Fan Excitement Builds for the 2005 National Hockey League Season
With the ratification of the Collective Bargaining Agreement
completed, devoted fans of the game breathe a sigh of relief.
With each new week that goes by, curiousity grows to see what
effect the new rule changes will do for the game, and the
movement of players in all directions due to an implemented
salary cap brings a very real excitement and anticipation for
the upcoming 2005 NHL Season.
The work and sacrifices that the league, owners, and players
have done to make the new season a reality is to be commended.
Gary Bettman, never with due appreciation it seems, has done a
fantastic job at the helm of the league for over a decade.
Owners and General Managers of teams such as the Edmonton Oilers
and Calgary Flames now have the opportunity to compete, for the
most part, on an equal playing field.
A Summary of Rule Changes for the 2005 NHL Season:
1) The goal line will be moved two feet closer to the end
boards, and the blue lines moved two feet further away from the
goal lines to give an extra four feet in the offensive end.
Tension during powerplays will increase for the fans of
short-handed teams.
2) The red line will be disregarded for the two-line pass rule,
giving rise to a faster game and more breakaway opportunities to
watch.
3) The tag-up rule will give offensive players who've overshot
the blueline into the opponents zone before the puck a chance to
circle back to the blueline and then continue back into the
offensive zone to play the puck. This will reduce whistles for
offside infractions; once again speeding up the game.
4) The instigator rule has changed to penalize fights started
during the last five minutes of the game. One game suspensions
and a $10,000 fine to the instigating players' coach are
manditory penalties. Fighting will always remain an exciting
part of hockey from a fan's perspective, regardless of bleeding
heart support to stop the act of throwing the gloves off.
5) Changes to the way linesmen approach icing will hopefully
reduce the worrisome issue of dangerous end board collisions
that occur during races for the puck.
6) Goaltender padding will finally be reduced. The days of
seeing ridiculously large equipement on goaltenders are over.
Scoreboards will no doubt show the effects of this rule change.
7) The elimination of tie-games due to the incorporation of a
shootout is a welcome addition by most fans of the game. A tie
game at the end of regulation will be followed by a four-on-four
five minute overtime, and then followed by a three man per team
shootout if both teams are still deadlocked. If still tied after
this, then a sudden death shootout will begin to produce a
winning team. The winning team will receive two points: the
loser in overtime or a shootout one point; and the loser in
regulation zero points.
A Summary of Player Movement:
Mike Peca, Jeremy Roenick, Darian Hatcher, Peter Forsberg, Tony
Amonte, Paul Kariya, Bobby Holik, Scott Niedermayer, Nikolai
Khabibulin, Sergei Gonchar, Brian Leetch, Chris Pronger, Mike
Rathje, Adam Foote, Gary Roberts, and Joe Nieuwendyk are but a
few players who have moved on to new teams.
The new Collective Bargaining Agreement, all rule changes, and
all player movement can be viewed at http://www.nhl.com/.