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    Rangers’ game-tying goal waved off due to interference; was it the right call? (Video)

    For the first time in a calendar year, the New Jersey Devils won their 5th straight game, knocking off the New York Rangers 1-0 Tuesday. Martin Brodeur picked up the shutout, his first of the season and the 117th of his career. Absurd record, that.

    But should he have? Depends on who you ask. According to New Yorkers, the Rangers scored the game-tying goal with three seconds to go in this game. According to New Jerseyans, however, Brodeur was interfered with and, unfortunately, for Rangers fans, the officials agreed, disallowing the goal.

    As you can see, Artem Anisimov buries the loose puck, but the officials don't like the way that Marian Gaborik bowls over Brodeur moments prior.

    But was Gaborik pushed? It certainly looks to me as though Anton Volchenkov rides him into the net while he attempts to stop, which would make this a good goal (and thus, a brutal call). Dave Maloney, on the other hand, clearly feels Volchenkov is "backing away."

    Not sure I agree -- hard to back away when you're going forward. But this a pretty divisive issue.

    Devils' coach Peter DeBoer felt it was the right call. From NHL.com:

    "I thought it was the right call," said Devils coach Peter DeBoer, whose team has won five straight since the All-Star break. "Marty gets pushed into the net. It's the right call. I give them credit for getting it right."

    And Anton Volchenkov, the "alleged" pusher, agreed with this assessment.

    "They have rules -- you hit the goalie, you get a penalty," Volchenkov said. "I saw him push Marty. I maybe pushed him a little, but I didn't push so hard."

    I nominate "I maybe pushed him a little but I didn't push so hard" as the "I smoked but I didn't inhale" of hockey.

    Granted, Volchenkov's not the only unreliable witness here. Alleged pushee Marian Gaborik is almost as difficult to believe:

    "I don't understand," Gaborik said. "It's frustrating. If I would have run him, I wouldn't say a word. But the guy pushes me into him. I tried to open my leg for a pass, I tried to stop. But he just pushed me into Brodeur."

    So, basically, "If I had done it on purpose, I'd be quietly deceptive, but because I didn't, I can be honest." I'm tucking this very convincing line of reasoning away for future use.

    John Tortorella was pretty upset afterwards but, sadly, he opted for a lame "No comment" after the game, perhaps because he's already a repeat offender when it comes to criticizing the officiating this year. Regardless of what you believe, I think we can all agree that the real travesty here is Tortorella showing restraint.

    What do you think? Goal or no goal?

     
    • Matt  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
      This seems consistent with other goalie interference calls I've seen this year. Consistent isn't the same as correct, though.
      • theone6643 3 months ago
        And why isn't it correct?
      • Matt 3 months ago
        I should say it isn't always correct. I'm not Gaborik, so I don't know if he was pushed or if he just failed to stop. I'm just saying that there have been a lot of plays where the defense pushes or seems to push a player into contact with the goalie, and that those goals are usually taken away.
    • Chris L  •  3 months ago
      Simple solution, allow goaltender interference to be reviewable, make the call for a goal on the ice, and review it to determine if the player was pushed in... case closed... I don't know why this isn't implemented... and as the ref... how can you see so much ice being kicked up by a player who is heading to the net and make a determination that he was not attempting to stop??
    • frank  •  Fort Myers, Florida  •  3 months ago
      As confirmed by this morning's NY Post, Brad Richards was benched for the 3rd period in Sunday's game with the Flyers, and demoted to the 4th line late in the NJ game-replaced by John Mitchell.

      Sather obviously not happy with the long term contract he is now stuck with Richards.

      Dubinsky, Ansimov, & Boyle totalled 23 points on the power play last season and this season total 3 points. CLEARLY Richards has not made either his team mates or the power play better.
      • Anthony 3 months ago
        he wasn't brought here to make Dubinsky, Ansimov or Boyle better and the power play doesn't need to be better when your in the top five in killing penalties, hes here because torts brought him here to be a veteran leader who has stanley cup experience and of course his 20+ goals wouldn't kill us either
    • Cds0506  •  Owego, New York  •  3 months ago
      He, clearly tried to stop. It was Marian freakin Gaborik. The guy has spent his career staying away from contact with other players. Why now is he tackling goalies? It was a bogus call based solely on the fact the the goalie fell over. Hockey is the best sport on earth. Let's not let it turn into Soccer or Basketball.
      • Darian K 3 months ago
        Get some glasses bud. You clearly have never been under pressure in the last few seconds of a sport and desperate for a goal. Good players will cross the line at some point or another...and this was a perfectly good call.
      • Jorge 3 months ago
        Darian, I even where glasses, and even I can tell ya, it wasn't the right call.
    • McEvechkin  •  3 months ago
      I can see both arguments. When I see the snow shooting from Gabby's left skate though, it tells me he was trying to stop. The refs should let more of these plays go to review.
    • tipton  •  3 months ago
      Rangers fan, tough call but when you see it live and from the refs angle I can see why he waved it off. I also have to agree there was no way Brodeur was flopping on that particular play. I just hope the refs are consistent and the Rangers get that call in their favor down the line. And nice little slew foot by Parise on Anisimov at the end, good thing there were no injuries from that. Bottom line is the way they played, the Rangers didn’t deserve to win that game and I’m glad Tortorella choose not to comment on it.
      • Darian K 3 months ago
        Funny how you make your little comment sound like it was a conspiracy call against the Rangers. It was a perfect call...Gaborik ran Brodeur and was NOT in any way pushed or directed into him. Accidental or not, it was Gaboriks fault...accept it, move on.
    • Derek  •  3 months ago
      watch it full speed and it looks like gaborik ran brodeur. watch it slow-mo and it looks like volchenkov pushed gaborik in. the refs watch it full speed.
      • Darian K 3 months ago
        Another obvious rangers fan...go cry. It was a good call, and I neither hate or like either team.
      • Derek 3 months ago
        i'm a Devils fan... season tickets for 10 years. not sure how that comment portrayed me as a rangers fan. even watching it at slow-mo volchenkov still barely touches him -- but my point was... it happens fast, and at a fast speed the refs definitely made the right call.
    • JosephP  •  3 months ago
      NJ is right - Gaborik just kinda went limp and let himself fall into Brodeur. Volchenkov wasn't really leaning on him much at that point.
    • Michael  •  New Orleans, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
      Good call.
    • George A  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 months ago
      If you stay out of the crease, there can be no call. Many say the fact that there was an "ice shower" proves he was trying to stop. If he would have "tried to stop" sooner, he would not have entered the crease and may have even drawn a penalty on the defense for interference. (Although it would not have helped much in this case.) Both men were charging very hard toward the net. I think it would be difficult (if not impossible) for the ref to call the defender for "shoving". My point is this. The refs have to draw the line where the rules tell them to draw the line. Currently, if the goalie is knocked back into his net by the offense, the call is usually going to be made.
    • FockerNJ  •  3 months ago
      I think it's pretty clear that Rangers fans think it's a terrible call, and Devils fans thought it was interference. Very understandable either way.

      My problem with it being a good goal is that Gaborik goes in pretty hard and follows through like he's trying to take Brodeur out. It's ridiculous hearing Rangers fans say Brodeur took a dive to draw that call.
    • Ernie P  •  Burlington, Canada  •  3 months ago
      Reinstitute the blue ice rule. That will stop all arguements about goalie interference!
    • Casey  •  Moose Jaw, Canada  •  3 months ago
      cant run goalies down or maybe u can lol
    • James F  •  3 months ago
      I thought it was open season on goaltenders?
    • Dan  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  3 months ago
      Hard to say.. He wasn't pushed into the goalie... Looks like of a mix of running into the goalie and the goalie selling it to get the call. However NHL rules make me shake my head harder and harder every year.. Being a player and a goalie myself I have this to say. As a goalie it is your duty to defend. Poke check the pass away and put the attacker on his behind, no goal and no embarrassment..
    • Kodywiddak  •  3 months ago
      i loved kovalchuk's beautiful back check
    • Brodie30  •  3 months ago
      If that's a legit goal, teams are going to have to start carrying 6 goalies. 2 won't survive the season.
    • AnotherYahoo  •  St Paul, Minnesota  •  3 months ago
      I think if you watch this from the perspective that Volchenkov caught up to Gaborik, who was already putting the brakes on, you'll see that Volchenkov's momentum accelerated Gaborik and pushed him into Brodeur. At real speed I would have waived off the goal. After watching the replay several times, Volchenkov pushed Gaborik into Brodeur, it's a goal. But I don't like Gaborik and it's two New York teams, so I don't really care. boo hoo.
    • Joe  •  3 months ago
      I can see why the ref called it the way he did. He was in proper position, but it wasn't a good position to see what actually happened. Did the ref following the play make the same call? I never saw him in any of the replays in the video.

      It looked to me like Gaborik was trying to stop. Volchenkov gets his stick into Gaborik's skate (24 second mark of the video). That, along with a slight push sent him into Brodeur. However, the refs blew the call, even if they correctly waved off the goal. There is no way that is goalie interference. If anything, it was incidental contact, and no penalty should have been given to Gaborik. I do think it should have been a goal, but my judgment my be clouded there.
    • Danne D  •  3 months ago
      For the record that's a Rangers commentator saying Volchenkov was backing away.

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