Babies Ever After: Doug and Eva get married between the two movies and near the end of it have their first child.When his boss disagrees, Doug winces and says Sorry before continuing the beatdown. Apologetic Attacker: Part of Dougs introduction montage is him roughing up an unruly bar patron in the alley while his boss looks on.He also let's Eva's ex-boyfriend beat the ever-loving snot out of him after she leaves the guy for him (all the while apologizing) because he thinks he deserves it, offers a similar scenario to Laflamme if he thinks it will make amends, and his sacrifices for the team causes them to start an all-out melee against an opposing team, and inspires them to play harder during the last game. He's a Nice Guy, who doesn't seem to bear prejudice against anyone, he flat out states that he likes protecting people, and tells Laflamme who clearly hates him (At first) that he will protect him no matter what because they're teammates. All-Loving Hero: Though Doug isn't a literal example, he does embody many qualities.But he always keeps a sense of humor about it. He's very good at what he does, is quite skilled at getting inside his opponents heads, and is not above goading other players into fighting him when he's not ramming them into the boards. Affably Evil: Ross Rhea, though evil is a bit of a stretch.Accidental Athlete: Working as a bouncer, and being naturally tough, have made Doug the perfect hockey enforcer.Averted in a shot of Doug's cell phone when he receives a text. 555: The call-in number for "Hot Ice".This film contains examples of the following tropes: It was followed up by a sequel, Goon Last Of The Enforcers