It's very easy for an enforcer after his career is over to embrace the role that he had and talk about how afraid he was of the other guys out there. It's a form of mutual respect, now that the battles are over, that each guy was just trying to do his job. And I do believe that they were all afraid of each other, it's very dangerous stuff, I'm sure they all saw e.g. Todd Fedoruk hit his head on the ice. I just do not believe that in the moment, it stops players from throwing body checks or cheap hits. It is an incredibly fast game and guys are making split-second decisions, and for players who are put out there for pugilism, they understand their role. Again, I just heard how Scott Stevens stopped people from doing stuff, and I'm sure there's hundreds of players who would admit that they were afraid of Stevens, who would praise his physical play, but who knew that their job was to f*** with the other team and Scott Stevens wasn't going to stop them. I watched hockey in that era, and I don't remember any shortage of cheap plays against the Devils.