The Systematic Erosion and Neutralization of Skill and

Play-making in the NHL                        

NHL Players Are Not Created Equal nor Should They Be Treated As if They Are
By Neil K. Sheehy
 

Note:    The following article was written and published during the

               2004-05 National Hockey League Lockout.

ARTICLE PREFACE

I am writing this article knowing that I will be criticized for having the audacity to write it.  I will be criticized for believing that my ideas have some value, and I will be accused of being “self-serving” because I am an NHLPA Certified Agent.   After all, who am I to write a thought-provoking article based on personal experience about the problems in our game and how it is played in the NHL, and therefore taught across North America at all levels?  I have a fair amount of experience in the game of hockey, but I am not misguided enough to think that anyone with the power to influence change in the sport will actually listen to my point-of-view! 

I have thought hard about hockey's evolution over the past few decades and I have established theories about why changes in the game have occurred and how those changes have negatively impacted the game.  Before now, I have not publicly voiced my theories, and it was not until I spoke with Pat Conacher, a close friend of Wayne Gretzky’s and the current coach of the AHL’s Utah Grizzlies, that I considered doing so. 

After a recent AHL game I spoke with Pat, and he respectfully accused me of being the guy who caused a major shift in how the game is now played.  I had similar thoughts, but until I heard his accusations, I was reluctant to express them because I did not want to appear arrogant, as if my style of play actually influenced the game of hockey!  Is it arrogant for me to think that I was a catalyst in the downturn of the game?

In the Battle of Alberta, I continually pushed and prodded Wayne Gretzky, trying to get him to think more about me than scoring goals.  Consequently, I had to face retribution from Dave Sememko, Marty McSorley, Don Jackson and Kevin McClelland every night. I took several hits to the head every game, but I would not fight.  I told them that if I fought them, I would be fined.  And in reply, Kevin McClelland eloquently quipped, “I’ll pay it!”  It was obvious that he and his teammates desperately wanted a "piece of me." 

Purposefully, I rocked the boat.  I hit the skilled players and would not fight the tough ones, which distracted them all.  In part, because I was the recipient of many cheap shots as “pay-back” for my tactics, the NHL eventually reacted and implemented “the instigator rule” which further encouraged my tactics and helped neutralize the game's offensive skill. 

I now feel compelled to express my thoughts, as I believe the game of hockey is at a crossroads.  The future of professional hockey will depend upon decisions that are made now.  Most who are involved in hockey recognize that its players are bigger, stronger and faster and more skilled than ever before, but the game is in fact diminished and is considerably less entertaining.

But, how can that be?  I believe it is because the most skilled players are not given the freedom to exhibit their skills!  Rather, they are coached to “play the percentages” and...“Chip it in, chip it out…..chip, chip, chip!” 

The "Golden Age of Hockey," a time when great teams dazzled us all, is an age of the past.  I am convinced we are now at a time when changes must occur.  We must discuss and tackle our game's problems, and come up with real solutions, otherwise hockey will never sell in non-traditional markets and the game will suffer.

Solving any problem first involves identifying what is wrong, and then the real challenge is finding the right solutions.  I hope to offer a perspective that identifies tactics that began the downturn of skill and play-making in hockey, and then to offer possible solutions.

I believe I have a unique perspective of the game because I played eleven years of professional hockey, including an NHL career which spanned over nine seasons.  I retired from hockey in 1994, began law school the same year, and finished in 1996.  I passed the Bar in Minnesota and Massachusetts in February, 1997. 

I have remained involved in the NHL since 1994, as an NHL agent/lawyer, as well as being on USA Hockey’s Executive Board as an athlete representative from 1997 until 2004.  I have participated in and studied many issues regarding hockey development, and have closely watched the game evolve both in the NHL and at youth/junior/high school and college levels.

I have witnessed that the trends of all levels of hockey follow what occurs in the NHL, in part because players and coaches emulate the way the game is played professionally.  But I have also seen that all leagues follow the lead of the NHL in its officiating as well.  A case in point is the latest crackdown on “obstruction” in the NHL.  Every league in North America seems to have followed by instructing its referees to call more penalties.  That which has caused the downturn in the NHL game, has in turn negatively affected the game at all levels.  The good news is that solutions that will "fix" the NHL will in time create positive results for hockey everywhere, at all levels.  

I do not mean to “oversimplify” the issues regarding our game, and I do not claim to have all of the answers, but Pat Conacher and I share a perspective that is never mentioned when discussing “the state of the game".   I have heard about possible rule changes that would help "open up" our game to allow a more effective offense, i.e. widening the red and blue lines, taking out the red line, keeping the goalies in the net so they cannot play the puck, reducing the size of goalie equipment, and increasing the size of the cage.

The aforementioned ideas all have some merit and I believe they should be considered.  It is my hope as well that the points I raise in this article might be thought-provoking enough to also merit consideration.  And I sincerely hope my ideas might inspire further debate and discussion about our great game.  When the NHL begins to play again, and it is an absolute disgrace that it will not be anytime soon, I am hopeful that the "decision-makers" will consider all possibilities that might restore “The Golden Age of Hockey."

Many discussions regarding “What is wrong with our game?” revolve around the way the game was played in the 80’s by the great Edmonton Oilers’ teams, with such players as Gretzky, Messier, Kurri, Coffey, Tikkanen, Anderson, Lowe, Huddy and Fuhr, not to overlook Semenko, McSorley, McClelland, Jackson, Lumley, Linesman and  Hunter.

I was fortunate enough to play for some great Calgary Flames’ teams at that time, and even moreso to play against the great Edmonton Oilers’ teams, which are now thought to be among the best ever assembled.  I always considered myself lucky to even have been on the same ice-surface as "Gretzky And Company."  Although it may have appeared otherwise, I had tremendous respect for them.

The Battle of Alberta was hockey at its finest, and two of the best teams in hockey, the Oilers and Flames, went to war with unbelievable passion for close to twenty "marathons" per season: up to five exhibition games, eight regular season games and seven playoff games.  Yes, the ole’ Battle of Alberta was great hockey, but it was played at a time when the game was wide-open and highly offensive, with two of the all-time greatest players leading the way, Wayne Gretzky and Mario Lemieux.

 

And then it happened, the beginning of the systematic erosion and neutralization of skill and play-making in the NHL…

 

The Systematic Erosion and Neutralization of Skill and

Play-making in the NHL                        

NHL Players Are Not Created Equal nor Should They Be Treated As if They Are
 

ARTICLE MAIN TEXT

Wayne Gretzky warned against not protecting the NHL’s best players and was dubbed by some as, “Whine Gretzky."  Brett Hull spoke out against the way the game is played and he was written off as.....well "being Brett."  Mario Lemieux warned against it and he was discounted as a baby who felt he deserved special treatment. 

And “Why not?” I ask.  Players like Gretzky, Hull, Lemieux, Yzerman, Federov, Sakic, Modano as well as the NHL’s future stars: St. Louis, Kovalchuck, Heatley, Richards, Thornton and Gomez among others, should be treated differently because these players make the NHL the greatest league in the world.

 

The NHL is steeped in history and tradition and therefore rarely makes radical changes to the game.  Therefore, I am not advocating for radical changes to the rules, but rather for focusing on the league's interpretation of the rules, instruction of the rules and the league's commitment of more resources for officials.  In order to fully understand my perspective, I believe it important to briefly outline the history of the NHL as I experienced it. 

 

I have distant memories as a boy in the 1960’s watching “Hockey Night in Canada” and I witnessed expansion in 1967. I watched great Montreal Canadiens’ teams with Yvan Cournoyer, Jean Beliveau and Jacques Lemaire.  I vividly remember when Bobby Orr arrived on the scene, and in his break-out season with the Boston Bruins, won the Stanley Cup in 1970 and again in 1972. The Bruins dazzled us with their skill and their hard physical style of play on the small rink of the Boston Garden.  Orr and Company received the nickname,“The Big Bad Bruins," but not one player was bad, nor really that big.  However, they were a great team that bonded together and played with tremendous overall team skill and toughness.

 

Philadelphia responded with “The Broad Street Bullies” and won two Stanley Cups in 1973 and 1974.  Dave “the Hammer” Schultz glamorized the role of the goon and the Flyers changed the make-up of the game with players like Gary Dornhoeffer, Don Saleski, Dave Schultz, Andre Dupont, Ed Van Impe and Bob Kelly. The evolving game in the NHL influenced the minor leagues and the minor league style of play became the impetus for the movie Slapshot.

The Montreal Canadiens continued its dynasty of skill and “team toughness” in the late 1970’s with the likes of Guy LaFleur, Pete Mahovlich, Lemaire, Guy LaPointe and Larry Robinson.  The New York Islanders responded with their own skill and overall “team toughness” in the early 80’s with Bryan Trottier, Mike Bossy, Denis Potvin, John Tonelli, Bobby Nystrom, Clark Gillies and Billy Smith.  These dynasty teams could win however any other team wished to play…with skill or toughness.  

 

Then in 1984, in a Stanley Cup rematch with the New York Islanders, the Edmonton Oilers’ players became of age and created the NHL’s most recent dynasty. The Oilers were dominant with Wayne Gretzky, Jari Kurri, Mark Messier, Glenn Anderson, Paul Coffey and Grant Fuhr.  The Oilers successfully intimidated other teams with their youth, speed, and skill. 

 

Edmonton not only had the fastest and most skilled team in the league, but Glen Sather had taken a page from Fred Shero’s Philadelphia Flyers’ playbook and had one of the toughest teams in the league with Dave Semenko, Marty McSorley, Kevin McClelland, Don Jackson, Ken Linesman, Dave Lumley, Dave Hunter and Wayne Van Dorp.  The Oilers could play whatever game a team wanted to play and dominate. There was no team as fast, as skilled or as tough.

 

In the 1980’s, as a tactic, the Oilers created scrums and pushing matches so that players from both teams would be put in the penalty box.  Four-on-four, there was no better team than Edmonton, and with that advantage, the Oilers feasted on all other teams in the league…until the NHL decided the Oilers’ style of play was unfair, and neutralized Edmonton’s game by implementing the coincidental penalties rule.  My, my, how things have changed!

 

Edmonton was the best in the NHL and every team dreamed of finding a way to beat them.  Bob Johnson, the coach of the Calgary Flames, worked day and night looking for ways to beat the Oilers by trying to neutralize their speed and skill, and to do this he needed players who could skate well and who were also tough.

 

I played an important role within Badger Bob’s system and my role as a member of the Calgary Flames was the same as in guerrilla warfare.  I was unpredictable at a time when most players were predictable.  I kept players guessing by distracting them and keeping them off their game. 

It was a time in the game when tough guys fought tough guys, and a tough guy would never turn away from a fight.  The “goons” protected the skilled players, and no one touched the skilled players unless they wanted a fight, a line-brawl or even a bench-clearing brawl, of which Calgary and Edmonton had many.  This was the way the game was played until the NHL implemented rules that awarded a 10-game suspension (without pay) for the first player over the bench in a brawl.

 

I pushed and prodded Gretzky to get him thinking more about me than about scoring goals.  Consequently, I had to face Semenko, McSorley, Jackson and McClelland every night, but I would not fight them.  I took several hits to the head and was challenged to fight every shift.  I told these tough guys that I would get fined if I fought them and Kevin McClelland eloquently quipped, “I’ll pay it,” because he and his teammates so desperately wanted a "piece of me."  

 

The officials didn’t call many penalties against the Oilers until we “The Flames” used the media to highlight that fact.  We got the story out that our players were being mugged and challenged to fight, and the Oilers were not being penalized.  A couple officials even said to me, "Don't worry, you'll get yours"!  In part because of the Oilers' tactics which were exposed in our battles, the NHL eventually reacted and implemented the “instigator rule.”  From then on, any player that instigated a fight received a two-minute minor.

 

I continued to rock the boat.  I hit the skilled players and would not fight the tough ones, which distracted both the skilled and tough players. I was now allowed to annoy Gretzky to distraction and was able to keep Edmonton’s tough guys off-center by drawing penalties, and this was a time when Calgary had the #1 power-play in the NHL. 

I was not held as accountable for my tactics like I had been my first couple years as a player.  The rules now protected me and I was able to use them to make my game more effective by neutralizing the skill of opposing forwards.  It was one of the reasons which enabled the Calgary Flames to have consistent and continued success against the Edmonton Oilers. 

 

This began a shift in how the game was played throughout the NHL, a process which has continued to evolve the last twenty years.   Coaches studied the great Edmonton Oilers’ teams and the tactics the Flames successfully used against them.  Players were then expected to implement similar tactics, and unfortunately, because the NHL allowed such tactics without individual player accountability, an increasing number of players adopted this style, which legally shuts down the best offensive players, but which also eliminates a great degree of skill from the game. 

Additionally, I believe the "Todd Bertuzzi" incident never would have happened if the instigator rule didn't exist and if players were better able to police themselves.  This situation would have been dealt with long before and a star player like Bertuzzi probably would not have been involved.  I do not condone what Bertuzzi did and his actions have absolutely no place in the NHL game.  Incidents like this do more to hurt our sport throughout the United States, where the league is in quest of the elusive television contract, than periodic fisticuffs among its players throughout the regular season.

What other changes have recently occured in the NHL that have further eroded and neutralized skill and play-making in the league?

 

Another major change in the NHL occurred in the 90’s when it expanded from twenty-one teams to thirty.  The league also opened its doors to eastern European players with the fall of the Iron Curtain.  However, most of these players were already drafted by established NHL teams, which forced the expansion teams to acquire less accomplished players. However, coaches needed to compete immediately, so they had to find ways to neutralize the higher skill of the established teams. 

 

I have often heard players express complete disdain for what seems to be the most commonly used words of their coaches, “Chip it in! Chip it out...chip, chip, chip!”  Today's coaches are coaching the highest percentage play, given today's rules and the way today's game is officiated. 

Great coaches like Scotty Bowman, Glen Sather, Bob Johnson and Herb Brooks all coached their players to keep puck possession and use their skill and abilities to make plays, because these coaches believed their teams worked hard to get the puck; there was no reason to give it away.    

Today, when a team is not as skilled, a coach will commonly instruct his players to make “safe” plays…“get it in” or “get it out” or “chip it in” or “chip it out."  And because only sixteen of the thirty NHL teams make it to the playoffs, coaches "play it safe" in order to keep their jobs, and that has further stifled skill and puck possession in the NHL.

 

Since the mid-90’s, the NHL has promoted speed and high-impact body contact in hopes of attracting a national television audience.  What effect has that had on the game?   It has encouraged high-impact body contact, with reckless abandon, which is often over-looked by officials and this has further eroded skill in professional hockey.    

 

And what is charging?  I was taught as a young player that if you took more than three steps toward an opponent and made contact, you would be penalized for "charging."  That is no longer the case in the NHL.  Allowing players to charge without penalty causes skilled players to lose the puck in order to protect themselves when trying to make a play.  As a consequence, coaches often yell, “Don’t give the puck away!…Chip it in!…Get it deep!” 

 

It should be no surprise that the number of concussions has increased in the game today.  High-impact contact is encouraged,  and charging  and "head-hunting" are allowed.  For players to make contact at high-speed, they must take more than three steps before making contact, which by the rulebook is charging.  The league has in effect, removed player accountability.  Players are not penalized for these types of infractions, and this continues the trend that eliminates skill from the game because skilled players must continue to protect themselves at the expense of puck possession. 

 

Furthermore, a complete lack of respect among players has permeated the game.  The NHL instituted a penalty for “hitting from behind," but now players have purposefully created the tactic of turning their backs to an oncoming body-check in hopes of drawing a penalty, at the expense of possibly being injured.  This is how sick our game has become.

 

Skilled players are not allowed to play a skilled game, because if they do, they risk being injured and possibly ending their careers.  In addition, coaches bench a player if he unsuccessfully tries to make a play other than by "chipping the puck in the zone" and "getting it deep."  Players are also coached not to make plays on either side of the blue-lines because they might turn the puck over and create an odd-man rush the other way.

Coaches want their players to agitate opponents and draw penalties. “Agitate, but don’t fight," they say.  This was a novel idea back in the 80’s, but now it is the norm and our overall game is suffering because of it.  It neutralizes skill and frustrates the very players that make hockey “the greatest game in the world.”

I agree with Brett Hull and Mario Lemieux regarding the necessity of the NHL protecting its most skilled players.   I believe the instigator rule should be eliminated.  The officials should not be forced to call more penalties with new rules, but rather focus on calling fewer penalties and allow players to police themselves.  If this were to happen, the tactics of trying to draw more penalties would be diminished.  

If a player is held accountable for the way he plays, by facing retribution without the prospect of drawing a penalty, in most cases he will likely stop his tactics.  Therefore the role of the "tough-guy" should remain important in the NHL to make players accountable but it can be kept under control.  This would help open up the game and give it back to the skilled players.  

The NHL changes its rules to compensate for the tactics players develop given the rules that the NHL creates.  With each new rule, players develop a new set of tactics.  The league needs to think “outside the box” and become less reactionary and more intuitive.

Officiating is a thankless job but it is extremely important in hockey and the NHL must invest greater resources into working with its officials. An alternative to having two officials on the ice calling a game, would be to have one referee watch from above and consult with the on-ice referee between periods and after each game.  The two can switch each night from on the ice to off and from off the ice to on.  This would help officials get a better feel of the league and to understand the tactics and tendencies of the players, which would help them become better officials with a better feel for the game. 

Officials do the best they can given their direction from the league.  The focus of the NHL should also be on working with its officials to protect the league's most skilled players.  If the NHL would allow the players to police themselves within reason, and give the officials the leeway to control it, the tactics players use to draw penalties would eventually lessen and skilled players would again be able to fully showcase their abilities.

Additionally, players should not be allowed to make contact after taking more than three steps, and if a player leaves his feet to make contact, he should be penalized.  The rulebook should be enforced and charging should be called.  If so, skilled players would have more opportunity to play a skilled game, and there would be fewer injuries, fewer concussions and hockey would benefit at all levels.

Indeed, there are numerous possible remedies that would help "fix" our ailing game...and I have highlighted a few, but I believe the NHL Commissioner's "Number One" focus should be to insist that its officials understand the critical fact that NHL Players Are Not Created Equal Nor Should They Be Treated As If They Arewhen the game is on.

 
If you find this article interesting or its perspective accurate, please send this website link, www.sheehyhockey.com to as many people as you think might be interested.  The only way for change to occur is for hockey players and hockey fans everywhere to get the message and to make sure that the decision-makers at all levels of hockey understand what truly makes hockey the greatest game in the world.  Thank you for reading my views.   - Neil K. Sheehy
 

Related archive articles on the 1980's Battle of Alberta click here!

 

Back to the Top!

 

 

 

 

 

 
© 2005 Sheehy Hockey, LLC.