A focus on a rash of NHL concussions recently have brought to light many ideas to try to curb the problem: Reinstitute the red line for two-line passes, allow clutching and grabbing again, allow defensemen to fence off at the blue line, remove three or four rows in every arena to make the ice surface bigger.
Kyle Brodziak, the Wild's leading goal scorer, has a novel idea, too.
"You want to eliminate concussions? Tell guys they can't work out anymore," Brodziak said, grinning. "I heard the old Oilers would come in 20 pounds overweight."
Obviously, Brodziak's talking with tongue planted in cheek, but Brodziak's point is NHL athletes are supremely fit, meaning they can supremely fly. And many are starting to wonder if the sport's gotten too fast.
Add the fact NHL players wear equipment -- from lighter, sleeker uniforms that don't absorb as much water, to technologically advanced skates to lighter pads -- that creates more speed, yet they're playing on the same-sized ice surface as always.
"They're doing as much as they can to prevent concussions, but it's a fast game, and bad stuff happens sometimes," Brodziak said. "Everybody wants the game fast. Remember, the goal is to be the biggest, strongest, fastest team."
Hockey is nothing without its players, and more than 30 are out because of concussions, including the Wild's Guillaume Latendresse. Many are big names, such as Pittsburgh's Sidney Crosby, Carolina's Jeff Skinner, Philadelphia's Claude Giroux, Los Angeles' Mike Richards and Ottawa's Milan Michalek.
Flyers future Hall of Famer Chris Pronger's season is over, and his career might be in jeopardy. The Wild's Pierre-Marc Bouchard missed more than a year because of a concussion, and many worried about another after getting his head smashed into a ledge Tuesday in Winnipeg.