I Love Fighting in Hockey, but the NHL Needs to Ban It

I’m an old-school hockey purist. I love hard fought battles along the boards. I love tough players who lay thunderous body checks and sell out to block shots. I even love to see a spirited bout between two willing combatants, going blow for blow. However, fighting needs to be taken out of the NHL.

Stifling the Game’s Growth

(John E. Sokolowski-USA TODAY Sports)
(John E. Sokolowski-USA TODAY Sports)

While there are a number of reasons against fighting — including player safety concerns, the game evolving beyond it and it simply being viewed as barbaric — the reason why it needs to be eradicated is because it’s stifling the growth of the game, specifically the development of the NHL. The NHL has and will continue to have its devout niche following, which for the most part, absolutely adores seeing supercharged fisticuffs. This same admiration for violence doesn’t carry over to the general public though, or even the casual fan (outside of a few individuals on the fringe). Fighting doesn’t only hinder the growth of hockey, it goes as far as alienating individuals from the game.

The fighting-in-hockey debate has once again resurfaced due to the Buffalo Sabres and Toronto Maple Leafs brawl that recently took place.  Unfortunately, moments such as this one are the only time the NHL gets showcased on a national level in the United States. This certainly doesn’t help the image of the game, and actually reduces it to a laughable sideshow at best. While what went on at the Air Canada Center was entertaining for some, it makes the NHL look bush league to many others, reducing all of its credibility to ash.

How many times have your non-hockey friends referred to hockey players as “animals” or “barbarians”? Some of you have probably even seen the frightened turn away and cover there face in horror. How do you sell a protective mother on the game of hockey to the point where she’d feel comfortable enough to let her young children watch the game as a weekend family outing, never mind convincing her to allow her kids to participate?

A Sport Misunderstood

Showcasing world-class, highly skilled athletes, hockey is one of the most difficult sports to play on the face of the earth. Too bad a number of consumers will never be able to look past the violence to see the true essence of the game. There’s no other sport that demands such a unique blend of toughness, endurance, speed and quickness, hand-eye coordination and mental fortitude all the while requiring its athletes to perform on a quarter-inch thick razor blade. Despite these intricacies, these uber-talented individuals will never be considered anything more than stick-swinging, fist-throwing neanderthals, if the NHL refuses to clean up its game.

(Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports)
(Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports)

Outside of North America, fighting is all but nonexistent in the professional ranks of hockey, and hardly missed. European hockey fans are actually someone of the most passionate and exuberant followers you will find. Dare I say, they would even rival most North American fans. The games are just as exciting and hard fought as NHL games, all the while being played without the most talented players. If fighting was removed from the NHL, it would only accentuate the caliber and skill of the league and its athletes.

Again, I love seeing a spirited tilt as much as anyone, but what I love even more is seeing the game of hockey grow. If the NHL continues to permit fighting, it’ll continue to turn away potential hockey fans and delegitimize itself. The hardcore fanbase — rain or shine — will always be there, as the last two lockouts have proved. The NHL needs to focus on other consumer segments to nurture its brand, and ultimately continue the development and reach of hockey. It can take a giant step in the right direction by prohibiting fighting.

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Liam Maguire
11 years ago

Hi again Joe

Re fighting; the fans want it brother. The majority of hockey fans want fighting in the game. I know I do. And yes the leagues in Europe have fighting but more disturbing are the cheapshots. PJAxelson, a Swede with Boston a dozen years ago said the NHL was a far better league with fighting to control some of the BS. If you’re on FB I encourage you to check out what I wrote on the Leaf-Sabre brawl just google Uultimate Hockey Network. Starting this weekend I will be writing a multipart series on fighting in hockey. Bottom line, the majority of every single element associated with the NHL want fighting in the game. I pointed out the three things needed to be done to all but eliminate the staged fights and help curtail the cheap shots. One thing for sure Joe, its a game played with controlled violence. Yes there’s a lot of nice, skillful plays but with contact, collisions, sticks, the compete level of these men and bad intentions you are going to have violence. And that violence is best served with a fight.

Bruce Hollingdrake
Admin
11 years ago

This was added to the conversation via Twitter

@Liams_Hockey added this:

@TheHockeyWriter. There were so many factual errors in the post re fighting let me address a few of them. Are you suggesting a lifetime suspension for fighting? That’s the only way to ban it. There is significant fighting in the KHL. Jagr was in a game 2 years ago that didn’t finish due to brawling. The growth of hockey in NA is unprecedented. Attendance & ancillary $ being spent, TV numbers, all going up. The half dozen line brawls a year are unfortunately over shadowed by dozens of cheap shots and dirty plays. Fighting is responsible for maybe 5% of all injuries. Wrong approach my friend. Factually incorrect and way off base. What you want gone should be the staged fights. Reduce the roster by one, remove the instigator rule and throw the book at the Matt Cooke’s. Very easy. But leave fighting alone.

Eric Burton
11 years ago

Those Ideas are awesome, although my Minnesota Wild will be short one player. :)

Eric Burton
11 years ago

The GM’s don’t want to ban fighting from hockey and either do the players. If you take fighting out of hockey, there are a certain type of player that will run wild, the “so called” agitators like Matt Cooke.

Cedric
Cedric
11 years ago

Hey, I’m Cedric, I’m french, living in toronto,
I’d like to know if you think that it’s possible to ban fighting during the hockey game. I interviewed lots of fans and they told me that “It’s part of the game”. And they don’t seem to think that it’s a bad example for fans.