New York Post

Quinn has ‘big problem’ with Sabres’ hit on rookie

- By LARRY BROOKS

BUFFALO — David Quinn “had a big problem” with Patrik Berglund’s blow to the head of Filip Chytil two minutes into the second period that sent the Rangers rookie to the locker room for mandatory concussion testing.

Chytil returned to the match after an 11-minute absence from the bench and pronounced himself, “Good, OK,” in the locker room following the Rangers’ 3-1 defeat to the Sabres on Saturday.

“I think it was a hit to the head,” Quinn said of the unpenalize­d check below the Buffalo goal line. “He didn’t have the puck and he hit him in the head.”

There is no indication whether the Department of Player Safety will become involved for any supplement­al discipline.

Play on.

Cody McLeod replaced Vladislav Namestniko­v in the lineup in a move the coach said was more about the former than the latter, but Quinn could not have been happy with Namestniko­v’s game in Thursday’s opening 3-2 MSG loss to Nashville.

“Cody had a good camp, he played well, and I think he will bring a little more pace and energy to the group,” Quinn said prior to the optional morning skate. “This will give him a chance to continue to build off his camp. Vladdy and I had a good conversati­on. He’s still fighting his way through it.”

McLeod, who took the worst of it in a fight with Nathan Beaulieu at 14:35 of the first, played 5:35 overall and got two shifts in the third period.

The Sabres had too many men on the ice on Connor Sheary’s first period power play goal, as acknowledg­ed by the winger, himself.

“What’s that they say?” coach Phil Housley asked rhetorical­ly. “If you’re not cheating, you’re not trying.”

The game marked a reunion of sorts for Quinn and Sabres’ captain Jack Eichel, who went to the 2014-15 NCAA final with BU as a freshman before entering the draft, where he was tabbed with the second selection behind Edmonton’s Connor McDavid.

Eichel’s collegiate career lasted 40 games and ended

with a heart-wrenching 4-3 championsh­ip game defeat to Providence. After playing for Team USA in the World Championsh­ips, the center consulted with Quinn as he pondered turning pro.

“The question I had for him was why [he] would want to come back after everything he had accomplish­ed in what was a fantasy-like first year until the final game?” Quinn said. “My concern with him coming back was that he wasn’t going to have the same level of respect for college hockey that would allow him to improve.

“It was time for him to go, for sure. Not that he needed me to tell him that. I think he was leaving anyway, but I would have driven him to Buffalo because it was time for him to go.”

And if the Sabres had won the lottery, drafted McDavid and Eichel had gone to the Oilers, would the coach have driven his Hobey Baker Award winner to Edmonton?

“No,” the coach said, laughing loudly. “I wouldn’t go that far.”

Alexandar Georgiev is scheduled to start Sunday’s match in Carolina, marking the earliest appearance for a back-up since 2014-15, when Cam Talbot got the nod for Game 2 at Columbus. … Tony DeAngelo and Frederik Claesson were the blue-line scratches for the second consecutiv­e game.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States