I am not a skater, so hopefully someone can explain this to me:
A player is skating with the puck and is hooked around the wrist. He falls to the ice. Ref calls a hooking penalty.
Now my question- With todays power skating training programs, how does a hook to a wrist cause a pro hockey player to fall off his skates? Why are these calls not called embellishments? If a player can be taken off his skates that easily, why is he even in the pro game?
Thanks for the education.
- powerenforcer
Do you have a specific play in mind? I can think of a few reasons. One if it can pull you even a little off balance when you're in the middle of a stride your blade could bite into the ice and then momentum takes over and down you go, or the opposite can happen and your blade doesn't bite and you slip. But without knowing exactly what you're talking about it could absolutely be embellishment, or it could just be plain physics and nothing to do with how strong of a skater a certain player may be or any permutation thereof.