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Report: NHL might scrap the dry scrape in mere days

Philadelphia Flyers v Pittsburgh Penguins

PITTSBURGH, PA - OCTOBER 22: Members of the Pittsburgh Penguins ice crew skate during a timeout against the Philadelphia Flyers at Consol Energy Center on October 22, 2014 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/NHLI via Getty Images)

NHLI via Getty Images

Some subtle rule tweaks get a big thumbs up, while others flop as if they hit a patch of bad ice. The “dry scrape” before overtime periods hasn’t been popular - just scan a beat writer’s Twitter feed when a game goes beyond regulation - and TSN’s Darren Dreger reports that its days may already be numbered:

The intentions of the tweak are reasonable enough - the NHL wanted teams to play on a higher quality sheet of ice during overtime, rather than merely improving conditions during shootouts - but it sounds like the delay is annoying enough to tower over any subtle improvements in OT.

If nothing else, the term “dry scrape” was added to the hockey fan lexicon, though it might not last long since the practice may just die out in about six weeks.

(Do note that an official change hasn’t been made yet, however.)

Related: Bob McKenzie on the far-from-loved dry scrape

Follow James O’Brien @cyclelikesedins