The hockey goalkeeper…well, different from other players. In this respect, it is different from others. Most people, if they encounter someone else tapping a frozen rubber disk at them at a speed of more than a hundred miles per hour, they will try to get out of the way. The goalkeeper tried his best to stop.
The goalkeeper is probably the most flexible player on Simone Biles’s side. do not trust me? Watch a warm-up before your menstrual period. Completely split. Sit on the ice and bend backwards until the back of their heads almost touch the ice. Some people will even stand up from the complete split mentioned earlier to one action.Wearing skates all the time, almost wearing Fifty pounds Gears.
Hockey is a family unmatched by other sports and an unbreakable bond between players, coaches, officials and fans. No other sports will have all members of each team shake hands after a playoff series. I remember a game between the Sharks and the Los Angeles Kings in San Jose at the end of the regular season. The Sharks entered the playoffs, while the Kings did not. The game itself was an indifferent study of the two teams, but in the end something magical happened. This is the last game of the great Luc Robitaille. As the third quarter draws to a close, fans in Shark Tank stand up unconsciously, applaud Robitaille and shout “LUUUUC”, like a forum full of kings fans. .
Earlier this month, when the Columbus Blue Jackets goalkeeper Matiss Kivlenieks appeared, the hockey world was shocked. died After being hit by fireworks at a party on July 4th. At the memorial service held in Columbus on Thursday, it was revealed that Kivlenix’s last save was the greatest save.
Kivlenieks died of chest trauma caused by the explosion of a firework mortar. A nine-round mortar tube rack that was supposed to face upwards fell to one side, and the last two shells were fired. Kivlenieks was in the hot tub, stood up after the penultimate shell, shot when the shelf tipped over, and flew over his head. As a result, the last shell hit him.
Kivlenix’s friend and Blue Jacket goalkeeper Elvis Melzlikins comment At the memorial service:
“But what happened, I was standing 20-30 feet behind him, and I was holding my (pregnant) wife,” Merzlikins said. “He saved my son. He saved my wife and also saved me. My son’s second name will be Matisse… He died as a hero.”
Merzlikins added that if the Kivlenieks had not stood up, there would be about 60 people or more in the area where the shells could hit. Is this a simultaneous tragedy and lucky act, or whether Kivlenieks deliberately put himself in danger, this is an unanswerable question. In any case, whether intentionally or not, Kivlenieks undoubtedly saved the lives of others by sacrificing his own life.
There is really nothing to say, right?



