Interview with Isaac Pantzares • Marcus Liveby should not be punished

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The Swedish ice hockey secret police have struck again.

the reason?

Someone said something.

It is not far now, what every Swede who is interested in ice hockey has been waiting for since September when Sweden’s longest regular season started.

This year’s playoffs may be a bit of a stretch, the SHL looks tough and because some cowards have decided that only one team can advance in the series system, at least four Allsvenskan ice hockey teams with stated SHL ambitions will be desperate when the season is drawing to a close, and disappointed. Extreme hope when it goes well.

Note on the door, adrenaline will shoot out of the players’ ears, set up for an emotional primal state.

I’m a fan.

    Isaac Pantzar.
Isaac Pantzar.

to be reviewed by the Board

Last week, AIF player Tingsryd, Isak Pantzare, was reported to a secret council after he said the following in an interview;

– It’s not the judges’ fault, it’s those bastards sitting in Stockholm, or wherever they are, calling the numbers. We practice it every day to advance into the penalty area and then they pull a clean goal. They pee on Swedish ice hockey.

It may not have been the deacon’s letter he used, Pantzare of Övertårneo, but… do we want it?

The player was asked to come to the interview with his breath in his throat and his emotions stinging like needles in his face, and of course he was asked about the situation that everyone was wondering about, and the answer of the competing person was honest, real, and directly encouraging everyone who was tired of a soulless reaction.

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How cool when someone says how they feel.

Stop! paper!

If you are considering the direction of Swedish ice hockey, you should continue reading now.

A few days passed, and then Bantzari learned that the Allsvenskan ice hockey “disciplinary board” had been informed.

Disciplinary board?

No, the “Disciplinary Board”, such a thing exists in the SHL and in Allsvenskan ice hockey, and according to the information, it should consist of a secret group that exists to protect the brand and can issue sanctions when Swedish ice hockey regulations – or Swedish law – are not enough.

The members of the board are the same as those who sit on the disciplinary committee – Prof. Flintyn, Swede Otto Soderskiöld, Dr. Otto Schultz and others – but the difference is that the disciplinary committee follows the laws of the Swedish Sports Confederation, while the Swedish Sports Federation (SHL) follows. The “disciplinary boards” for ice hockey in Allsvenskan follow the regulations of their respective leagues.

They punish players and managers with fines and reprimands, and not infrequently when they criticize decisions or series in which they play or who make them.

It’s weird as hell, but why do thoughts have to go to the darkest periods in Swedish and European history just because we want to play little ice hockey?

Either we say it is important for players to attend match interviews, or we stop it.

Either we agree that we think players should be allowed to show emotion, or we draw cartoons by Jörgen Lindgren.

They should be allowed to be themselves

Players who place a headset on top of a sweaty pressure cooker should be given the opportunity to be themselves and answer truthfully even if a slight mistake or too much is sometimes given, regardless of whether the thumb is sore or the umpire or the room attitude is offended.

I think the potential problem with contempt of judgment being drawn at times is a bit exaggerated, and if anyone takes issue with that, partner SHL, HA and dikossa C are more than happy to ruminate on errors of judgment in slow motion.

It’s rare that I hear players hang out with individual referees, if one of them expresses himself carelessly, I think ice hockey is cleaning itself up at this point.

In Pantzari’s case, he revolts against an unknown group of thugs that no one knows who they really are, nor does the whole world have to be.

Hidden and questionable “council” should not be punished by trade unionism.

The timing is also interesting in this context, because it all happened when we were in Sweden debating and debating the value and importance of freedom of speech for weeks.

At the time, Hockeyallsvenskan therefore chose to report a player who sniffed slightly in an interview, against a ruling that many experts also considered incorrect.

It’s as tactless as when a dung-covered Boris Yeltsin tries to dance to a humba, which if anything should make patrons and the public pull their ears back.

Tonight is a full night for the SHL and I would like all players and captains to show their solidarity with their fellow professional who has been bullied and bullied by the tyranny of Swedish ice hockey.

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That players and coaches come to interviews and stand there – without saying a word.

Blessed be the fruit.

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