> by Steve Moerland <[log in to unmask]>
> If we are going to go to three points for a win in regular season hockey,
>then you have to have a winner. If we merely give one point each for a tie
>there is an imbalance in points. 2 points for the game instead of three.
Another solution would be to use a four-point system. This would cover
the three situations described in this thread:
4 - 0 split for a regulation win
3 - 1 split for an overtime win (or artificially-designated victor)
2 - 2 split for a draw
The ideas promoted as tiebreakers all have similar flaws; they introduce
situations normally brought about by bad play. Deciding games on
shootouts or mandated power plays negates the efforts of good defensive
(in the first case) or well-disciplined (in the second) teams whose
successes are functions of their abilities to avoid them.
I don't understand why draws are considered unacceptable by so many people.
Is it a desire to see someone win, or may it be a desire to see the
other team lose? Does it demonstrate a lack of patience; an unwillingness
to put a particular night's performance in perspective? Could it be just
another example of the polarized thinking that seems to dominate these days?
+----------------------------+----------------------------------------+
| Michael Patrick Bresina | America's always had a problem |
| [log in to unmask] | with illegal aliens. Ask any Indian. |
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