Vrana (7) from Brett Connolly (11)

    Capitals Penalty – 19:44 – Nic Dowd 2 minutes for Tripping

     

    End of 1st – WAS – 1      VGK – 1

    Shots             09                 07

    Faceoffs        07                 19

    Hits               09                 20

    PP                 0/1                1/2 *3rd in Progress

     

    Analysis:

    This was an ok period for the Capitals. They’ve gotten themselves into penalty trouble which allowed Vegas to take the 1-0 lead and a powerplay to start the second period. The Capitals are not doing well in the faceoff circle and they are being physically dominated by the Golden Knights in the hits category. However, they have responded well and got a good goal from Jakub Vrana to tie the game.

     

    Need to Do:

    The Capitals need to kill off this penalty, and then stay out of the box and stop giving the Golden Knights opportunities. Also the Capitals need to do a much better job in faceoff circle and pick up their physical play as they were horribly dominated in hits.

     

    Second Period:

    Capitals Penalty – 8:35 – Evgeny Kuznetsov 2 minutes for Illegal Equipment

    Capitals Goal -11:42 – Alex Ovechkin (20) from Brett Connolly (12) and Madison Bowey (5)

    Golden Knights Penalty – 15:42 – Ryan Reaves 5 minutes for Interference

    Golden Knights Penalty – 15:42 – Ryan Reaves – Game Misconduct

     

    End of 2nd – WAS – 2    VGK – 1

    Shots             18                 17

    Faceoffs        18                 26

    Hits               22                 35

    PP                 0/2                1/4

     

    Analysis:

    This was a better period for the Capitals as they were better in the faceoff circle and they also were able to get the lone goal of the period. However, they were still dominated in the hits category, plus they did not do much with their lone powerplay which was a 5 minute one.

     

    Need to Do:

    The Capitals need to keep on pressing the play, and play a full 20 minutes. Also the Capitals need to do a much better job with their powerplay opportunities.

     

    Third Period:

    Golden Knights Goal – 2:33 – Pierre-Edouard Bellemare (4) from Brayden McNabb (3) and Nate Schmidt (2)

    Golden Knights Goal – 2:49 – Cody Eakin (11) from Oscar Lindberg (2) and Deryk Engelland (4)

    Golden Knights Penalty – 3:53 – Colin Miller 2 minutes for High Sticking

    Golden Knights Penalty – 7:14 – Jonathan Marchessault 2 minutes for Slashing

    Capitals Goal – 11:40 – Jakub Vrana (8) from Evgeny Kuznetsov (18) and Matt Niskanen (9)

    Capitals Penalty – 14:46 – Nic Dowd 4 minutes for High Sticking

    Golden Knights PPG – 18:35 – Nate Schmidt (1) from Shea Theodore (12)

    Golden Knights ENG – 19:53 – Nate Schmidt (2) from unassisted

     

    End of 3rd – WAS – 3    VGK – 5

    Shots             26                 28

    Faceoffs        26                 37

    Hits               40                 41

    PP                 0/4                2/6

     

    Analysis:

    This was a letdown of a period for the Capitals. They gave up two goals in a span of 16 seconds in the first 3 minutes of the period, and did not play with much gusto throughout the period.

     

    Next Up:

    Washington (15-9-3 33pts) @ Arizona (13-11-2 28pts)

    Vegas (15-13-1 31pts) v. Chicago (9-14-5 23pts)