YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

    Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

    To get started, first
    Puck Daddy

    Columbus GM on Doughty goal: ‘Either there was a deliberate stopping of the clock or malfunction’

    NHL.com

    On Wednesday night, the Columbus Blue Jackets were screwed out of at least a point, maybe even a rare victory. There's no denying that.

    Los Angeles Kings defenseman Drew Doughty's game-winning goal at 0:00.4 of the third period came after the game clock was frozen at 1.8 seconds, for what the Jackets claim was at least one full second; or enough time to capture the four distinct images of goalie Curtis Sanford seen above.

    It was an embarrassment for the league, to the point where the video review wasn't even addressed on NHL.com's Situation Room Blog on Thursday morning.

    It's the kind of thing that calls the integrity of these games into question. The NHL fined John Tortorella $30,000 for a hyperbolic tantrum about the officiating at the Winter Classic because it "challenged the integrity of the league, its officials and its broadcast partners," according to Colin Campbell.

    So what happens to the Los Angeles Kings and their game operations staff for this mess?

    Columbus Blue Jackets GM Scott Howson addressed the matter on his official team site blog Thursday morning, revealing both his outrage and that Campbell promised Howson that the league will look into what happened in Los Angeles on Wednesday night.

    Howson said he spoke with Campbell, a senior vice president of hockey operations for the NHL, twice on Wednesday night. Campbell confirmed that the clock on the screen in television replays of the goal is in fact the official in-arena clock and not that of the broadcaster:

    Howson said Campbell "confirmed that we were actually seeing the official game clock stop for one full second" and "has promised me that the NHL will investigate this to try and figure out how this happened." Howson, who wasn't in attendance at the game, has his own suspicions:

    "It is an amazing coincidence that with the Kings on a power play at STAPLES Center and with a mad scramble around our net in the dying seconds of the third period of a 2-2 hockey game that the clock stopped for at least one full second. I can only think of two ways in which this would have happened. Either there was a deliberate stopping of the clock or the clock malfunctioned."

    The Columbus GM acknowledged that the Blue Jackets are a last-place team and this loss "likely not going to affect our place in the standings." (Hell, it should actually help them Fail for Nail).

    But he later explained why this controversy means something to his team and to the Western Conference:

    "We will never know if we should have had one point or two points in the standings. What we do know is that we should not have had zero. Anyone who has competed at a high level of sports knows that when you put everything into a game, the result matters. And to have the result altered unfairly stings.

    "In addition, this result matters to every other team in the Western Conference that is competing with Los Angeles for a playoff spot. We will never know if the Kings would have got the extra point in overtime or shootout, but they may not have. This extra point in the standings could have an enormous impact both competitively and economically. What if the Kings make the playoffs by one point or gain home ice advantage by one point? We could be talking about a team not making the playoffs and missing out on millions of dollars in playoff gates. No one can ever convince me that this result does not matter."

    Considering that the No. 4 through No. 8 seeds in the Western Conference last season were separated by two points … yeah, it does matter.

    It also matters because we're paying a [expletive] load of money to watch these games in person or on the television.

    We do so under the assumption that the refs will blow and miss calls; we don't do so under the assumption that the clock will conveniently "malfunction" at a critical juncture of the game. It happens, for sure: The clock will start a few clicks late on a faceoff or some such. It happens in every arena. This one is just so egregious, and so critical, that it's inexcusable.

    "There is nothing more important than the integrity of the game."

    That was the NHL's reaction when a Fox Sports Net Pittsburgh producer willfully withheld a definitive replay from the War Room that would have validated a Philadelphia Flyers goal. He was subsequently suspended.

    In this case, if it's found that someone at Staples Center willfully stopped the clock for a few moments during a Kings power play at the end of regulation, there's one clear way for the NHL to make it up to Columbus.

    No, not fixing the lottery like they did for Pittsburgh: Declaring this game a regulation tie, awarding both teams a point, and playing out overtime and the shootout in the pregame before the teams meet on Thursday, March 8 in Columbus (a suggestion we share with Jesse Spector).

    Again: Only if this was something deliberate rather than a malfunction, aka what we'd bet the farm on the NHL claiming it was.

    UPDATE: Colin Campbell tells Pierre LeBrun, regarding any change to the outcome: "No you can't. Once the game is over, it's over.''

     
    • chris m  •  Stamford, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
      They must have seen this when they first looked at the replay. The operator turned the clock off for a second,
      • Ryan 3 months ago
        Yep, I was watching the one of the last Av's / Kings games at the Staples Center on TV and saw the clock operator turn the clock on an off about 3 times during the last 4 seconds while the Kings were in the Av's zone.
      • shanghinoon1000 3 months ago
        that doesn't make sense and if your attempting to poke fun at the assas of Kennedy, your even stupider!!
    • KeepItReal..  •  3 months ago
      Should have been review and reversed. I'm not a big hockey fan but that clock error cost them the game. You should be beaten by your opponent, not an outside source.
      • secretsauce 3 months ago
        Agree absolutely.
      • Nikolay P 3 months ago
        it was reviewed, but they didnt catch it only until a few minutes after, but it was too late to reverse the call
      • Mike McElroy 3 months ago
        Im a cbj fan and trust me....a clock error didnt make them lose or cost them the game
    • CrAzYpSyChoLoSeR  •  Nanaimo, Canada  •  3 months ago
      This isn't the first time this has happened at Staples Center...I recall the Lakers getting a number of favourable clock "malfunctions" over the years.

      Its pretty lame nonetheless.
      • Fox 3 months ago
        "As honest a game as basketball" is not something I ever want to hear about a sport I follow.
      • Ben 3 months ago
        Oh please.. Hater!
      • Mad Bombs 3 months ago
        Crazy... you must be a clippers fan, if your not you sure sound like one. hike up your skirt and grab those nuts.
    • Lorne  •  3 months ago
      Why is Colin Campbell even still associated with the NHL? They need to distance themselves from that man as much as possible.
      • bashibabat 3 months ago
        Oh cause hes helping the Bruins right!
    • Bacon Latte  •  Hillsboro, Oregon  •  3 months ago
      Hmmmmm. Is the NHL as rigged as the NBA?
      • macdiddy1978 3 months ago
        probably not because the NHL's biggest market hasn't won the cup in 45 years
      • true democrat 3 months ago
        and the NFL, just asking
      • Round Belly 3 months ago
        ALL sports worth this much are controled to meet the finacial needs of team owners.
    • The Unsilent Majority  •  3 months ago
      Ultimately it doesn't matter what the reason for the clock stoppage was, it was definitely for longer than .4 seconds and the Jackets lost out on at least a point because of it. I like the suggestion that they each get a point and start their next contest with a 4-on-4 OT period to finish this game.
    • Tom  •  3 months ago
      I am sure everyone here has a clock of some form on thete porson. Has anyone ever seen the clock magically stop for a second, then start back up again. I am sure they will say it was a malfunction, but it was just too much of a coincidence to believe.
    • Mustache of Kes  •  3 months ago
      Thank god Colin Campbell has weighed in on this. His involvement should reassure everyone that there has been no conspiring / covering up whatsoever.
    • Andy  •  3 months ago
      I noticed the clock freeze after watching the play a second time on on the fly. Kinda shocked noone noticed it in staples right away.
    • Mike McElroy  •  Pharr, Texas  •  3 months ago
      So my conspiracy theory about the NHL sabotaging my CBJ for 11 years may be correct? I knew it!!
    • K M  •  3 months ago
      The producer in that Penguins-Flyers game should have been immediately fired. Immediately.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 months ago
      You'd think the NHL would be fair with this and have a playoff or shootout...pistols at 10 paces gentlemen.
    • Massive Tamahawk  •  3 months ago
      OF all places I could see this happen, Definitely L.A
    • Jason L  •  San Diego, California  •  3 months ago
      I guarantee that the guys running the clock had not idea they'd get caught.
    • Albert G  •  San Francisco, California  •  3 months ago
      The two ways this could have happened was either it ways deliberate. or it ways deliberate!
      Are you blind!!!!!
    • Alex  •  3 months ago
      I know columbus sucks but thats #$%$ los angeles cheated and this is pathetic. los angeles wont win ish anyway.
    • Mo-mentum  •  3 months ago
      A malfunction at this juncture of the contest is much less likely than being "homered" by the timekeeper. Clear case of cheating with evidence to prove it!
    • Paul D.  •  Tacoma, Washington  •  3 months ago
      Is anybody really surprised? With the combined arrogance of the owners, the league, and most especially the referees/officials, this will be swept under the rug (or ice) in about 3 months!
    • Big McLargeHuge  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
      I remember a few years ago when the Flyers clearly scored a goal against the Pens in Pittsburgh, but upon video review... the Pens broadcast team somehow "did not have access" to the particular angle that CLEARLY showed it was a good goal.... yea, mm-kay.
    • mindblelon  •  3 months ago
      Give the Kings zero points for the game as a league penalty.

    Yahoo! Sports Authors