Hockey Rules Made Easy
If you're a newcomer to the game of hockey you may find the
rules of the game a bit confusing, but with a little
self-educating you'll pick up them right away. When you
understand the hockey penalties, you'll find the game more
enlightening regardless of whether you're playing or enjoying a
hockey game as a spectator. The rules for hockey aren't too
terribly complicated, just pretty different from other sports.
Once you learn the rules, you may be ready to complain about the
ref's calls like everyone does in other sports, but be careful
about arguing with the referees because hockey is a pretty
disciplined game. The captain of a hockey team is the one person
designated to talk to officials about the rules of the game.
Each team has a captain and alternate captains. The alternates
can talk to the officials about a play if the captain, for one
reason or another, is not on the ice.
In hockey, penalties are assessed by referees for poor behavior.
Different penalties have different consequences, some resulting
in a team playing short one or two players, but no more than
two. When a player is taken out of the game because of a
penalty, the play that occurs with the player's team being
short-handed is referred to a power play for the other team and
a penalty kill for the team that is penalized. There are minor
penalties, major penalties, misconduct penalties and severe
penalties. With severe penalties, such as trying to injure
another player, a player may be suspended or fined.
With a minor penalty, the player sits out for two minutes or
until the other team scores while the penalized player's team
continues to play with a shortage of one player. For major
penalties a player warms the bench for five minutes regardless
of whether or not the other team scores. A misconduct penalty
earns a player a ten minute outage, but during the time a
misconduct penalty is being served by a player, the player's
team doesn't have to play short-handed.
The term "offsetting" refers to a situation where both teams
have players that are penalized for the same incident. The
players involved in the incident have to serve their penalty
time, but neither team has to play short-handed in such
situations. Some specific rules of hockey clearly state what the
penalty or procedure is for certain behaviors, but some are left
up to the judgment of the referee who is the final authority on
penalty assessments.