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标题:hort reign of Kenneth Moffett and the long tenure of Fehr, Weiner was exceedingly conscious of the unions history and traditions of player invo

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liamin 发表于:2015-2-27 9:56:04
Got a question on rule clarification, comments on rule enforcements or some memorable NHL stories? Kerry Fraser wants to answer your emails at cmonref@tsn.ca! Kerry, First off, love the column! And how appropriate that you just delineated 10-minute misconducts versus minor misconducts as the end of the Penguins/Senators game gave the refs an opportunity to assess both! My question is this - what exactly did Pittsburghs Matt Cooke do to deserve the 10-minute misconduct? Besides being the recipient of four punches thrown by Chris Neil, I saw nothing. Anybody who points back to the Karlsson injury should remember that there was no penalty on Cooke there - whether they think there shouldve been or not should be irrelevant to the late-in-the-game shenanigans by Neil! I look forward to your answer. Thanks! Rich Osbourne Rich: We do our very best to provide honest, fair and accurate insight to you and all the other hockey fans that have made Cmon Ref on TSN.ca the most frequented blog of its kind anywhere. Thank you very much for the kudos and continued loyalty. TSN play-by-play superstar Gord Miller applied sound logic gained from "officiating theory-101" with a call of his own as the penalties were being announced over the PA system when Gord offered up, "and Cooke gets 10 (misconduct), more for his own protection than anything." Analyst Mike Johnson followed with, "and thats okay for the Referees to get him out of the game to make sure he doesnt get back on the ice and not have this get out of hand." Both insights were accurate because any referee that is worth a pound of salt is aware of possible retribution that could be directed at Matt Cooke for his legal check that inadvertently injured Sens young star defenceman, Erik Karlsson. At this point in the game the Officials are on damage control and pay close attention to on-ice personnel and match-ups. In addition to keeping the peace, each Ref will do everything within his power to avoid having to assess an instigator penalty in the last five minutes of the game or anytime in overtime, which as you are aware can result in a suspension and fines. Aside from not wanting to write lengthy post-game reports if something like this occurs, a more important consideration for the Officials is their desire to provide player safety when liberties can be taken. The potential for paybacks greatly increases when the final outcome of the game has already been decided. Putting this "theory" aside for a moment, I reviewed both broadcast feeds to see if there was something that Cooke did in this dust-up that was worthy of a misconduct penalty to provide a more direct answer to your question, Rich. I found what I was looking for in the local Pittsburgh feed. Once Cooke got back on his feet after being thumped to the ice by Chris Neil, Cooke in his frustration attempted to throw Neils hockey stick over the glass and into the crowd. It was only through good luck that the stick caught the top of the protective glass and spiralled back onto the ice. If the stick had gone over the glass into the seats a game misconduct would have been assessed under Rule 53.4 instead of the 10-minute misconduct penalty. Additionally a review of the incident would have taken place and supplementary discipline might have been applied since fan protection is a very sensitive issue. There you have your answer Rich. Even though Gord Miller, Mike Johnson and many of you might endorse the sound officiating logic described above, there are others reading this that probably wont agree. You might say the Refs overstep their authority by being proactive or over-officious and instead should just call the infraction when it occurs. Removing a player due to time remaining just to keep the peace or for a players own protection might be beyond your fan comfort level. While you are entitled to your opinion I know I dodged a bullet on more than one occasion by taking the proactive approach. With a couple of minutes remaining in a blowout win in the first game of a back-to-back series between two divisional rivals in the 1980s a coach put his "enforcer" on the ice. (This was long before the instigator in the final five minutes was in the book so I felt the need to be creative.) The "role player" had not taken one shift all game and was anxious to do some serious damage in the dying minutes. The player was snortin and snottin as he lined up and could hardly contain himself before the puck went down. I skated over to him and read the riot act and promised I would throw the book at him if he started anything. The enforcer took the bait I offered and told me to go Ef myself and to just worry about my job because he was going to do his! Thats verbal abuse in my world so I told him he would have a hard time doing it that night from the dressing room as I banged my hips, assessed a misconduct penalty and had the linesman escort the player off the ice! The game ended without incident and I had no reports to write. ? Happy Valentines Day everyone! wholesale jerseys .ca looks back at the stories and moments that made the year memorable. cheap jerseys from china . As he skated toward centre ice, Washingtons quirky star lifted his left leg high off the ice. Ovechkin then broke into dance, pumping his legs up and down with his arms spread before engaging in a hug with teammates Brooks Laich and Karl Alzner. http://www.jerseyscheapnfl.us.com/yl702/ . LOUIS -- Up eight runs after three innings, Clayton Kershaw went right after the hitters. cheap nfl jerseys . Pacioretty celebrated his second goal of Montreals 4-2 victory over the Leafs on Saturday night by twirling his stick and pretending to sheathe it like a sword. Cheap New York Mets Jerseys . This time, they did it with offence. Paul Pierce scored 27 points, Kevin Garnett added 24 points and nine rebounds, and the Celtics made their first eight shots of the fourth quarter to hold off the Heat 115-107 on Tuesday night.NEW YORK -- Michael Weiner, the plain-speaking, ever-positive labour lawyer who took over as head of the powerful baseball players union four years ago and smoothed its perennially contentious relationship with management, died Thursday, 15 months after announcing he had been diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumour. He was 51. The Major League Baseball Players Association said Weiner died at his home in Mansfield Township, N.J. "We wouldnt be where we are today without his expertise," San Francisco Giants pitcher Jeremy Affleldt said in a text to The Associated Press. "We will all feel this loss of such a great man." As Weiners health deteriorated this summer, a succession plan was put in place. Former big league All-Star Tony Clark took over Thursday as acting executive director and is to be approved as Weiners successor when the unions board meets from Dec. 2-5 at La Jolla, Calif. "Words cannot describe the love and affection that the players have for Michael, nor can they describe the level of sadness we feel today," Clark said in a statement. "Not only has the game lost one of its most important and influential leaders in this generation, all involved in the game have lost a true friend." At Weiners last public speaking engagement, a 25-minute meeting with baseball writers on the day of the All-Star game in July, he was confined to a wheelchair and unable to move his right side. Yet, he wanted to respond to questions about his illness and issues in the game, and did so with the grace and humour he was known for throughout his life. "I dont know if I look at things differently. Maybe they just became more important to me and more conscious to me going forward," he said. "As corny as this sounds, I get up in the morning and I feel Im going to live each day as it comes. I dont take any day for granted. I dont take the next morning for granted. What I look for each day is beauty, meaning and joy, and if I can find beauty, meaning and joy, thats a good day." Weiner first experienced weakness and tingling on his right side in July 2012 and was diagnosed with a glioma the following month. By June 2013, he had experienced a rapid increase in symptoms. As he sat in a wheelchair in foul territory at Citi Field the following month before the All-Star game, players lined up to speak with him. His voice had gotten raspy by early August, when he responded on behalf of the union to drug suspensions handed down to Alex Rodriguez, Ryan Braun and other players. "Michael is a tremendous person. Thats why everybody loves him," New York Yankees reliever Mariano Rivera said Thursday before Weiners death was announced. "He can relate with every player and had time to talk with every player." Known for wearing blue jeans and Converse Chuck Taylor All-Star sneakers to work, Weiners easygoing manner with players was a change from former head Donald Fehrs more lawyerly approach. His style connected both with players and the students he taught during Sunday school at his synagogue. "Lost a great friend today," Arizona reliever Brad Ziegler tweeted. "One of the best leaders & men I knew. Prayers for his family." Weiner was hired by the union as a staff attorney in 1988 and wound up succeeding Fehr in December 2009. Weiner became just the fourth head of the organization since 1966. A longtime New Jersey resident and a graduate of Williams College and Harvard Law School, Weiner clerked for U.S. District Judge H. Lee Sarokin in Newark before joining the players association. Once at the union, he became a key figure in the lengthy process to parse the $280 million collusion settlement among individual players.dddddddddddd Weiner also was a junior lawyer during the 7 1/2-month players strike in 1994-95 strike and the negotiations that finally led to a new labour agreement in March 1997. "I think that helped some people on the owners side to finally accept that the union was a fixture and the union was an entity they were going to have to deal with," he said. "There was never a chance for anything to settle in until we got through collusion, and really until then we got through the bargaining in 94 and 95." Following eight work stoppages in a 23-year span, baseball has since negotiated three straight labour deals without interruption. Weiner headed talks for the last deal, in November 2011, which instituted a series of significant changes that included restraints on signing bonuses for amateur players and increased the number of free agents able to switch teams without requiring the loss of draft picks as compensation. "It took a while for the owners to appreciate that the union is not only here to stay, but that the union and its members can contribute positively to a discussion about the game -- about its economics, about the nature of the competition, about how its marketed in every way," he said. In addition to the labour contract, he headed the legal team that in 2012 convinced an arbitrator to overturn a 50-game suspension imposed on Braun, the Milwaukee outfielder who was the previous years NL MVP. The union argued his urine sample had not been handled properly. Last summer Braun agreed to accept a 65-game suspension for his activities relating to the Biogenesis of America anti-aging clinic and his public statements. Following a line of leaders that began with Marvin Miller and went on to include the short reign of Kenneth Moffett and the long tenure of Fehr, Weiner was exceedingly conscious of the unions history and traditions of player involvement. He appeared with Fehr and the then 95-year-old Miller at a 2012 discussion at New York Universitys School of Law marking the 40th anniversary of the first baseball strike and the rise of the union. Fehr, now the head of the NHLPA, released a statement on Thursday night to lament Weiners passing. "My wife Stephanie and I are enormously saddened to learn of Mike Weiners passing today, and our thoughts go out to Diane and their three daughters," said Fehr in the statement. "Mike was an extraordinary individual in so many ways: as a loving husband and father, as an exceptional union leader and lawyer, and as a great friend to so many. He was an indispensible part of the MLBPA staff for more than two decades, and was the right man to lead the union. This is a great loss, for his family, for his friends, for the players, and for everyone who crossed his path.” His hair nearly gone from his treatment, Weiner returned to NYU in January for a memorial celebrating the life of Miller, who died two months earlier. He humbly referred to "our little sport of baseball." "He was not just too young to die. He was too good and decent, too kind and brilliant," said Gene Orza, the unions former chief operating officer. "I never knew anyone finer." Said NFL players union executive director DeMaurice Smith: "The family of Michael Weiner and the community of athletes worldwide have lost a leader. I will miss my friend." Weiner is survived by his wife, the former Diane Margolin, and daughters Margie, Grace and Sally. cheap jerseys wholesale jerseys ' ' '
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