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USA Hockey Officiating Program

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USA Hockey Officiating Program The Off-ice Officials Guide to * Who Comes Out? * Who Comes Out? In this stacked penalty situation, the minors to X and A are coincidental. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: USA Hockey Officiating Program


1
USA Hockey Officiating Program
The Off-ice Officials Guide to
Penalty Terminations
2
Introduction
  • This presentation is intended to familiarize
    off-ice officials for the USA Hockey 16-and-Under
    National Championship with basic rules and
    procedures governing the termination of
    penalties.
  • Key services provided by off-ice officials
    include
  • The accurate recording of penalties on the game
    score sheet.
  • Proper posting of penalties on the scoreboard
    penalty clocks.
  • Knowing the proper on-ice playing strength of
    each team.
  • Determining which penalized players are eligible
    to return to the ice, when they are eligible to
    return, and in what order.
  • Multiple penalty situations can easily become
    complex and potentially confusing, especially in
    the older age groups and higher skill
    classifications.

3
Penalty Categories
  • Minor penalties.
  • Major penalties.
  • Misconduct penalties
  • Game misconduct penalties.
  • Match penalties

4
Minors and Majors
  • Minor penalties
  • Penalized player is ruled off the ice for two
    minutes
  • Major penalties
  • Penalized player is ruled off the ice for five
    minutes
  • If a player receives a minor penalty and a major
    penalty at the same time--
  • The major is recorded and served first
  • The minor does not start until the major expires

5
Misconduct Penalties
  • Misconduct
  • Player is ruled off the ice for 10 minutes.
    However, a substitute is allowed to replace the
    penalized player on the ice.
  • The team, therefore, does not play shorthanded.
  • Because a substitute for the penalized player is
    on the ice, the penalized player cannot be
    released from the penalty bench until the first
    stoppage of play after the 10-minute penalty
    expires.
  • Misconduct penalties are never posted on the
    scoreboard penalty clocks.

6
Game Misconduct Penalties
  • Player is ejected from game in progress and
    suspended from remaining scheduled game(s), as
    determined by the tournament Discipline Committee
  • There are no time penalties associated with game
    misconduct penalties and no substitute is sent to
    the penalty box. However, the player incurring
    the penalty is charged with 10 minutes on the
    score sheet

7
Match Penalties
  • Penalized player is immediately ejected.
  • Substitute for the penalized player serves a
    5-minute time penalty.
  • Penalized player is suspended as determined by
    the tournament Discipline Committee
  • Apply only to these infractions
  • Deliberate injury to an opponent
  • Deliberate attempt to injure
  • Deliberate kicking of an opponent
  • Detrimental conduct, to include--
  • Deliberately injuring or attempting to injure a
    game official (including off-ice officials) or
    opposing team official.
  • Verbally threatening a game official (including
    off-ice officials) with physical harm.
  • Spitting at an opponent, spectator, game official
    (including off-ice officials), or team official.

8
Multiple Penalties
  • Multiple penalties can be assessed for certain
    single infractions
  • Usually associated with fighting and injury
    potential penalties. Examples include--
  • Checking from behind
  • Minor plus misconduct or
  • Major plus game misconduct
  • Spearing, butt-ending, head butting, facemask,
    and fighting
  • Major plus game misconduct
  • Double minors
  • Multiple penalties for the same infraction are
    recorded as separate penalties on the game score
    sheet.
  • Double minors are recorded as two separate
    penalties on the score sheet

9
Multiple Penalties
  • When a minor plus misconduct is assessed, the
    minor is recorded and served first.
  • A substitute serves the minor penalty.
  • The misconduct does not begin until the minor
    penalty expires or a goal is scored
  • If a player receives a major penalty plus a game
    misconduct
  • That players team must place a substitute in the
    penalty box to serve the major penalty
  • The substitute player does not have to enter the
    penalty box immediately but must enter before the
    five-minute time penalty expires.

10
Coincidental Penalties
  • Coincidental penalties are an equal number of
    penalties of equal duration called at the same
    stoppage of play.
  • There is no change in on-ice strength.
    Substitutes replace the penalized players on the
    ice
  • Coincidental penalties are never posted on the
    scoreboard penalty clocks
  • Penalized players serve their entire time and are
    released at the first stoppage of play after
    their penalties expire
  • Coincidental penalties never make a team
    shorthanded.
  • For coincidental penalties that include both
    minor and major or match penalties to the same
    players, the minor penalties are recorded and
    served first.
  • The time portion of match penalties are treated
    as major penalties in determining which penalties
    are coincidental

11
Determining Coincidental Penalties
  • Remember that coincidental penalties are an equal
    number of penalties of equal duration called at
    the same stoppage of play.
  • On-ice playing strength is determined by
    offsetting those penalties that meet this
    criteria, as in this example.

In this example, the minor penalty to Y and one
of the minors to X offset. A substitute for X
must serve the remaining non-coincident minor and
returns to the ice when that penalty expires or a
goal is scored.
12
Delayed (Stacked) Penalties
  • The on-ice playing strength of a team (excluding
    goalkeepers) can never drop below three
  • If a third non-coincident penalty is assessed
    while two others are being served--
  • The third penalized player goes to the penalty
    box but a substitute takes his place on the ice
    to keep the on-ice strength at three.
  • The third penalty does not start until the first
    penalty expires or a goal is scored
  • If a goal is not scored before the first penalty
    expires
  • The first penalized player remains in the penalty
    box when the penalty expires. (Since a
    substitute for the third player is already on the
    ice, the on-ice strength remains three)
  • The first penalized player remains in the penalty
    box until the first stoppage of play
  • In cases where penalty expiration times allow
    players to be released during play, they are
    released in the order that their penalties expire
  • Follow the same procedure for subsequent
    non-coincident delayed penalties

13
Terminating Minor Penalties
  • When a goal is scored against a shorthanded team,
    a non-coincidental minor penalty then being
    served will terminate
  • If two or more non-coincidental minors are being
    served by the shorthanded team, the first penalty
    assessed is the one that terminates (first
    in--first out)
  • If two or more non-coincidental minors were
    assessed to different players of the same team at
    the same time, the captain of the shorthanded
    team designates which penalty automatically
    terminates
  • Captains decision is made when the penalties are
    assessed

14
Terminating Major and Match Penalties
  • Major penalties and the 5-minute time portion of
    match penalties never terminate automatically
  • If a non-coincidental major or match penalty plus
    a minor are assessed against the same player at
    the same time, the major or match penalty must be
    completely served before the minor begins
  • If a team is shorthanded because of one or more
    major or match penalties, it remains shorthanded
    until all such penalties are served, no matter
    how many goals are scored.

15
Termination Concept
16
Who Comes Out?
17
Who Comes Out?
The minor penalty to Y and one of the minors to X
are coincident. A substitute for X must serve
the non-coincident minor and returns to the ice
when that penalty expires or a goal is scored.
18
Who Comes Out?
19
Who Comes Out?
When non-coincident minors are assessed to
different players of the same team at the same
time, the captain of the shorthanded team
determines which player returns if a goal is
scored. Rule ref 402(e). This is also a
stacked penalty situation. The penalty to Z
does not begin until the next face-off.
20
Who Comes Out?
21
Who Comes Out?
Non-coincident minor penalties expire in the
order in which they were assessed (First In -
First Out). Rule ref 402(e).
22
Who Comes Out?
23
Who Comes Out?
Because X was assessed both a minor and major
penalty, the major must be recorded and served
first. A major cannot expire on a goal scored
and the minor penalty has not yet started. Rule
ref 402(e).
24
Who Comes Out?
25
Who Comes Out?
The minor to X and one of the minors to A offset,
leaving both teams shorthanded but at even
strength (4 on 4). The goal was scored before
either of the penalties being served expired.
26
Who Comes Out?
27
Who Comes Out?
Team A is shorthanded but the first penalty is a
major to X, which cannot expire on a goal scored.
Because the minors to Y and A are not
coincidental, the minor to Y terminates when the
goal is scored.
28
Who Comes Out?
29
Who Comes Out?
All of the penalties in this situation are
non-coincidental minors. Because of the First In
- First Out rule, the minor to X is the one that
terminates when the goal is scored.
30
Who Comes Out?
31
Who Comes Out?
One minor to X and the minor to A offset, leaving
the on-ice strength 5 on 4. The minors to Y and
B made the on-ice strength 4 on 3. The sub for X
therefore comes out under the First In - First
Out rule.
32
Who Comes Out?
33
Who Comes Out?
This is a stacked penalty situation. X comes
out because it is the first penalty. However,
Team A will remain two players short because the
penalty to Z does not begin until the face-off
following the goal.
34
Who Comes Out?
35
Who Comes Out?
In this stacked penalty situation, the minors to
X and A are coincidental. The penalty to Y is a
major and cannot expire until fully served. The
minor to Z is therefore the only penalty that can
terminate.
36
Who Comes Out?
37
Who Comes Out?
In this stacked penalty situation, the penalties
to Y and A are not coincidental because one is a
minor and one is a major. The penalty to Y is a
major and cannot expire until fully served. The
minor to Z has not yet started. The minor to X,
therefore, is the only penalty that can terminate.
38
What Goes on the Clock?
39
What Goes on the Clock?
Since all of these penalties were assessed at the
same stoppage, all of the minors offset, except
for one of the minors to Team A. Team A will
therefore skate shorthanded, 5 on 4, so two
minutes will show on the clock under Team A
40
What Goes on the Clock?
41
What is the on-ice Playing Strength?
While only three Team A players were penalized
compared to four for Team B, a total of three
minors and one major were assessed to each team
at the same stoppage. Remember, a match penalty
is the same as a major for purposes of
determining coincidental penalties. Both teams,
therefore, remain at full strength and no time
shows on the penalty clocks.
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