Following a stretch that saw his recently-torrid Anaheim Ducks score just two goals over eight periods, Teemu Selanne did not mince words Thursday night.
After the Ducks came out on the short end of a 2-1 decision in
Robert Tychkowski's column in Friday's
Selanne said he is not making excuses, and the Ducks will indeed have to find a way to win Saturday in
Selanne was not the only one complaining about the officiating Thursday, however. Ducks' television commentators John Ahlers and Brian Hayward expressed dismay over the way the game was being called -- or more accurately -- not being called.
Nobody is suggesting the Ducks lost the game because of the officiating. The Oilers, playing in front of an electric home crowd, played an excellent playoff-style game.
The Oilers also came up with timely goals, including the game-winner in the dying seconds of the third period. Considering the playoff-like atmosphere in Rexall Place, it was almost inevitable the Oilers would win this one.
Having said all of that, the game was, in a word, ugly.
As Ahlers and
And therein lays the problem. The NHL has told us repeatedly this crackdown on hooking, holding, clutching and grabbing would continue through the entire season and the playoffs. Until a couple of weeks ago, it seemed that would be the case.
The issue is certainly not unique to Ducks' games, as other games have degenerated into quicksand-style hockey. For
In Tuesday's 3-0 loss in
Again, nobody is suggesting the Ducks lost this game because of the officiating. Yet at the same time,
The difference shows in the standings. After an incredible three month stretch,
Actions speak louder than words, and the NHL needs to speak with actions. If something was a hook or a hold in October, it needs to be a hook or hold in April. In the past, teams knew the standard would be relaxed come playoff time, and teams were constructed in that fashion.
This year was supposed to be different. This was supposed to be the year up-tempo, forechecking teams like
If the league backs off on the enforcement of the rules at this point, it will be far tougher -- or even impossible -- to change the culture of the game at a later point. If the playoffs turn into a mud bog, the general managers who constructed their team for the new NHL will feel deceived, and they will likely build their team in a slow-down, clutch and grab style in the future.
Right now, the league's culture is changing. Wide-open, fire wagon hockey has returned for the first time in years. The NHL would be wise to ensure that continues, and the only way to do that is to call the games the way they were for the first six months of the season. Anything less, and the new NHL will end up looking exactly like the old NHL.