There are times sticks will pass through players/objects. This is intended. You lose control of the puck when this happens. You also cannot effect the puck if your stick passes through a players/object first.
Cross create one Ts have always been a good way to score. They can be defended though.
https://youtu.be/tc8cBh4FFao?si=T00DMw2OPr01_JtX
There has to be a certain amount of resistance for the trip to happen. The defender is back skating and using DSS. They also appear to be letting go of DSS. Had they contacted their skates with the outgoing poke, they most likely would have been tripped.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGDkXM55Qpo
- 27:46: You can't trip your own teammates so you will see their sticks pass through each other.
- 27:54: I can assure you you're not the only one this happens to. We're aware that goalies need to stop these shots better.
- 28:32: I don't see any issue with this. It's not unusual in the real world to have pucks deflect off defenders and go in.
- 28:58: Not seeing a problem here either. The puck gets knocked loose when the collision happens. The stick on stick collision could have still knocked it loose without noticing since the collision happened right after. This too is something that happens to everyone and not just you.
Are you serious… you see no issues ? You’ll see him try to trip me with his foot …. (can you tell me how I can make my d man do that?) and after when he fails to trip me when his foot the tip of his stick goes through my skate….. and without his goalie or player even touching my stick or stick blade I loose control of the puck…. Watch it again ….
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/9JbYy8rxtEw
The skate on skate contact isn't enough to drop a player. The stick then goes between the legs without passing through them. Once between the legs, they have to sweep their stick to cause a trip. The replay also doesn't show the stick passing through their foot. It looks like it remained between them. It looks like contact is made, but that's not enough on its own to cause a trip. Had it been on the initial poke, that could have tripped them.