Sidney Crosby scores a hat trick on hat night.
Yes, they actually do*. It’s tradition. (Like I said, different organizations do different things with the hats. Here the Penguins have an affiliate with a local Boy Scout program called “Hat Tricks for Humanity”, where they take them and give them to charity)
-Here’s one from Alexander Ovechkin (watch out, it’s kinda loud)
-Zdeno Chara’s first hat trick.
Sidney Crosby gets a “natural” hat trick (three goals uninterrupted by anyone else scoring)
Taylor Hall’s first.
Hat tricks aren’t exactly rare, but they are uncommon. If you want to throw a hat, I suggest buying a cheap, generic one and keeping it with you at games.
*And yes, people have been known to throw other things. (I believe someone once threw a sex toy) Hockey fans are crazy.
That reminds me of that goalie (in football) who had a video leak out showing him taking it up the ass, his girlfriend fucking him with a strap-on. During games that season, the guy was bombarded with dildos.
Possible photographic evidence.
Yeah, the lack of customary headwear-chucking notwithstanding, it’s not like soccer fans are above throwing stuff onto pitches, as a general idea (ranging from mundane stuff like toilet paper or shoes, to slightly less so, like pig’s heads or live pigs).
Perhaps you are unaware that most of the world’s professional leagues play in the winter and spring. You might also be unaware that it can get quite cold in many parts of Europe in the winter, even in England, from time to time. It gets very cold indeed in some countries with active, strong (as least relatively strong) professional leagues, such as Russia.
So, yes, you can see plenty of examples of hat wearing if you watch professional soccer in Europe.
Well, in Detroit they throw octopi on a regular basis.
The Florida Panthers fans throw rubber rats(after a player killed a rat with his stick in the locker room during the 1996 playoffs)
Leo Messi scored 8 hat-tricks in one season.
Thanks for treating me like a complete fucking moron. Perhaps *you *are unaware that when people say things like ‘tend to be a lot colder’ this should not be taken as an absolute statement that hockey arena’s are always colder. In addition, perhaps you are unaware that most football leagues in place that get cold (but not England) take a short break during the winter, because it gets too cold to play. You may also be unaware that if there’s snow on the ground, games get cancelled.
So, yes, although there have been examples of people wearing hats to stadiums, they’re still less common than they would be in hockey arena’s, which TEND to be colder.
Hockey arenas aren’t very cold for the fans. At least modern ones aren’t.