Paul, I am not sure you saw the game last week with the Maple Leafs. My question is in regards to kicking the puck in the net.
The play had Clarkson of the Leafs flat on his back on the ice beside the opposing goal area. He kicked the puck with his skate which went to the front of the net, hitting an opposing players skate and went in the net for a goal.
However, the ref said no goal and upon review the goal was not allowed because it was kicked in. I can't understand why this was no goal. The player didn't kick the puck in the net, he kicked it (while on his back) towards the front of the net and it hit a opposing players skate, then it deflected in the net. Why is this not a goal?
- sparky
Not to speak for the man, but I can answer this. From Section 38.4 of the NHL Rule Book:
"(iv) Puck directed or batted into the net by a hand or foot or deliberately
batted with any part of the attacking player’s body. With the use of a
foot/skate, was a distinct kicking motion evident? If so, the apparent
goal must be disallowed. A DISTINCT KICKING MOTION is one
which the player propels the puck with his skate into the net. If the
Video Goal Judge / League Office Video Room determines that it was
put into the net by an attacking player using a distinct kicking motion,
it must be ruled NO GOAL.
This would also be true even if the puck,
after being kicked, deflects off any other player of either team and
then into the net. This is still NO GOAL. However, a puck that enters
the goal after deflecting off an attacking player’s skate or that deflects
off his skate while he is in the process of stopping, shall be ruled a
good goal. See also 49.2."
In layman's terms, the key word in the answer is actually in your question- "deflection." While the puck may have been deflected after the kick by Clarkson, the kicking of the puck is still what propelled it into the net. No goal.