I'm with Sheik on this one. Did not look intentional, and Booth did not see him coming (he was looking back the other way), and turned his head into the hit. This is borderline, although Richardson did come up out of his crouch for the hit, but turned his shoulder away at the last second. The hit could have been harder.HD replays....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSILVbnofZM
Shoulder to the chin... skates on ice, didnt charge... borderline suspension material IMHO as it was the hit to the ice by Booth's head that knocked him out.
Booth had his chin down and not looking. Could be argued either way. If it was shoulder to chest we wouldnt be having this discussion. That being said, head hits should be avoided.
This is what I don't get about the NHL. Booth didn't have the puck. Therefore interference should have been called against Richards (I don't know if a penalty was called) - and the shot to the head was gratuitous.It was a late hit, he wasn't expecting the hit so he was not prepared. He already dropped the pass. If he had the puck it was a clean hit but he didn't.
http://www.nhl.com/ice/page.htm?id=26348as far as the official RULES go, this is 100% clean.
Booth had just passed the puck and was hit within a second of doing so. The timing was clean. It's the move to become more upright, which put the head into play, that is the question. Again, hard to judge intent at something that happens at that speed (stop watching the slow-motion, and watch it at regular speed).This is what I don't get about the NHL. Booth didn't have the puck. Therefore interference should have been called against Richards (I don't know if a penalty was called) - and the shot to the head was gratuitous.
As for Scott Stevens, alot of research has been done/is being done on the long term effects of concussions; times change, rules change, etc.
We are better informed today. If you look at football, head-slaps used to be legal - and head-to-head collisions used to be considered the epitome of good hitting. "Clean" hits of the 1970s are dirty hits today - and rightfully so. We know more about head injuries and the strength, size and speed of players today make such hits much more serious than before.
saw coach's corner this weekend as well, and have to say that get-up cherry had on was utterly ridiculous. but cherry was right, the dirty hits so far this year have been increasing. i also agree about ovie, and while he certainly plays with alot of passion, he does play dirty at times. if ovie wants to play that style, someone is going to make him eat his lunch at some point. i think one of the worst for cheap shots is jarko ruutu.I also watched coach's corner, gotta Don Cherry is a fashion nightmare-lol. However, he mentioned the number of dirty hits is increasing and that a majority of the dirty players are from overseas. I've seen Mr. Ovechkin throw several dirty hits on people.
Most athletes would. Everyone knows the dangers of prolonged use of steroids - yet many take them.Now, we all know that there are risks involved in sports and that accidents and intentional hits happen. It's a risk the players take and they get paid quite well to take such risks. My question is where does it end.