This is аn appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County which granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment. We affirm.
On aрpeal, appellant argues that the lower court erroneously granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment. Specifically, apрellant states that genuine issues as to material facts exist which support his cause of action. In this case, appellant was struck by a hockey puck while attending a professional game as a spectator. Appellant argues that the lower court improperly found that he assumеd the risk of being struck. Central to this contention, appellant states that he intentionally sought to avoid this danger by securing a seat two rows behind the protective plexiglass near center ice. We reject appellant’s argument for the reasons outlined below.
As an appellate cоurt, we are bound to consider certain principles which dictate when and under what circumstances a trial court may properly enter summary judgment.
Goebert v. Ondek,
Citing our supreme court’s decision in
Jones v. Three Rivers Management Corp.,
Thus, our probe is two-fold. First, we must determine whether the law articulated in Jones concerning flying baseballs is applicable to similar incidents involving hockey pucks. Second, we must decide whether this “nо-duty” rule is applicable to the facts presented in the case sub judice. For the reasons outlined below, we find the rule applicable *424 and affirm the lower court’s order granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment.
A review of the law of this Commonwealth reveals that
Jones
shinеs brightly as a polestar with regard to the so-called “no-duty” rule. In
Jones,
our supreme- court relied upon well-established common law concerning amusement facilities in determining the duty owed by a baseball park to its patrons.
Id.,
In
Jones,
however, appellant/ spectator was struck in the eye with a battеd ball during batting practice while using an interior walkway within Three Rivers Stadium.
Id.,
We do not find, nor does appellant proffer, any reason for this Court to differentiate flying hockey pucks *425 from batted baseballs with regard to the risk assumed by the spectators of the two sports. To the contrary, wе find the risks involved similar. The omnipresent specter of a deflected Mario Lemieux missile whizzing towards spectators seated at center ice is аs inherent to the sport of hockey as the unnerving probability of a Von Hayes rocket flying towards patrons sitting in first base box seats is to a baseball gamе. Thus, we find the “no-duty” rule applicable to hockey spectators as well as baseball patrons. Therefore, we must determine whether risk in the instant case was “common, frequent and expected.”
Unlike the spectator in Jones, appellant was struck by the relevant orb while sitting in close proximity to the playing surface. Also, appellant, unlike his compatriot in Jones, was struck during the course of the game. We reject appellant’s contention that appellee was liable for his injuries since he [appellant] sought to avoid injury by purchasing seats behind the protective plexiglass. Our review of the record reveаls that appellant had previously attended a professional hockey game and should have been familiar with the inherent risks involved. We find, therefоre, that the risk of a spectator being struck by an errant puck, even for an individual sitting behind plexiglass, is common and reasonably foreseeable. Thus, we conclude that appellant assumed the risk of being struck by a flying puck.
Our decision with regard to this matter is consistent with the approaches taken by other states.
1
In an early decision,
Ingersoll v. Onondaga Hockey Club, Inc.,
*426 There was no obligаtion on the part of respondents to protect appellant against a danger incident to the entertainment which any reasonable spectator could foresee and of which [he] took the risk. The risk of being hit by a baseball or by a puck at a hockey game is a risk incidental to the entertainment and is assumed by the spectator. Any other rule of law would place an unreasonable burden upon the operator of a bаll park or hockey rink.
Id. at 508. We find this logic persuasive and consistent with our supreme court’s decision in Jones, supra.
We find, therefore, that the lower court proрerly granted appellee’s motion for summary judgment. Even accepting as true all of appellant’s well-pleaded facts, we find that apрellant is not entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 2 Thus, we affirm the order of the lower court.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. At least two of our sister states have decreed that injured hockey spectators assumed the risk оf being struck with a flying puck with accordance with the baseball "no-duty” rule.
See Modec v. Eveleth,
. This decision should not be misconstrued, however, to suggest that spectators injured at hockey games in all instances shall be barred from recovery. Utilizing Jones as our polestar, we note that the baseball "no-duty" rule is only applicable to risks occurring during a hockey game which are "common, frequent and expected."
