His intentions are extremely clear, why aren't Delia'sYou seem to be very certain to intentions of other people. Maybe you could analyze yourself and everyone else is out to get by in the world by deception.
His intentions are extremely clear, why aren't Delia'sYou seem to be very certain to intentions of other people. Maybe you could analyze yourself and everyone else is out to get by in the world by deception.
It didn't come off when he pushed off. It came off when he pushed into the post. Twice, when the first one wasn't enough.news flash, goalies have to put weight on the post to move. if its looks like the goalie pushes the net off, its because he did. But he has to. its the whole point of putting pegs in the net. it gives the goalies a stable point to push off of.
It didn't come off when he pushed off. It came off when he pushed into the post. Twice, when the first one wasn't enough.
He knew what he was doin'.Didn't look on purpose by the goalie.
It's the second time in as many games that the net has come off too easy.
The arena crew needs to look at this. It looks like a Toronto Scotiabank arena specific problem.
If I was an opposing goalie and felt the nets could come off easy, I'd do the same thing at a critical moment.
You don't need to pull up to have a net come off it's moorings. In fact, they are specifically designed to come off from a force moving along the ice. That's the whole point of them. A goalie is low and can provide a similar force when they want to.
If you watch the video, he slides into it forcefully, and when it jostles, you can visibly see him do a second push and shift his weight into it, after he is already at the post/at his position, to ensure that it becomes dislodged. He then kicks the dislodged net away with his foot as he pushes back the opposite direction.
Except when a player trips another player he directly took an action that violated the rules (intentionally or not). A goalie knocking the net off the moors from a standard post move is not a direct action that violates the rules.