prog: (Default)
prog ([personal profile] prog) wrote2007-07-19 01:07 pm
Entry tags:

Lethal! En, forcers! Player one! *bang*

Today's Wikipedia featured article is about fighting in hockey and I read the whole thing. I found it fascinating because I grew up in a hockey-loving house (by virtue of my brother Peter being in it) and watched and enjoyed countless Bruins games on television, and then went on to a hockey college and couldn't help but follow all our boys' (and, separately but lesserly, ladies') exploits there, and still I had no concept at all until now of NHL teams having unofficial "enforcer" players who protect the smaller players, punish perceived transgressions, and generally only fight with other enforcers. This is apparently a tradition far older than I.

I haven't followed or even thought much about hockey in years, and now it all seems rather bizarre for the reason the article states, that there's no other professional team sport in the western world that tolerates and even encourages on-field pugilistics like North American hockey. When I was a kid it seemed as natural as anything but now it strikes me as the output of unregulated testosterone poisoning, and simply distasteful. The purposeful and oddly abstract tackles and collisions in American football is just as physical but a hundred times more nuanced. (As is the checking and such in hockey, sure.)

(Subject line is what the arcade machine "Lethal Enforcers" would say when you put a quarter in and then started a one-player game, and otherwise has nothing to do with anything.)

[identity profile] xach.livejournal.com 2007-07-19 06:28 pm (UTC)(link)
Fighting in high school and college hockey is much more harshly penalized than in the NHL. It's also impractical, since most if not all school athletic hockey leagues in college and below mandate full face masks.

[identity profile] prog.livejournal.com 2007-07-19 06:39 pm (UTC)(link)
It's funny, but while I was a local fan I didn't know about the explicit ban on fighting in NCAA hockey, and I don't think I ever really noticed its absence.