Got a question on rule clarification, comments on rule enforcements or some
memorable NHL stories? Kerry wants to answer your emails at cmonref@tsn.
Dannell Ellerbe Jersey .ca. Kerry, Sorry to
say, but in two of the last three Senators games its blatantly obvious who the
referees are pulling for. Calling penalties on Milan Michalek for grabbing a guy
after the St. Louis Blues did it for two full periods without a call and then
that horrible call on Bobby Ryan for holding his stick the proper way and Steen
obviously skating into it. Terrible officiating and its obvious to us fans
watching on TV. Im getting to the point of shutting it off completely and trying
basketball, where I know they will call terrible penalties but on both teams!
Dr. Adam Hoirch --- Hi Kerry, I was curious about if referees review their own
calls/non calls in the intermission. In watching the Ottawa/St. Louis game last
night I have to say there were some calls that seemed unwarranted against the
Senators and some non-calls against for the Blues that seemed to be blatant. Ive
seen games where it appears the refs give a soft call to the team that has been
wrongly punished, but that wasnt the case last night. With the Blues getting
over nine minutes of power play time including a full two minutes of 5-on-3
while the Senators got only 37 seconds of total power play time it is hard to
imagine any attempt was made to balance unfair or missed calls. Do the refs
really try to make amends for errors or do they just forge on? Cheers,Scott ---
Bobby Ryan received an elbowing penalty in the first period of the Ottawa-St.
Louis game. Alex Steen ran into Ryan. Can you explain what Ryan did wrong?
Thanks,Greg Moffatt --- Hi, Many have probably heard of the Senators vs. Blues
game. It was pretty obvious all the calls were one-sided, at a point that I was
expecting a supervisor coming down during the intermission and talking to the
guys. The Senators were called on cases were the Blues did exactly the same
thing, on multiple occasions, with the ref right there smiling with both hands
down. As a Senators fan and hockey fan, I felt for the first time betrayed. This
game was controlled and it made me so mad! My Twitter account went crazy! Fans
were all on the same page, they all felt sick to their stomach. What is going on
against the Senators? The Pittsburgh and St. Louis games were really weird.
Example of identical play on both side were the Senators were in the box and not
the Blues: - High stick- Crosscheck- Tripping- Roughing (I guess) on Michalek
for coming on after the whistle and grabbing a Blues player from behind (which
was done all night)- Misconduct to MacArthur because he too had enough of this
circus! Last night, the Senators won against the Blues and the Refs. Please
looks at the game and comment...its weird! Cheers,Jean-Francois Labonte --- Hi
Mr. Fraser, To be blunt: what are the repercussions for bad referees, and what
do you think the league can do to minimize games turning on bad calls in the
future? Context: Im a very angry Ottawa Senators fan. We recently lost a game in
part because of a blown boarding call against the Leafs and nearly lost a game
against the Blues where the Blues had seven power plays and the Sens had one
power play. Ill spare you most of the details of the Blues game, but it was the
worst officiated game Ive ever seen. It included a comically bad call against
Bobby Ryan for elbowing a player who skated into his arm while Ryan was looking
away and playing a puck on the boards. A ten-minute misconduct against
Clarke MacArthur for, what I gather, saying something to the referee that the
referee did not like. As far as Im concerned, good referees arent just being
fair, they look like theyre being fair. In a well-officiated game, all of the
fans – win or lose - leave believing the players decided the game, not the
referees. If that doesnt happen, everyone loses. What do you think? Yours
truly,Anthony Moffatt --- Hi Kerry, Doing my best not to wear Sens-coloured
glasses, I still am shocked at what I believe to be a display of inconsistent
and at times downright incompetent officiating by the referees in Ottawas game
at St. Louis on Tuesday night. Despite the Sens winning the game I cant help but
feel uncomfortable with officiating like that in a sport at the professional
level. The Senators were assessed 10 penalties to the Blues three. I am in no
way stating that some of these werent deserved as discipline has been a major
issue for them this year, but such a huge discrepancy when clearly the Blues
were up to antics of their own (it seemed like there was a scrum after every
whistle) is very disappointing. The fact that the Blues failed to capitalize on
any of their six (seven?) power play chances just added to the feel that Ottawa
was in fact playing against the officials and not St. Louis. What is your
opinion on the job the refs did during that game and, knowing how the league
protects its refs, is there any channel through which the Senators could
possibly launch a formal complaint? It was clear during the game that the team
was frustrated by the seemingly unfair parade of white jerseys to the penalty
box. Regards,Dave Peters --- Dr. Hoirch, Scott, Greg, Jean-Francois, Anthony and
Dave: (Almost 1,000 words in the questions alone!) Since I am not qualified to
provide anger management counseling for you, I will instead analyze the game
from my area of officiating expertise. If the Ottawa management feels, as each
of you does, they can request an official review of the officiating crews
performance presented throughout this game. That performance review must be
requested in writing and would be conducted by VP of Officiating Stephen Walkom.
His findings would be returned to Senators General Manager Bryan Murray in a
written report. Having watched every second from the opening puck drop to the
end of the second period and portions of the third period and OT, I find some
evidence that Brian might have already requested a formal review. Heres my
analysis. It is not intended to be work of prose but simply a breakdown of calls
and missed calls from my perspective. First Period: The game began with some
negative energy and carryover from their previous meeting on December 16
resulting from a high hit by Zach Smith on Alex Steen. Steen subsequently missed
some games with concussion like symptoms. The first clue of what the refs might
have in store came when Ken Hitchcock not only started his fourth line but
intended for Ryan Reeves to line up out of his normal position to take the
opening draw against Zack Smith. Referee Marc Joannette wisely ejected Reeves
prior to the puck drop following some trash talk. That first shift lasted 36
seconds before unsportsmanlike conduct penalties were assessed to both Reeves
and Smith. Given the negative energy I referred to, the referees should have
been on high alert to bring the temperature down if and when they deemed it
necessary. It was apparent to me that St. Louis Blues were the more aggressive
team from the onset. With 13:42 remaining in the first period David Backes took
exception to a solid, but legal hit by Chris Neil in the Senators end zone. When
play stopped in the Blues zone (13:29 remaining) David Backes initiate a scrum
by first grabbing Clarke MacArthur after the whistle and then dropped his gloves
and grabbed Kyle Turris. This was a perfect opportunity for the referees to set
a good standard on scrums by assessing a single penalty to Blues captain
David Backes. This was a key moment in the game when a stand-alone penalty to
the Blues should have resulted to address the scrum issue but was not called.
With 4:34 remaining, Kevin Shattenkirk got away with a high hit and charge
against Milan Michalek on a play that was signaled for an offside at the Blues
blue line. Shattenkirk travelled a distance, left his feet and made some contact
with the head of Michalek. A charging minor was warranted but not called. With
2:06 remaining in the first, Clarke MacArthur was correctly penalized for
tripping when he kicked T.J. Oshies skates out from behind to take down the Blue
player. Even though Sens coach Paul McLean and MacArthur protested, the referee
made the right call! Another correct penalty call by the referee was then
assessed to Derek Roy of the Blues with 29 seconds remaining when he grabbed and
stretched the jersey of Marc Methot from behind. Second Period: This period
was when missed and incorrect penalty calls resulted in frustration for the
Senator players, their coach and their fans. With 17:01 remaining, Kyle Turris
cleanly won a Senators end zone faceoff against Alex Steen. Steen then hooked
his stick through the left leg of Turris, lifting the leg almost waist high and
depositing the Senators player hard to the ice. Steen gave Turris an additional
shot once he was down just for good measure! Although nothing was called this
was clearly an aggressive trip that should have resulted in a penalty to Steen
and resulted in another major scrum taking place. When play stopped 13 seconds
later, Turris had words with Steen, punches were exchanged in the scrum.
Chris Stewart and Bobby Ryan were assessed coincidental roughing minor
penalties. The main event was between Turris and Steen and following the failed
tripping call, these two players should have been sent to the penalty box to
cool off. There was a good non-call by referee Joannette during the resulting
four on four when Alex Steen grabbed a stretch pass at the Ottawa blue line and
went in all alone. Eric Gryba made an excellent, legal defensive stick lift with
the referee looking on. Scrums persisted in rapid-fire that were not addressed
by the referees. With 12:02 remaining, Kyle Turris of the Sens pushed the back
of Roman Polaks head with force following a stoppage of play in the Blues goal
crease. Turris should have received a penalty as the initiator of the scrum that
followed. No call was made. Eric Condra jammed his stick at a puck that was
frozen by Jaroslav Halak, resulting in a major scrum where no penalties resulted
with 11:42 remaining in the period. Shortly thereafter (10:24 left) a four
player scrum following the stoppage took place that included a couple of
heavyweights in Chris Neil and Ryan Reeves. Once again, no penalties were
assessed by either referee.A pattern clearly had developed by this point with
the number of non-penalized scrums that had taken place within a relatively
short span of time on the game clock. What can I say about the Bobby Ryan
elbowing penalty? In an attempt to put it nicely. Ill state that Bobby Ryan did
not deserve an elbowing penalty on the play when Alexander Steen ran into Ryans
elbow. Penalty calls are rated in three categories: i) Good ii) Marginal and
iii) Poor. This call clearly falls into category iii). The Senators lost their
composure (justified or not) and verbally shared their disdain for the referees
call and most likely got personal. The referees standard on scrums was somehow
was altered at this point in the game when just 5 seconds into the Bobby Ryan
elbowing penalty, Patrik Berglund went to the net and lightly bumped Sens goalie
Robin Lehner. Milan Michalek was then assessed a roughing penalty, putting the
Sens two men short when he grabbed Berglund around the neck from behind to pull
the Blues player back from his goalkeeper. No punch or push to the head as
witnessed previously but a grab around the neck. The penalty call was an
overreaction and completely inconsistent with the standard set to on the
multiple scrums that had occurred to this point in the game. Much more
aggressive incidents had been committed by players of both teams had not
resulted in penalties to this point in the game; especially to place a team at a
two man disadvantage. Perhaps there is also a lesson to be learned by the Sens
as well regarding their lack of anger and frustration management? The penalty
assessed to Marc Methot with approximately four seconds remaining in the
roughing minor to Michalek was justified, once Methot extended his arms and
delivered a solid cross-check in the corner to T.J. Oshie. The tripping penalty
assessed to Mika Zibanejad on Jay Bouwmeester with 2:59 remaining in the second
period was also a must call for the referee to make. The negative energy that
was first initiated by the Blues against the Senators at the start of the game
was now clearly being transferred by the Sens toward the refs! Clarke MacArthurs
10 minutes misconduct at the 20:00 minute mark clearly demonstrates the Sens
frustration. Third Period: I hope no one would argue with the errant high-stick
by Eric Gryba that clipped Brenden Morrow or the free two-handed slash to
Morrows leg before the whistle blew to assess the high-sticking penalty. What I
would point out here is that rather aggressive scrums continued with a couple in
the final minute of regulation time. The score was tied and I would expect, as
was the case, no penalties resulted. I would have hoped the scrums had been
dealt with by the referees in an assertive and appropriate manner in the early
going of the game and not through a stand-alone penalty to Milan Michalek that
placed his team in a two-man disadvantage. OT Period: Regardless of what the
player or his coach thought the hooking penalty to Clarke MacArthur when he
reached and placed his stick across the arms and body of T.J. Oshie to restrain
the Blues forward on a path to the net was absolutely the correct call! The
bottom line is that the Senators persevered and picked up two points in a
shootout win. Whether an Officials Performance Review is requested by Bryan
Murray, we will most likely never know. Perhaps more important than this, as the
Senators move forward, is for coach Paul McLean and his players to review their
response to the officiating they received in this game. It can only better
prepare them for other emotional situations they might have to overcome in the
future.
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in seven appearances (five starts) with Toronto FC in 2013.
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