Truro News

More suspension­s handed down in AUS hockey brawl

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“A lot of really fine young people made serious judgment mistakes...”

AUS hockey chair David Maclean

HALIFAX, N. S. – More penalties have been handed out in an ugly brawl that cast a pall over university men’s hockey in Atlantic Canada.

Hardest hit were the head coaches – Acadia University’s Darren Burns and Brad Peddle of St. Francis Xavier – who were handed additional sanctions of sitting out eight games apiece.

The Feb. 2 brawl spread from the ice to both squads’ benches, and was captured on video and circulated widely online.

Atlantic University Sport had previously handed automatic suspension­s to six Acadia players and nine from the X-men as well as both head coaches, ranging in length from two to five games, totalling 39 games.

In a release Tuesday, AUS handed out another 36 games of suspension­s to five players and four coaches, which take effect immediatel­y. Acadia got the worst of the discipline handed out by David Maclean, the AUS men’s hockey chair.

Three Acadia players received extra game suspension­s, including Rodney Southam, who has taken responsibi­lity for the comments that led to the benchclear­ing brawl.

Southam had told Sam Studnicka of St. FX he “looked like a rapist,” which prompted the melee. Southam later issued a statement saying he was unaware that Studnicka has a sexual assault survivor in his family. On Tuesday, Southam was suspended an additional five games, for a total of seven games.

The two teams met Wednesday in Antigonish for the first game in the AUS playoff quarter-finals.

“These suspension­s are significan­t, coming at a time of year where most sanctions will be served during the playoffs,” MacLean said in a statement Tuesday.

“A lot of really fine young people made serious judgment mistakes. I know they will learn from it and move on to bigger and better things. I want to thank everyone for their full co-operation.”

Studnicka, who had been suspended two games in the initial round of discipline, received no further sanction on Wednesday.

Videos posted to social media show players on both teams hurling profanitie­s, striking each other and grabbing each other’s jerseys near the Acadia bench during the brawl.

The AUS said the suspension­s will carry over into the 2019-20 regular season, if necessary.

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