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NYHL Playoffs

Hard to believe that the playoffs are about to begin once again.  The opening series in all age divisions will be a round-robin format. Depending upon the number of teams in a particular tier, the series will vary. For instance, in an eight-team tier the match ups will be 1,3,5,7, in one group and 2,4,6,8, in the other. Two teams from each side will move on to the Semi-Finals and cross over so the match ups will be 1A vs 2B and 2A vs 1B in a best of three or four-point series. The winners of those two series will play in the Finals for the Tier Championship.

Ties between one or more teams in the Round-Robin series will be decided as follows: First: Over-all in the Round Robin, Second: Head-to-Head results between the teams in Round-Robin play. Third: the formula Goals For plus Goals Against divided by Goals For.

Good Luck!

Games will be scheduled on Bladenet as soon as the standings are available and the pairings can be determined. Under the Age Category, eg. Bantam, the dates, game slots and venues will be identified with the match-ups showing as To Be Determined. As soon as we have that information we will have the schedule posted. We will continue to give as much notice as possible for game times.






Looking For a Part-Time Position?

Job Opportunities

NYHL has part-time opportunities for Cashiers,

Gate Personnel (over 18 yrs)

and Timekeepers (16 yrs and over)

for the winter season in rinks throughout the city

Hockey knowledge is an asset but not required.

Training is provided for either position.

Call Anne at the  North York Hockey League Office

416- 242-5365

anne@nyhl.on.ca

History Changed the Face of Hockey

From an article by By Stan Fischler

NEWSFLASH – Nov. 1, 1959
NEW YORK – History was made at Madison Square Garden tonight during an intensely fought game between the Montreal Canadiens and New York Rangers. Rangers right winger Andy Bathgate threw a hard backhand shot on goal striking Montreal goalie Jaqcues Plante in the face. The Habs netminder fell to the ice in a pool of blood. After being stitched up, Plante would not return to the ice without wearing facial protection, thus marking the first time in NHL history a goaltender donned a facemask in the same game he was injured.

It was a cool November night almost 50 years ago today that Jacques Plante stunned the hockey world by putting on the facemask.

Such a protective device had been used before, but only as a temporary move to cover a head injury.

Clint Benedict was one NHL goaltender who used it briefly and Dennis Mooney, a goalie for the Atlantic City Sea Gulls, tried a sheer, curved plastic covering that proved unsuitable because it both fogged up and cracked under severe impact.

What remained to be seen after Plante wore the mask in that revolutionary contest was whether he would be permitted to continue doing so.

Vehemently opposed to the device, coach Toe Blake battled his goalie on the issue until a compromise was struck:  If Plante lost games while wearing the mask, the experiment would be aborted and Plante would return to the standard mode of playing minus mask.

However, Blake would tolerate the invention as long as Plante triumphed.

As it happened, Plante ran off a substantial winning streak.

In his first 11 games with the mask, Plante allowed just 13 goals.

Still, Blake remained skeptical, insisting that Plante try one game without the mask. The goalie did and it proved disastrous. The Habs lost and that was the last time Plante ever played a game without the mask. He was 30 at the time and one-third of the way through a Hall of Fame career.

The next major question was directed at the other five regular major league goalies: would they follow suit and ape the Montrealer?

The macho philosophy of NHL netminders at the time opposed the mask. Future Hall-of-Famers such as Glenn Hall of the Chicago Blackhawks and Lorne ‘Gump’ Worsley of the Rangers adamantly refused to follow Plante’s lead, but, in time, other goalies relented.

One by one, puckstoppers followed suit until Worsley was the last remaining mask-less goalie.

“My face is my mask,” was the Gump’s explanation.

Gump finally relented with his final NHL team, the Minnesota North Stars.

Receiving pressure from both Cesare Maniago and his wife, Gump ordered a mask prior to the 1973-74 season.

Worsley first wore the mask in an NHL game on Oct. 13, 1973. He allowed two goals in the third period and Minnessota was defeated by the Buffalo Sabers 4-3. Afterwards Gump complained he couldn’t see the puck at his feet and that the mask was still too hot and made it hard to breathe.

Gump didn’t wear the mask for some time after that, but he did make some alterations to it by drilling extra holes for air and widening the eye slits.

Later in the season when he was called on to play in eight out of 10 games, Worsley returned to using the mask. He then retired after the season.

Complaints about the mask from the likes of Gump and others actually had a positive effect in that designers diligently worked to improve them. And once Hall, Worsley and Terry Sawchuk caved on the issue there was no going back; the mask was in the game to stay.

To wit:

GOALIE STYLE:
As the masks improved and became impregnable, goalies lost their puck-fear and thereby changed their styles. “Without a mask, the predominant reflex we had was fear and we positioned ourselves accordingly so as not to get hurt,” said Islanders Stanley Cup-winner Glenn ‘Chico’ Resch. That all changed when the masks became so strong that goalies actually were able to make saves by blocking the puck with their masks. This, in turn, enabled the flourishing of the butterfly style now generally in use (see game-changing moment No. 29.)

SHOOTING STYLE:
Where once forwards could intimidate goaltenders with “headhunting” shots, this weapon was negated by the mask, which led to a decrease in scoring. It also inspired shooters to find new techniques and high-tech sticks. In addition, widespread crowding of the goal crease and screening became standard operating procedure.

GENERAL USE:
The mask allowed goalies infinitely more freedom to dive into scrambles and perform what was once extremely hazardous positioning.

OTHER EQUIPMENT:
The success of the mask multiplied the focus on additional goalie safety. If a netminder could have a face covering, he could also have better protection from his shoulders down to his skates and, eventually, puckstoppers began to look more like the Michelin Man than ever before (see game-changing moment No. 49.)

All of this was rooted in the introduction of the slapshot as a practical weapon by Montreal’s Bernie ‘Boom Boom’ Geoffrion in the early 1950s.

Had the slapshot been banned, along with the curved stick, Plante and his cohorts in the crease might never have sought facial protection.

After all, organized hockey had been played for more than 60 years without goalies requiring a mask.

One could quarrel with the end result, but hockey has adapted.

It’s safe to say we’ll never see another goalie do what Glenn Hall did: play 502 consecutive games without a mask.

In fact, we’ll surely never see another professional goalie anywhere play without a mask, even for a second.

Bodychecking Vote at the AGM

By now most may have heard that the motion to remove body checking from the NYHL for the coming season was voted down by the Member Clubs by a margin of 62% to 38%. This means that there will be body checking in the NYHL from Minor PeeWee through the under 21 age divisions. Due to the low incidence of injury in the NYHL the status quo should not set off any alarm bells for either players or parents. The Referee Development Program which includes clinics, frequent supervision and mentoring is paying dividends in the calibre and motivation of the Officials the NYHL is putting on the ice. Those programs will be continued as the League recognizes that the officials are the key factor in ensuring the safety of players in game situations.

Going forward, it must be recognized that while the majority is significant and sufficient to enable the continuance of body checking, the minority opposed to body checking is significant and growing. The league and board of directors wishes to assure those who voted with the minority on this issue, that their concerns and desires have been heard loud and clear. It may be that these two concepts of the game are not mutually exclusive. The question the league needs to investigate now is whether it is possible to satisfy both those who are interested in maintaining body checking in the game, and those who are looking for a competitive non-body checking alternative. To that end, the NYHL board has authorized the league office to put together a committee, with representation from member clubs,  to look into any and all future options that might benefit the league and those who participate in it.

Thanks

A simple word that means so much to the hundreds of volunteer Coaches, Managers, Trainers, Convenors and House League Executives who donate their valuable time to make our local hockey programs better. Remember to say your thanks to these dedicated individuals. It’s the only pay they get – and probably the only pay that would really matter to them anyway.

The North York Hockey League would like to say a special thanks to the Club Contacts who provide valuable liaison between the League and the teams from each Club. The Club Contact has a particularly onerous role coordinating information, keeping teams appraised of League policy requirements, and advocating for each team’s best interest when conflicts arise. They often have to be the bearers of bad news passing on suspensions and fines when teams and players run amok of League rules. With almost 300 teams in the NYHL it is amazing that 30 Club Contacts can achieve all that they do each year and particularly so in a year when the League has introduced so many changes.

Thanks to the vision and experience of our House League Presidents and the NYHL Board of Directors who, by working together, were able to focus on change where change was needed. It has been a great year for the NYHL and the leadership provided by these individuals has made it possible.

Alternate Players, Call Ups, Substitute Players – Who is Eligible?

Can an AP come from a Club’s other Select team in the same age division?

No. They can come from the age division below or from the same age division in the House League but not from a Select team in the same age division regardless of tier.

Can a player come from our Select Team in the age division below?

Yes. A player can come from your Select team in the age division below a maximum of five times after January 15th. After they have appeared as an AP with the older team in a sixth game after January 15th they must stay with the older team for the balance of the season and are ineligible to play in the younger age division team.

Can a player from the House League be an AP?

Yes. House League players who are not rostered on a Select team can be called up an unlimited number of times during the season. The January 15th date does not apply to House League players..

Can an AP from the House League play down an age division?

No.

If a goaltender is called up as an AP and doesn’t play in the game does the game count as one of the five allowed after January 15th?

No. The Referee must note on the back of the gamesheet that the goaltender did not play in the game to ensure that the game is not counted as one of the five allowed after January 15th.

If a player other than a goaltender is called up as an AP and doesn’t play in the game does the game count as one of the five allowed after January 15th?

Yes. It does count.

If a Coach forgets to designate an AP on the gamesheet what is the penalty?

The AP who is not identified as such on the gamesheet is technically an illegal player and the situation should be reported to the NYHL Office for resolution.

If an underage player has been rostered on a team an age group older, can he play as an AP on a team of his own age?

No. Once he is rostered on the older team he is ineligible to play on a team in his own age group.

Revised Start of Game Procedures

Procedure Clarification

A few minor adjustments have been made and a revised protocol has been issued for the start of NYHL games. It will be phased in over the next few days.

For the first game of the night and each game that follows a flood, 12 minutes will go on the clock and the time will start immediately that the Zamboni doors are closed.  The Referees will peg the nets, meet the Team Staff and check the gamesheet while the clock is running.  At 10:30 the Referee will blow the whistle and go to centre ice for the opening faceoff.  In most games the puck will drop at 10:00 sharp. If the teams are not lined up and ready at the 10:00 minute mark the clock will continue to run to 9:45. If the game has still not begun the team least ready to start will be assessed a minor penalty for delay of game.

For games where there is no flood, the 12:00 minutes will start as soon as the previous teams have left the ice. The procedure from that point is the same as above.

It is important to remember that under the rules teams are required to be dressed and ready to play 15 minutes before scheduled game time. If the ice is available, the game officials will call the teams to the ice and the Start of Game procedure will commence. This early start provision does not apply to the first game of the day/night.

It is important during playoffs that the program stays on time to avoid curfews and to provide for overtime in those games where it may be necessary to determine a series winner.

Best of Luck to all in the playoffs!

NYHL Policy for Bad Weather Days

The practice of the North York Hockey League is to coordinate program cancellations due to bad weather with the City and with the GTHL. Following is the NYHL policy governing these situations.

Notification of Program Cancellation Due to Bad Weather:

  1. On Weekdays: If the NYHL program is being cancelled on a particular weekday (Monday to Friday) notification will be displayed by 3pm on the NYHL website www.nyhl.on.ca
  2. On Weekends: Because there are afternoon games to be considered notification will be displayed two hours prior to scheduled games on the NYHL website www.nyhl.on.ca
  3. In addition: if a decision is made to cancel games, the Club Contacts will be notified by email within the time frames noted above for weekdays and weekends.
  4. The NYHL will also notify the Toronto area radios stations of any cancellations:
    • News Talk 1010 CFRB
    • 680 News
    • The Fan 590
  5. Parents and individual Team Staff are requested NOT to call the NYHL office or Arenas about the potential cancellation of games. The official notification system is via the NYHL web site www.nyhl.on.ca and local news media.
  6. If a Notice of Program Cancellation has not been posted on the NYHL web site according to the schedule outlined in 1. and 2. above, it should be assumed by all participants that the games will be played as scheduled.

Under any winter driving conditions please leave for the arena with enough time to allow you to drive with caution and arrive safely.

Are Paid Coaches The Coming Trend in Minor Hockey?

The following article by Kristina Rutherford of CBC Sports is interesting reading particularly in the context of the escalating costs we all hear about in so many aspects of minor sports. There can be no doubt that the current economic environment will bring these issues into even sharper focus as pressures on disposable income for the average family continue to mount. For Leagues trying to maintain a level playing field for all Clubs, the ability of the wealthier organizations to lure coaching talent with hefty salaries makes providing an equitable competitive environment for all an even more elusive goal.

The more generously funded teams have always been able to buy the extra practice ice, the premium equipment and the expensive apparel but the ability to hire professional coaching could raise the bar beyond reach for most Clubs and the parents who foot the bill. Maybe this is the way of the future. Major League baseball dealt with the Yankees and their deep pockets for many years and in spite of that the Yanks haven’t always been the World Series Champions. Money does make a difference but not the only difference.

If your interested, read the article and if you’d like to comment send your thoughts along to coo@nyhl.on.ca. We’ll pick out a selection of representative feedback and publish it on the website.

Big bucks behind the bench in the GTHL

‘When a minor midget coach is getting $70,000 a year, I consider that incredible’

One coach in the GTHL estimates 90 per cent of AAA coaches in the league are being paid. One coach in the GTHL estimates 90 per cent of AAA coaches in the league are being paid. (Fabrice Coffrini/Getty Images)There are a lot of tight lips and padded pockets in the Greater Toronto Hockey League.

It’s clear that AAA coaches are being paid – 90 per cent of them, if you ask Toronto Junior Canadiens peewee coach Jules Jardine. He’s among them, and he’ll admit it.

But when it comes to how much these coaches are making and where the cash is coming from, well, people aren’t so willing to talk about that.

Says Jardine, “I’d rather keep that personal.”

The former pro will say the average coach salary at the AAA level these days is between $5,000 – $12,000, but that number varies, depending on who you ask.

“It’s not getting crazy,” says Jardine, who played pro hockey in Europe and one season in the CHL. “I have heard some crazy numbers out there, though.”

Numbers like $50,000 and more, but it’s all rumours. Nobody’s owning up or naming names.

“When a minor midget coach is getting $70,000 a year, I consider that incredible,” says Mike Chraba, GM of the AAA Toronto Marlboros. He doesn’t agree with it, but he’s heard about it.

Director of Victoria Minor Hockey Rob Richardson says it’s about time hockey was on par with other sports, where payment for coaches is the norm.

“My son was nine and figure skating, we had to pay his coach, we had to pay for his coach to go to a figure skating competition, pay her wages, expenses, everything,” Richardson says. “Why shouldn’t the same be applied to minor hockey?”

Richardson studied minor leagues across the country before deciding coaches in Victoria should be eligible to earn between $1,500 — $7,500 for a season, on top of expenses. Of all the coaching salaries he looked at, Richardson says, “Toronto is the extreme.”

Vaive’s salary a secret

Former NHLer Rick Vaive admits he was paid for his stint behind the bench with the Toronto Nationals minor midget team last season, but the former Maple Leafs captain isn’t naming numbers.

“Mainly it was a Christmas bonus more than anything else,” Vaive says. “Basically, it was taking care of expenses…There was a little bit more to it, for, you know what I mean, putting in the amount of hours.”

Vaive says it wasn’t a job, and the money was “nothing I was going to live on.”

“I live in Oakville, and it’s pretty expensive to live in Oakville,” he says. “This was not something that would get me through the year as far as my personal expenses go.”

Nationals GM Garry Punchard wasn’t naming numbers, either, when it comes to Vaive’s salary.

“It was only rumoured it was too much,” Punchard says. “What do I consider too much? Anything over zero. It was quite a bit more than that, I understand.”

As for the source of the cash, Punchard says the Nationals have never paid a coach — the money usually comes from parents of kids on the team. Sometimes it’s one wealthy parent who sponsors the coach.

The GM says this means coaching salaries may have no bounds in Toronto’s minor hockey system.

“It could be unlimited if there’s a wealth on a certain team, meaning there’s no purse-strings attached.”

‘Parents control the league’

The GTHL requires teams submit a budget before players commit to a season, so they know exactly what they’re signing up for and where their money is being used.

“Some teams in the organization have different budgets,” says Punchard. “They have an influx of cash, let’s put it that way.”

The GM says this started happening, to his knowledge, about 10 years ago.

“Certainly it’s not like it was 25 years ago, and of course that all stems from the parents. You’ve got to understand that the parents control the league, and that’s not to be nasty to them, but it’s just that that’s the way it goes,” Punchard says.

“Whether it’s A, AA, AAA or house league or select teams, the parents seem to be more involved today than they were 25, 30 years ago.”

Like the Nationals, the Toronto Marlboros don’t condone paying coaches, but it’s hard to stop. That organization’s GM said there are no paid coaches in the system right now, but there have been in the past, with salaries as high as $40,000.

“If a parent group wants to get together and decide they want to recruit a coach and spend money on it, that coach first of all has to be proofed by us,” says Chraba. “We also go to the coach and say, ‘This is not right. We’re tolerating it for this year only.’”

The situation they’re trying to avoid is what happens when parents pay the coach and decide they should have control over the team. Chraba says that’s why no paid coach has been with the Marlboros for two consecutive years.

“We just can’t see people getting paid to coach, it’s not right,” he says. “The problem isn’t when coaches are paid to cover their expenses, the problem is when you get a coach that really wants to take advantage of parents because of his expertise and charges extra money.

“Being paid a salary, I don’t think can be justifiable.”

Troy Binnie played a decade of pro hockey and now coaches his son Mitchell’s peewee AAA team with the Nationals. He said he’d never accept a cent, unless he was coaching at the junior level or higher. This puts him in the minority in the GTHL’s AAA ranks.

“I just think it’s taken away from the game,” Binnie says. “It is still a game. When Gretzky and all the true hockey stars, even Sidney Crosby, were playing minor hockey, none of their coaches were paid. They were parent volunteers, volunteers period.

“These guys that are being paid to coach right now, when they were growing up, they had parent volunteers coaching them. Why aren’t they putting the time back in that those parents put in for them?”

Average salary: $25,000?

Binnie’s main concern is the way it’s changing the focus of the game for the kids.

“There’s not as much fun in the game as there used to be. It’s all about winning, it’s all about having the best 12-year-old do a dumbbell workout,” he says.

The coach says from what he’s heard, the average salary for AAA coaches in the GTHL is $25,000, with $15,000 being “the low range.”

“There’s lots of money in hockey,” Binnie says. “Minor hockey is a business nowadays, it really is.”

Those in favour of paying coaches will say the same thing — it’s a business, and if winning and development are a priority, why not recruit the best coaches and reward them?

“You’re putting in a lot of time developing these kids,” says Vaive. “I don’t think it should get out of control, but at the same time, the GTHL is a business and these kids are there, they’re paying lots of money to play there, so you want to give them the best possible people to coach.

“In order to get top-level people to come in that can teach these kids, in some cases you have to pay them. If you have organizations that are willing to do that, then I don’t see a problem with it.”

Judging by the number of teams willing to pay for top-end AAA coaches, it seems few in the GTHL have a problem with it, either.

“What seems to be something that was sort of taboo 15 years ago, paying minor hockey coaches, is really the norm now,” says Jardine, who’s been coaching in the league for 10 years.

While he thinks a salary of $50,000 is too much at the minor levels, Jardine notes, “it’s what the market will bear.” And in the GTHL, he says, that’s a lot.

“There’s no end to some of the possibilities that could develop over the years.”

This is the last of Our Game’s three-part series on paid positions in minor hockey. Also see part one: ‘It’s supposed to be volunteer’ , and part two: Coaches courted with payment in minor hockey.

Helmets have an expiry date

Hockey helmets, like almost all consumer products, have a life cycle. The inner padding and the plastic shell components lose their protective capability over time and are less effective in preventing injury. The helmet is often a neglected piece that isn’t considered perishable. It’s often assumed to be indestructible and, until it fails and injury results, it isn’t given much thought. While it is important that coaches and parents ensure that all protective equipment worn by players is in good condition, the helmet often escapes vigilance. There is a small sticker on the back of the helmet that has the maximum effective date on it. Once the product ages beyond that date it has to be replaced. To continue to wear it in games is not only dangerous, it also violates the rules of the game. With the traditional gift-giving period coming up now is an opportune time to check those helmets and replace the ones that are out of date. Your player will not only be more comfortable, but a lot safer too.