Instead, the focus was on whether Colorado made an illegal line-up that led directly to Kadri’s goal, giving Avalanche a 3: 2 away win and taking the best of the seven series firmly under control.
Avalanche is now leading the series 3: 1, with the fifth game taking place on Friday night in Colorado.
“It stings a lot more than the others, just because it started … it was potentially … I don’t know … It’s hard for me,” Cooper said in a brief post-game press conference Wednesday night. “I’m going to have a hard time talking … you see what I mean when you see the winning goal. My heart breaks because of the players, because we should probably still play.”
Although Cooper did not mention in his press conference, where he asked only one question before the apology, there were clearly too many men breaking the ice, a closer look at the production shows why the two-time Stanley Cup winner Tampa Bay was upset.
A closer look at the broadcast revealed that Avalanche had six skaters on the ice before Kadri’s goal was scored. When he defeated Kadri Vasilevsky to the net, Colorado star Nathan MacKinnon was still on his feet as he tried to jump off and jump on the bench to end the shift. NHL rules require skaters to be five feet away from the bench and out of play before the shift.
On Thursday, Cooper made it clear that he believed officials had been wrong on the ice, but wanted to move on and watch the rest of the series.
“I got excited for Game 5 and right now I’m thinking about how to win it,” Cooper said. “It simply came to our notice then [anything] we can do to come back. They lost it. It is a pity, but there is water under the bridge right now. Let’s get ready. It should be a hell of a game 5. ”
Too many men’s penalties, even if the goal is scored, are not clear.
“Too many men on the ice are sentenced by any of the four officials on the ice,” the NHL said in a statement late in the hockey operation. “After the game, Hockey Operations met four officials as their usual protocol. When discussing the gate, all four officials advised that they did not see too many men on the ice.
Disputes continued only after the game, when the official scoreboard was distributed to the media listed six skaters on the ice in front of Kadri’s gate. The NHL later told reporters it was a mistake and Colorado defender Erik Johnson was on the bug list.
Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said Wednesday night he thought the gate was good, no matter what narrative Tampa Bay tried to push. “I didn’t hear any confusion,” he said.
Kadri, who played the first game in the series after a thumb operation earlier this month, said he wasn’t sure why Cooper was questioning the legitimacy of his goal.
“I’m not quite sure what he really was, what he thought, why it shouldn’t have been taken into account. It confuses me a bit,” Kadri said on Wednesday. said.”
Tampa Bay defender Ryan McDonagh didn’t have much to say about Thursday’s call, noting that as a player, “you’re looking for every inch to gain an advantage and try to jump into the game.”
This is the most terrible shot I have ever seen.
When Nazem Kadri (scorer) hits the ice, MacKinnon takes more than 5 seconds to return to the bench and is clearly more than 5 feet away. pic.twitter.com/9ede4C6ZCU
– Kailey Mizelle (@KaileyMizelle) June 23, 2022
#Controversy #winner #4th #Avalanche