Another great blog, Paul.
And baseball could definitely use the rule change you suggested.
I remember the Bill Lee injury in 1976. The Yankees Lou Piniella intentionally barreled into Red Sox catcher Carlton Fisk at home plate trying to score; Fisk blocked the plate and punches were engaged. When the benches emptied, Graig Nettles went after Lee and threw him down hard on his pitching arm causing torn ligaments in his left shoulder. Damn Yankees.
There was no reason for Nettles to go after Lee like that, except that Nettles was probably still sore from a 1973 Red Sox-Yankee brawl after which Lee compared the Yankees to "a bunch of hookers, swinging their purses."
Bill Lee was only 29 when injured and had three 17-win seasons in a row. Lee missed two months. When he returned in mid-July, the division race was for all practical purposes already over. Lee was never the same pitcher after that, having only one season statistically (in 1979 with Montreal) that approached his pre-injury levels.
The Yankees repeated in 1977 by a margin of two and a half games and in 1978 only by means of a one-game playoff. A healthy Lee would have given the Red Sox a fair chance to repeat in 1976 and would have certainly made the difference in ’77 and ’78.
Nettles wouldn't be remembered for his stunning World Series glove work. No one would remember Reggie Jackson as "Mr. October." And Bucky Dent would not have an obscene middle name.
Even as late as 2001 Nettles still showed no remorse. He told the
Hartford Courant, "A couple of their players had scratches [in 1973]," Nettles said. "And Lee said something like, 'You know you're in a fight with the Yankees because you get hit with [fingernails] and purses.' And I remembered it. He was always taking shots at us like that unnecessarily. So I pulled him off and I wanted to make sure he knew he wasn't getting hit with a purse.'"
Considering that the NHL rule for coming off the bench to precipitate a brawl is a 10-game suspension (a rule change done in 1987 under President John Ziegler), perhaps 10 games for baseball as you suggest may actually be
too lenient given the schedule is twice as long. But it would be a good start.
Have to say, though, I'm not a great fan of the icing rule related to prohibiting substitutions. I think we all know it was done in an attempt to create more scoring opportunities. Just like the automatic puck over the glass penalty and moving faceoffs to the defending zone when a power play begins.
"H.R. 1776." Nice!
Now we know what your profession would have been without pro hockey:
history teacher.