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    NHL general managers endorse rules changes (The Associated Press)

    BOSTON (AP) -- Hybrid icing could be on its way to the NHL.

     

    NHL GMs meetings: Visors, hybrid icing approved; Maloney’s hopes for Tippett; Avs bluffing? (Puck Daddy)

    BOSTON -- Mandatory use of visors for players entering the NHL next season, plus the testing of a form of hybrid icing in the preseason were among the items endorsed by the league's general managers on Wednesday. NHLPA Special Assistant Mathieu Schneider said that the GMs were committed to changing the way icings are called, and if all parties are pleased with it, the rule would officially be implemented beginning with the 2013-14 regular season. Along with hybrid icing and mandatory visors, video review of four-minute high sticking penalties, shallower nets (from 44 to 40 inches), and the need for the puck to make contact with a stick on a pass in order to wave off an icing will now go to the Board of Governors on June 27 for approval. More discussion needed on diving The issue of diving was also brought up Wednesday, but according to Schneider, there needs to be more discussion in order for there to be a recommendation to the BoG for some form of punishment. "There's so many that are gray, even though there's the calls that everybody and their mother knows that it's a dive, there are a lot of them that are gray," said Schneider. "What happens if you discipline one player and another player says, 'I did the same thing'? It's very difficult. There's nothing that's black and white. It's not like a high stick." Among the ideas discussed were better education of players and a list inside team dressing rooms. "It's something that we want to address, but we're not sure how to do it right now," Schneider said.

     

    News and notes: How are the Bruins stopping Chicago’s power play? (NBC Sports)

    News and notes entering Wednesday's Stanley Cup Final showdown -- will Boston continue to stymie the power play?

     

    Red Wings’ AHL Grand Rapids claims Calder Cup (NBC Sports)

    They beat the Syracuse Crunch in six games.

     
     
     
     
     

    Claude Julien’s patience, ‘hunch’ pays off for Tyler Seguin (Puck Daddy)

    BOSTON -- Going cold in the postseason is nothing new for Boston Bruins forward Tyler Seguin. After putting up 6 points in his first two playoff games against the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 2011 Eastern Conference Final, Seguin had a hard time finding the scoresheet the rest of the way, contributing only one assist as the Bruins went on the win the Stanley Cup. Two years later, and two years older, Seguin was going through another dry spell, having potted just one goal through three rounds for the Bruins. But a switch to the third line in Game 2 -- pairing him with Chris Kelly and Daniel Paille -- paid off. The line was a part of both Boston goals as they evened their series with the Chicago Blackhawks. Bruins head coach Claude Julien said he was playing a "hunch," and that putting Seguin on the third line wasn't so much a demotion as it was just finding a way to get him going offensively. "As long as he continues to play the way he has, I thought [Saturday night] was an excellent game for him. [He] made some good plays, was there, everywhere around the puck, second effort was there," said Julien. One of those places Seguin found himself was along the wall in overtime to receive a pass from Johnny Boychuk. He squared up, identified an open Paille, then gave him a cross-ice feed. The play ended with the puck behind Corey Crawford for the game winner. "We were able to come up big, and for Claude [Julien] to kind of put a guy and have him stick in there, it definitely makes us feel comfortable and confident and good about our game," said Paille. The line found instant chemistry. It's the kind of adjustment a coach makes during a series that could swing future results. If the trio continues to contribute positively, that's another thing Blackhawks' head coach Joel Quenneville and his staff will need to gameplan against. Getting Seguin going in the postseason has taken some time, but if Game 2 is any indication, the Bruins' depth just got a bit of rejuvenation. "He's only a 21-year-old kid; this is his third year," said Julien. "Sometimes patience doesn't mean just for one year, patience means a little more than a year. "As long as he's growing and getting better, I'm going to keep supporting him." Follow Sean Leahy on Twitter at @Sean_Leahy

     

    What We Learned: Worst thing about NHL Awards? The voters (Puck Daddy)

    Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend’s events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it. Hockey fans will absolutely hate to hear this, but here it is anyway: There's one thing baseball does way better than hockey, and to which this sport really needs to switch as soon as humanly possible. The Baseball Writers' Association of America makes a point to publish the ballots of every person who voted for Major League Baseball's awards, and that level of accountability is generally welcomed in the sports world at large. You know exactly who voted for exactly what, and writers who made some of the more absurd picks for the MVP or Cy Young awards have to try to defend those choices as best they can. The Professional Hockey Writers' Association, however, does not publish the individual ballots of its members, and that they don't is ludicrous. This was a debate that kicked up around the end of the regular season, when some writers, in the interest of transparency and to engender discussion, said who they voted for when it came to a number of awards and often why they did so. That they were occasionally wrong in their voting is to be expected, because no one can get everything right all the time, but at least those writers in particular had the guts to say, "No, I didn't think Sergei Bobrovsky was more valuable to his team than Jonathan Toews," no matter how ridiculous such a statement was. But that the organization doesn't do so is ridiculous and a little cowardly.