Yes, there is a perfect example in a kings game earlier this year where Dustin Brown came up the wing with the opposing gollie pulled and had a breakaway when he got tripped up and brought to the ice. According to the rule book he is given the goal even though he never shot the puck because he was on a breakaway with the gollie pulled when the other player fouled brown.
2007-11-25 13:47:09
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answer #1
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answered by pnppl100 3
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Yes, for example, if a team pulls their goalie for an extra attacker and a player from they other team gets taken down on a breakaway, normally with a goalie in net, it would be a penalty shot, but since there is no goalie, the player taken down is awarded a goal without a shot.
2007-11-25 13:48:35
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answer #2
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answered by showstopper 1
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Yes, whenever somebody scores on their own net, no shot on goal SHOULD BE credited.
During the 1984 Canada Cup, Canada scored 2 goals on 1 shot during one of their second periods
Pierre Rioux of the Calgary Flames scored his first NHL goal 4 games before he registered his first shot back in 1983-84
2007-11-25 09:59:11
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answer #3
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answered by Like I'm Telling You Who I A 7
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they count it as a shot even if it wasn't one. i remember two seasons ago there was a delayed penalty, so the hurricanes pulled their goalie for the extra attacker. a forward passed the puck up to the point, the puck bounced, glanced off the defender's stick went the full length of the ice and scored on the empty net. they gave credit for the goal to Zubrus along with a shot he didn't take.
2007-11-25 08:58:46
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answer #4
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answered by DC FURY 6
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Yes. The shots in the shootout aren't mixed in the with the shots in the first 65 minutes, and the winner of the shootout is given 1 score.
2007-11-25 08:39:58
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It happen to me in EA sports NHL 07 last winter. I won the opening face off of overtime so cleanly, my goalie missed the puck and lost the game.
2007-11-25 08:46:06
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answer #6
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answered by baypae 4
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Yup, happens fairly often. If your player was the last one to touch it before the puck gets kicked in, for one example.
What the hell is the goth dude yapping about?
2007-11-25 08:31:32
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answer #7
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answered by cme 6
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yes a def player passes to his own play who deflects it into his own goal isnt a shot on goal
2007-11-25 08:24:46
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answer #8
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answered by ralphgoblue 5
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no not with an official shot from the opposing team.
how a stat like that would happen is by the same team to score on them self .. lol stupid huh?
2007-11-25 08:25:54
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answer #9
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answered by Kirk O 1
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the answer is yes...a stray puck may find its way into the net or a deflection off either team may find its way to the net or a player may accidentally put it in his own net
2007-11-25 08:30:21
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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