The NHL suspended Duncan Keith of the Chicago Blackhawks for the rest of the regular season (five games) and the first game of the Stanley Cup Playoffs for his reckless, vengeful whack with his stick to Charlie Coyle’s mouth on Tuesday night.
From the NHL:
Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Duncan
Keith has been suspended for six games, without pay, for
high-sticking Minnesota
Wild forward Charlie
Coyle during NHL Game No. 1146 in St. Paul on Tuesday,
March 29, the National Hockey League's Department of Player Safety
announced today.
The suspension includes the Blackhawks' final five regular-season
games and first Stanley Cup Playoff game. The incident occurred at
9:27 of the first period. Keith was assessed a match penalty for
high-sticking.
Under the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement and, based
on his average annual salary, Keith will forfeit $148,883.35. The
money goes to the Players' Emergency Assistance Fund.
Keith was suspended twice before, including for a playoff game: He
got one postseason game for high-sticking Jeff
Carter of the Los
Angeles Kings on June 4, 2013; and he was given five games on
March 21, 2012, for an elbow to Daniel
Sedin of the Vancouver
Canucks.
That Sedin play was retribution
for his targeting Keith earlier in the game. But like on that
play, the Department of Player Safety didn’t really care what lit
the fuse for the Keith high-stick on Coyle. While some Keith
sympathizers were creating Zapruder film indictments of Coyle’s
action before Keith hit the ice – and the NHL pretty clearly
explains how Coyle’s stick accidently was wedged in his teammate’s
skate for that “slew stick” on Keith – none of it justified an
intentional tennis forehand of his stick into the Minnesota Wild
forward’s face.
Meanwhile, that Carter play was, as the video shows, the same kind of
reckless whack to the face. Talk about incriminating evidence ...
Johnnie Cochran couldn't disconnect those dots.
- Suspending Keith for a playoff game was, frankly, further
than we thought the NHL would go. “Suspended for the rest of the
regular season” is a nice bold statement, but they went beyond it.
Postseason suspensions are sometimes difficult to squeeze out of
DoPS – we had one last season, after having several in previous
seasons – so kudos for taking that step.
- And, let’s face it: They’re taking that step against one of their glamour franchises, the good soldiers that play in every outdoor game and bring lots of ratings to the postseason. While the Blackhawks agreed that Keith was at fault for this potential suspension, we imagine losing him for one of seven games in a playoff series was protested behind closed doors.
- Giving Keith
six games means the suspension is open for him and the NHLPA to
appeal it. But given the pace established by the
Dennis Wideman arbitration, his suspension would be finally
ruled on somewhere around the fifth round of the NHL Draft, we
imagine.
game is a solid statement and the right
punishment.
But what do you think?From Greg Wyshynski ,a writer for Yahoo Sports. Contact him at puckdaddyblog@yahoo.com or find him on Twitter. His book, TAKE YOUR EYE OFF THE PUCK, is available on Amazon and wherever books are sold.
http://sports.yahoo.com
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