net movement
Posted: Sat Feb 07, 2009 11:17 am
from the games ive seen, the goalie from eagan is famous for knocking the net off. after the second time it should be a delay of game
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Mayo won the game 4-0.SEMNHOCKEYFAN wrote:I remember a game a few years ago when it was mayo-jm and mayo kept getting chances down in the jm end and every time it would seem that the net would just happen to come off....i beleve mayo lost that game like 2-1 but i beleve that if it becomes consistant that the refs should call a penalty r something along that line.....
Yeah but that was different the goaltender didnt kick the net loose. The first goal waved off was knocked loose when Pitlick (i think it was pitlick) trying to knock the puck through harpers skate and the pipe.King of the Pond wrote:this very situation happened in the Blaine Centennial game. 2 Centennial goals were waved off because the ref claimed the net came off before the puck made it in.
Being a goalie, I can you tell that that dropping the net on the peg is the least effect method of pegging the net. If dropped from a high enough height this may work, but too many refs are old and lazy and do not bring the net up more than what is necessary to fit the peg underneath. The most effective method is what you first described; get down on your knees, BANG that sucker into the ice, and then drop the net onto of the peg.Zamman wrote:A lot of rinks cannot change to the rubber pegs. That would mean drilling holes in concrete, which would cause stress fractures in the flooring. In our rink we have a sand floor and the holes would just keep expanding or cave in. Not to mention that our pipes are just below the ice surface.Rossbury21 wrote:I think they should mandate a change to the rubber stoppers during games that most College and Professional teams now do...they require a little more work during intermission, but it is so much more effective, because the net will never be slightly off, if it gets nudged it will just move right back in.
The Problem with calling a penalty however is it is a judgement call, one ref will call it more then another.
Another point should be that people need to properly peg nets after the ice is made. I see most rinks and players kneel down and bang the peg into the ice then set the net on top of it. I was taught many years ago to take the peg, lift the net, set the peg in the pipe and drop the net. That causes enough pressure to sink the spike and the end of the peg. i do not see many nets moving off when this is done.
countrygentleman wrote:Being a goalie, I can you tell that that dropping the net on the peg is the least effect method of pegging the net. If dropped from a high enough height this may work, but too many refs are old and lazy and do not bring the net up more than what is necessary to fit the peg underneath. The most effective method is what you first described; get down on your knees, BANG that sucker into the ice, and then drop the net onto of the peg.Zamman wrote:A lot of rinks cannot change to the rubber pegs. That would mean drilling holes in concrete, which would cause stress fractures in the flooring. In our rink we have a sand floor and the holes would just keep expanding or cave in. Not to mention that our pipes are just below the ice surface.Rossbury21 wrote:I think they should mandate a change to the rubber stoppers during games that most College and Professional teams now do...they require a little more work during intermission, but it is so much more effective, because the net will never be slightly off, if it gets nudged it will just move right back in.
The Problem with calling a penalty however is it is a judgement call, one ref will call it more then another.
Another point should be that people need to properly peg nets after the ice is made. I see most rinks and players kneel down and bang the peg into the ice then set the net on top of it. I was taught many years ago to take the peg, lift the net, set the peg in the pipe and drop the net. That causes enough pressure to sink the spike and the end of the peg. i do not see many nets moving off when this is done.
Further, I never knock the net off its pegs intentionally. On top of that, nothing pisses me off more than when a ref doesn't put the peg in properly and the net comes off every time I slide post to post.