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NHL's Suspension of Aaron Rome Excessive

Posted: 06/07/11 07:52 PM ET

While this won't win me any fans in New England, I really think the NHL got it wrong when they decided to suspend Canucks defenseman Aaron Rome for the remainder of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Keep in mind, this is coming from someone who thinks head shots should be addressed in a similar way to high sticks: if you deliver a head shot, you should be penalized for it (penalty and/or fine and/or suspension depending of the severity of it) whether there was intent or not.

Let me also say it was a horrible injury suffered by Bruins forward Nathan Horton. And yes, the hit by Rome was late, which is why he was assessed a major for interference and a game misconduct on the play.

But to go beyond that in these circumstances truly doesn't make sense, especially in light of some of the past decisions the NHL has rendered in similar cases. In fact, the four-game suspension handed down by the NHL is the longest in the history of the Stanley Cup Finals.

First off, the Rome hit on Horton was not a blind-sided head shot. Rome came at Horton "north-south" according to NHL officials on a play where the Bruins' forward had the puck, dished the puck off to a teammate on the rush and admired his pass after he made it. Had Horton kept his head up as all hockey players are taught to do, the hit would have been less severe or possibly averted altogether.

Another factor here is this: the injury to Horton occurred more from the impact of his head hitting the ice than it was directly from the blow delivered by Rome's hit. The bottom line is that had Horton gotten up and skated away on his own power after the hit, at most, we're looking at a 2:00 minor for interference here, not a four-game suspension that will cost Rome a chance to play in the rest of the Stanley Cup Finals.

NHL Senior Vice President of Hockey Operations Mike Murphy made it clear the case did not involve a head shot when he was interviewed about the decision to suspend Rome.

"This has nothing to do with Rule 48," Murphy said. "This is just an interference penalty, an interference hit. If it was immediate after he released the puck, it was be a legal hit. We have them all the time."

This was a bang-bang play so to speak. How quickly did the play go down? On the NHL Network's show On the Fly, hosts indicated it was just under one second after Horton let go of the puck that he was hit by Rome. This is not a premeditated situation like Todd Bertuzzi who was head-hunting and trying to deliberately hurt somebody back in 2004. This was a hockey play in which less than one second elapsed between the release of puck and contact being made between Rome and Horton. The league standard: one half a second. So the lateness we're talking about here is even less than one half second.

Two cases that come to mind when discussing this suspension are the Zdeno Chara hit on Max Pacioretty earlier this season and the Alex Burrows biting incident in game one of the series. Neither of them resulted in suspensions.

The Pacioretty incident in particular is illustrative here because it involved an interference play where the impact of the landing caused a severe injury not the hit itself. Both hits were late and involved players who no longer had the puck. Both involved situations where the victim of the hit was badly hurt and was forced to miss significant playing time. Chara was not suspended by the league. Rome, however, is being suspended despite the fact that the league admits that suspending someone for one playoff game is more serious than suspending a player for one regular season game.

The Burrows incident comes to mind because like the Rome hit, it took place during the Stanley Cup Finals. Unlike the Rome/Horton hit, however, Burrows biting Patrice Bergeron is not even part of a hockey play. It is part of the extracurricular pushing and shoving that often goes on after the whistle blows, but it was not part of the game itself and was clearly outside the rules.

The league's decision not to suspend Burrows was based on the fact that Murphy could "find no conclusive evidence that Alex Burrows intentionally bit the finger of Patrice Bergeron." The video of the incident seems to clearly show otherwise.

One gets the feeling if the Burrows biting incident had happened during the regular season, a suspension would have resulted, but because this was the Stanley Cup Finals, the league tried to find a way not to suspend Burrows.

By deciding not to suspend Burrows, the league was deciding games as much as they were by deciding to suspend him. Burrows scored twice and added an assist in Game 2 of the Stanley Cup Finals. One of his goals was the overtime game winner.

The bottom line may simply be this: Zdeno Chara is a perennial all-star and Norris Trophy candidate. Alex Burrows is a top-six forward on the Canucks who scored more than 30 goals a year ago and more than 25 this season. But Aaron Rome is a sixth defenseman, a fringe player at best. He was expendable. Most fans wouldn't even notice that he wasn't in the lineup.

The bottom line remains that the league is just not consistent when it comes to suspensions. Making decisions on suspensions is a thankless job because somebody is always upset by the decision. Let's just hope Brendan Shanahan makes things better for the league when he takes over the role at the start of next season. Right now, there is no rhyme or reason to decisions and they just seem arbitrary. Just ask Aaron Rome or Max Pacioretty...

 

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gypsy508
06:46 PM on 06/10/2011
Let's be real here, the NHL didn't suspend after the biting incident because it didn't want to affect the outcome of the finals. When Horton was injured, the suspension was levied as a result of 1) the failure to curb the excess stuff the first time and 2) because with Horton out the sides were evened. It's not the consistency people are calling for but that's what it is.
12:18 PM on 06/09/2011
I think hockey is getting to violent. All the players say the head shots have to stop and then they go out and do as Rome did. The GM's are afraid to take a stand because they still want to have their goon on the team. Look at what happened to Savard and Crosby.
I think that a player who gives the head shot causing a concussion should be suspended for as long as the concussed player is out of action.
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john frodo
armchair expert
09:48 AM on 06/09/2011
Hi Brad a well considered evaluation, I agree to some extent. I dont mind Rome getting 4 games, but it had better be consistent in the future.
http://thinkingaboot.blogspot.com/2011/06/montreal-was-robbed.html
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john frodo
armchair expert
04:38 PM on 06/09/2011
Moving forward the NHL should listen to Cherry on Equipment and use video after the fact better.
http://thinkingaboot.blogspot.com/2011/06/bring-hockey-into-21st-century.html
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Creox
Life is too important to take seriously.
12:50 AM on 06/09/2011
I'm sad to say that the last two games (3 and 4) have been terrible to watch and is terrible hockey. I'm seeing flashbacks to 70.s goonville.

Officiating is the WORST I have seen....especially considering were are in the final...

I see confusion in the league right now and the product is not worth watching...I won't be until they get this crap under control. Not worth my time to be honest.
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08:25 PM on 06/08/2011
People here don't seem to understand what blindside hit means in hockey. The Rule is Rule 48 of the NHL rulebook, instituted starting the current season. It outlaws lateral hits where the checker approaches the skater from his side like the Richards-Booth and Cooke-Savard hits. The Rome hit was North-South hit where Rome was skating towards Horton straight on- it is not the defenders problem if they hit a player that's looking the other way. If there was a rule where you couldn't hit a player if he's looking away- players would just turn away every time someone went to hit them in order to draw a penalty.
Had Rome hit Horton within the .5 second after he last touched the puck, it would have been 100% legal.
And if you think he struck him with his elbow, your perception of reality conforms to your homerism. Absolutely did not happen. Even Mike Millbury said it was all shoulder.
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Sad But True
Food for thought tastes like chicken
07:54 PM on 06/08/2011
Just watched the hit for probably the 20th time on a 60" TV. It is a blindside hit.

Honestly folks, if you're arguing against that you have an agenda, it's that simple. Rome comes in from the side and lunges his shoulder into the neck/head area. As evidence by the fact that Horton was badly hurt, it was an EXTREMELY dangerous and illegal hit. Late, high, and blindside.

Sad that there are people actually trying to defend this (usually trying to point out other hits as some sort of argument of relativity).

Add to that the way hockey penalties often work. Take, for instance, high sticking. If the victim of your stick isn't hurt, it's a 2-minute minor. If the victim is bleeding or worse, it could be anything from a 4-minute double-minor to a 5-minute major and beyond.

This is the same policy. If your goon-like hit puts a player out for the series, you're out for the series.

Sorry to burst the bubbles.
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Tony Pepperoni
Where did all the good Republicans go?
05:00 PM on 06/08/2011
As a Canuck fan I can't complain with Rome's suspension, and I agree with Brad that consistency is needed. A late dangerous hit like Rome made should be 8 regular season games moving forward and anything less regardless of star status is sending mixed messages. Quite honestly that is going to mean a lot of guys taking forced holidays because as much as the haters would like to believe this is some evil Canuck trait it is not. I have not missed one of their playoff games and I wish I could say that I haven't seen many dangerous hits but I have. From all teams. Here is a video of the Canucks almost losing their best player in these playoffs (no suspension FYI). We all want this to change.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEyR6NTG_IE
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Sad But True
Food for thought tastes like chicken
07:55 PM on 06/08/2011
Finally a voice of reason from the Canuck side. Thanks for the honesty! It is what it is, to harness the power of a cliche.
07:15 AM on 06/09/2011
Well said, Tony. Whether you are a Bruins fan, or a Canucks fan...or any hockey fan, I think at least we all can agree that we want this to change.
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Brad Kurtzberg
07:23 AM on 06/09/2011
Agreed...that is something we want/need changed as hockey fans
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04:33 PM on 06/08/2011
A new era, a new standard. Sure Colin Campbell's tenure was bad for the NHL with maddening inconsistency and bad press when he got caught RED HANDED via email lobbying on-ice officials for special treatment for his NHL player son and dismissing Marc Savard as "big faker".
But he finally did the right thing for the league that made him rich and famous and left that post before the Stanley Cup finals. So now Mike Murphy and eventually Mr Shannahan will be the new dean of discipline. I can accept what Mr. Murphy said that "I don't care what the standard was before- this is my standard" (if he wasn't complicit in Campbell's chicanery- which he was). Once Shanny gets in and says "this is my standard!" - I will be willing to move on a quit comparing Campbell's suspensions and non-suspensions to the new guy's suspensions and non-suspensions.
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Brad Kurtzberg
09:29 PM on 06/08/2011
I agree once Shanny comes in, we start with a new standard. But to change 3/4 of the way through the playoffs is unusual and inconsistent. My goals moving forward for the league: 1) better protection against headshots 2) consistency in suspensions/fines 3) accomplishing the first two goals without removing the physical element from hockey that we all know and love
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04:15 PM on 06/08/2011
If we had these same standards in place 15 years ago, I don't think Scott Stephens would have ever made the Hockey Hall of Fame.
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Brad Kurtzberg
04:39 PM on 06/08/2011
I guess he, like all other players, would have to make adjustments. But you can hit hard and play physical defense without hitting opposing players in the head...
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Sad But True
Food for thought tastes like chicken
07:55 PM on 06/08/2011
He simply would have been handed some well-earned suspensions.

He nearly (if not certainly) ruined Paul Kariya's career.
03:57 PM on 06/08/2011
I agree that leaving his feet to deliver the hit put this in a different category. The history of the player also has something to do with the league's aggressiveness here. I've long held that a player should be suspended at least as long as the person he hurt is out of the lineup. The league MUST get tough on head hits--NO HEAD HITS EVER.
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Brad Kurtzberg
04:03 PM on 06/08/2011
Etherdog, I agree with a ban on head hits, as I said in my article and many of the comments here. But the league is not treating this as a headshot. The logic of the NHL on fines and suspensions is impossible to figure out...Let's hope that changes soon
10:59 PM on 06/09/2011
Brad,

You are so correct in pointing out the inconsistency of enforcement. When the season started I expected that there would be a clear signal from the league that head hits would be met with swift and severe punishment. The league pussied out. My Penguins lost Syd from January on and no one was called to account. Head hits have reached a crisis point in the NHL, and if they don't realize it the the league will suffer greatly.
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01:53 PM on 06/08/2011
The action was completely appropriate. Head shots can't be tolerated, he left his feet to deliver the hit. If you don't want to be suspended, treat other player's careers with more respect.

The real silliness here is the Canucks claiming to be using the suspension as motivation. That says a lot about the character of the Canucks, that they even NEED motivation at this point, but more so that they choose to play the victim card here. Sad. I've lost all respect for them. Take it like a man, take some accountability. Bunch of clowns.
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03:51 PM on 06/08/2011
Teams look for motivation wherever they find it. The Bruins have not been suspended for half a dozen questionable incidents this year- including the analogous Chara hit- without a single suspension. They have not accepted any responsibility. Why the double standard?
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Tony Pepperoni
Where did all the good Republicans go?
04:37 PM on 06/08/2011
First, he didn't leave his feet. I am a Canucks fan but I want head shots out of the game too. I don't want to see anyone's career ended, but the league needs to be consistent. That's all. This is the Stanley Cup playoffs so aggressive hockey is what we are going to get.

Making this into some character issue of the teams is ridiculous. We have 2 great teams with players that give their all to win a prize they have wanted all their lives, so big hits and emotion will be part of it.
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Spartan112
SPARTANS!? What is your profession?
05:17 PM on 06/08/2011
Yeah he did leave his feet. Not prior to the hit, but as he pushed through it.
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Brad Kurtzberg
05:23 PM on 06/08/2011
Thanks for the comment Tony. The league did not consider it a headshot and whether he left his feet or not was not considered in the decision to suspend Rome. He did leave his skates but the question becomes whether it was before or after contact. These are two great teams and the hockey is spirited. I just want to see the league be consistent. The Burrows biting incident to me deserved a one game suspension and a hefty fine. It seemed the league bent over backwards to not suspend a player because it was the Cup Finals. I think the league's refusal to suspend or fine Burrows made the play in Games 2 and 3 more physical and bitter and out of hand IMHO. Really want to see the league be consistent.
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Spartan112
SPARTANS!? What is your profession?
01:45 PM on 06/08/2011
I'd be willing to bet Brad is either from Canada or NY. Just guessing here. That said, the hit was so late that people in the arena didn't know it happened as they were paying attention to Lucic who now had the puck. They didn't react until it was shown on the video screen.

The hit was very late. The hit was to the head. Rome left his feet.
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01:55 PM on 06/08/2011
Weren't you saying the other day that this was classic rule 48- only to have Mr. Murphy say: ""This has nothing to do with Rule 48," Maybe you should sit this one out.
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02:34 PM on 06/08/2011
Murphy is plainly wrong, just like he was wrong about Burrows. Since when is Murphy an accepted authority on anything but contradictory behavior? It's rule 48. A second is an eternity on the ice. A bang-bang play is substantially less than half a second. A second is enough time to dance a jig around Horton.
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Spartan112
SPARTANS!? What is your profession?
04:27 PM on 06/08/2011
Oblique, you should sit out any conversation that has anything to do with hockey. In every other convo you think murphy is simply Campbell's stooge. Now you agree with him?
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Brad Kurtzberg
01:57 PM on 06/08/2011
Spartan: The league did not treat it as a head shot (see the quote from Murphy). Was it late? Absolutely. Was it a penalty? Hell yes. The problem I have is the inconsistency the league shows in handing out suspensions and fines. The logic just escapes me. Rome's play was illegal and deserved to be penalized, but he was not treated the same as other players who had committed similar infractions in the past or in my mind, infractions that were at least as bad (i.e. Burrows who didn't even get a fine).
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02:37 PM on 06/08/2011
"the league did not treat it as a head shot (see the quote from Murphy)"

Why do you treat this as correct? Can you think for yourself?
12:54 PM on 06/08/2011
Everyone (ESPECIALLY Canadiens fans) complains that the league needs to take these type of hits more seriously, to get them out of the game. They SAY that it is what they want to see.
OK, Rome gets suspended four games, and people cry that it is too much, and continue to bring up past mistakes or questionable decisions the league has made. Which way do you want it? Or are you one of those that wants heavy punishment when it happens to one of your guys, but when one of your guys does something questionable...you get all mad and say the punishment isn't fair?
I totally agree with you, that the league has been inconsistent...and that needs to change. Players should know what to expect when they play dirty. Burrows not getting suspended didn't bother me, but I do think the reason why things got crazy in game 3, is because the league did NOTHING, not even fine the guy. I would hope that they didn't try to "make up" for it by suspending Rome for the four games, but like you said, who knows with the league.
My point is, people cry for the league to be tougher on these types of hits, and when the league finally does take a hard stand, people cry that it is too much. What if this IS the league making a stand saying these head shots will not be tolerated anymore?
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Brad Kurtzberg
01:26 PM on 06/08/2011
Thanks HockeyGirl74. I am in favor of a head shot policy similar to the high sticking rules now in effect. Right now, you are responsible for your stick and if it hits someone in the face, a penalty is called whether you intended to hit someone or not. If they did the same for head shots, I think over time, the players would adjust and while you could never eliminate them from a fast physical game like hockey, you could reduce them significantly.

I hope that with Brendan Shanahan taking over discipline next season, we will get some consistency. It's a chance for the league to start with a clean slate. We'll see what happens.
01:50 PM on 06/08/2011
I agree with you on that Brad. So if there WAS a head shot policy, what do you think is a fair punishment for it? (NOT taking in account whether or not a player is injured on the play, because I do not feel that doing it that way is a good idea.)
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03:55 PM on 06/08/2011
Well to put into perspective your views on the hit: we all know you thought Matt Cooke should have been severely punished- but you excused Chara's hit. Both were unneccesarily violent and possibly ended a career and both found by the league to be worthy of 0 games.
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Johnism96
12:04 PM on 06/08/2011
Where has the respect and honor gone in the game. The offending player always say they were not trying to hurt to other player. Um... if you put your elbow or shoulder into someones head there is not other explanation other than you are trying to hurt them. Players are bigger, stronger and faster and almost all hits to the head are resulting in concussions. Shannahan needs to set the tone by announcing any hit to the head will result in a 10 game suspension. Enough with this suspension by picking a number out of a hat. Chara gets 0 for almost killing a man. Cooke gets 14 for a check from behind. Burrows gets 0 for biting a guy. Rome gets 4 for a late hit. I just want consistancy and I believe the players do to. Make it a 10 game suspension, stick to it, and head hits will be out of the game in 1 year.
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Brad Kurtzberg
01:27 PM on 06/08/2011
Thanks Johnism96. I agree, consistency is very important moving forward. We'll see what Shanny does. Let's hope it's a step in the right direction....
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04:23 PM on 06/08/2011
To be fair, the previous dead of discipline that everyone hated, Colin Campbell, just left before the Finals, and the new guy, Mr. Murphy, said he doesn't care what the previous standardS were, it's his standard now.
11:58 AM on 06/08/2011
The NHL is Big Business and in the entertainment business. There is no way Bettman and his minions are going to let the finals go down in four games and that is the job of the officals - to manage the games. It was obivous from the beginning of game three that the officals were going to do all they could to tip the rink to the Bruins advantage. Yes Rome hit Norton late but still within one second of Norton passing off the puck - this is a two minute penatly! Throughout the game the Bruins hit late, slashed, cross checked and generally took advantage of decision by the league to give the Bruins an advantage. And the Canucks realized this and gave up - they know they're in the entertainment business. The real question here is will the much better Canucks be "allowed" to win the cup. Finally Daniel Sedin was elbowed to the head and there was no call - explain that if there is not corruption in the league. The NHL management under Bettman has the same standards and ethics as Wall Street bankers.
01:01 PM on 06/08/2011
LOL the refs tipped the rink to the Bruins advantage and the Canucks gave up? You are quite the Canucks fan.
By the way, it's Horton, not Norton.
"The real question here is will the much better Canucks be "allowed" to win the cup."
Let me guess. you had quit your job and gave all of your money for May 21, 2011, didn't you?
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Brad Kurtzberg
02:40 PM on 06/08/2011
So you think the fix is on, bospade?