Culture change, like it or not, has started in Minnesota high school hockey as the first full season with tougher penalties to make the game safer swings into high gear. ¶ Evidence can be found along the boards, which have become a place of respect rather than reckless hits. It also shows up in the heads of players not wanting to put their team at a big disadvantage during a game. ¶ Tougher penalties put in place last January helped deter the players not already affected by the check from behind into the boards that paralyzed Benilde-St. Margaret's forward Jack Jablonski. Checking from behind and boarding were changed to carry an automatic 5-minute major penalty."I can clearly see a player who wants to hit along the boards has changed his mentality and is more under control," said C.J. Beaurline, a veteran college and high school official and member of the 2012 National Federation of High School Association hockey rules committee. "The culture is changing. It's headed in a positive direction, but by no means are we satisfied."
Craig Perry, Minnesota State High School League associate director, said gauging culture change is not just measurable by statistics on the tougher penalties.
"I hope ultimately the end goal is a reduction in the penalties in those areas because we've seen less of that dangerous kind of play," said Perry, whose organization pushed for the penalty changes and declared culture change a major goal.
No player, coach or referee objects to safety. But members of all three groups expressed concerns in recent interviews with aspects of the tougher penalties and resulting unintended consequences.
For example, confusion with the rules resulted in automatic player ejections earlier this season that might not have been warranted.
Some caution that changing culture could alter the game's essential elements.
"We don't want to take away the aggression that goes with the sport," Benilde-St. Margaret's coach Ken Pauly said.
Hill-Murray coach Bill Lechner said, "I don't love playing schools that maybe can't skate and just send bodies flying at you trying to take you off your game. If the changes help that, that's OK. But I don't mind playing physical when it's legal. Even talking to my assistant, Pat Schafhauser, he hopes it doesn't get too soft of a game."