Sentinel & Enterprise

Capitals’ Wilson to answer for head shot on Carlo

Recidivist blindsided B’s defender along boards

- By Rich Thompson

The NHL’s Department of Player Safety tendered Washington Capitals’ right wing Tom Wilson an opportunit­y to explain his actions.

The DPS on Saturday morning issued a statement on Twitter that read “Washington’s Tom Wilson has been offered an in-person hearing via Zoom for boarding Boston’s Brandon Carlo.” Representa­tives scheduled Wilson for an interview on Saturday night but are expected to render an edict at a later date.

This would not be Wilson’s first appearance before the tribunal entrusted by the NHL to police the game. Wilson drew a 20game suspension for a blow to the head of Blues’ forward Oskar Sundqvist during an exhibition game on Oct. 3, 2018. The ruling was later reduced to 14 games by an arbitrator.

At least the DPS referred to it as “boarding,” which is a lot more than referees Dean Morton and Pierre Lambert saw because no penalty was called. In a play Bruins’ coach Bruce Cassidy described as a “predatory” hit, Wilson delivered a blow to Carlo’s head during a scrum along the Boston end boards at 1:18 of the first.

Carlo was battling Capitals right wing Jakub Vrana for a loose puck when Wilson came in high and blindsided a defenseles­s preoccupie­d player. Carlo dropped to the ice on all fours, where he took a cross-check from Vrana to the back of the neck.

Carlo was transferre­d to a local hospital where, according to Cassidy, he was examined overnight and released. Cassidy offered no medical specifics on the case.

“He got released from the hospital this morning,” said Cassidy following the Bruins practice Saturday at Warrior Ice Arena in Brighton. “He’s back home and hasn’t been to the rink

obviously and that’s all I got from the trainers this morning.”

The Bruins’ response was twofold. They came out in the second period and scored three goals en route to a 5-1 victory. Defenseman Jarred Tinordi, who was claimed off waivers from Nashville on Feb. 27, threw down and engaged Wilson in a heavyweigh­t slugfest at 6:12 of the second period.

Bruins’ rookie left wing Trent Frederic took a shot at Wilson at 1:12 of the third, but got an instigator minor and 10-minute misconduct tacked on to his fighting major.

“It was not a surprise to me, we are built that way and we have talked about that with the leadership group and the expectatio­ns because there is a standard here,” said Cassidy. “I was happy to see it and the new guy who had only been here a week stepped right up and joined in on that.

“Obviously that was in his DNA before he got here. But being around the guys, he realized that this is how we do business the best that we can.”

Terrier connection

The loss of Carlo had ramificati­ons both during the game and in the Bruins’ preparatio­n for Sunday’s encounter with the New Jersey Devils at the TD Garden.

Cassidy had to reconfigur­e his back line with the Bruins’ dominant stay-athome defenseman seeing stars on the way to the emergency room.

Cassidy bucked the convention­al wisdom and aligned puck-movers Charlie McAvoy and Matt Grzelcyk on the first unit. The pair, who played a single season together at Boston University under New York Rangers coach David Quinn, were credited with two of the finest setups of the season.

McAvoy gave Boston a 2-0 lead at 6:43 of the second when he got the puck at the right point. McAvoy faked a slapper through a screen and fed Frederic, who effortless­ly redirected it behind Caps’ goalie Vitek Vanecek.

Grzelcyk made a similar move from the left point. He waded into the circle and made a cross-slot feed to Brad Marchand, who flicked home his second of the contest at 14:58 of the second. At the home end, McAvoy and Grzelcyk did a good job keeping the Capitals’ first line of Alex Ovechkin, Evgeny Kuznetsov and Conor Sheary off the scoring summary.

“There is a school of thought where you separate puck-movers and put them with defenders to balance things out,” said Cassidy.

“I feel having two puckmovers together that read off each other well probably means you are going to have transition plays and breakouts you ordinarily don’t get because it is hard for one guy to do it himself.”

 ?? STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD ?? Capitals left wing Jakub Vrana puts a stick to the back of Bruins defenseman Brandon Carlo’s head on Friday night.
STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD Capitals left wing Jakub Vrana puts a stick to the back of Bruins defenseman Brandon Carlo’s head on Friday night.

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