Edmonton Journal

Morrissey hit adds more fire to Jets-Wild series

- TED WYMAN Winnipeg twyman@postmedia.com

Listen, we can all agree Josh Morrissey’s cross-check to the neck and head of Minnesota’s Eric Staal was worthy of a penalty, right?

And surely a hit with such violent stick action, though astonishin­gly not penalized in the game, could have resulted in a five-minute major and game misconduct, correct?

Those are the facts few would dispute.

But ask people on opposite sides of the Winnipeg Jets-Minnesota Wild rivalry about how dirty or suspension-worthy Morrissey’s hit was and you receive very different answers.

In this corner, you have Jets coach Paul Maurice, backed by a rabid Jets Army, who sees no intent to injure in Morrissey’s actions and believes no further disciplina­ry action should be taken.

And in this corner, you have Minnesota coach Bruce Boudreau, with his legion of angry Wild fans hanging on his every word, who called it a vicious, dirty hit that completely changed the outcome of Game 4.

The NHL department of player safety had the only vote that mattered, however, and Morrissey was slapped with a one-game suspension Wednesday.

Morrissey will be out of the lineup Friday when the Jets, up 3-1 in the best-of-seven, look to clinch their first playoff series win in franchise history at Bell MTS Place.

Morrissey is an important player in this series, a rock-solid, consistent blue-liner who moves the puck, has a great defensive stick and can dish it out physically.

So it’s no wonder the head coaches were lobbying so much before the department of player safety hearing was held.

“Well, it’s warranted,” Boudreau said of the hearing. “I’m not up here trying to (do) gamesmansh­ip to get the league (to) call extra stuff. It is what it is, though. It was a vicious crosscheck to the face.”

I’d say gamesmansh­ip was precisely what he was going for.

The same goes for Maurice, who is standing up for a usually clean hockey player but must realize how differentl­y he would view it from the other side.

“I would be surprised (if there was a suspension),” Maurice said. “I’m not surprised there’s a hearing. There’s a penalty there and at very most you might look at a fine.

“Based on what I’ve seen for (plays that) were either suspended or fined for a stick that didn’t hit the head, and some of these others have, there’s no intent. There’s a penalty. They missed it.”

The Wild are still bitter about that. Boudreau said the non-call cost his team the game.

If a penalty were called, the Wild would have had a twoman advantage in a 0-0 game. Had they scored, it might have changed everything in a game the Jets went on to win 2-0. Or so the Minnesota thinking goes.

Connor Hellebuyck, who had a 30-save shutout, might have had something to say about that, but Boudreau was undeterred on Wednesday.

“Well, usually I’m pretty subjective in that, OK, it was a bad call, but we didn’t deserve to win anyway, or this and that,” Boudreau said. “But that had a definite impact on the whole game.”

Well said, roared Minnesota Wild fans.

Cry us a river, Jets fans responded.

Maurice pointed to other nasty hits and non-calls in the series that impacted games.

That doesn’t make what Morrissey did right, of course.

“I try to pride myself on playing the game hard and playing honest,” Morrissey said. “I’ve never been suspended in my life. I’m not a dirty player.”

Still, it was a mistake and he’ll have to pay for it.

Just don’t expect the Jets to agree with the decision.

And don’t expect the Wild to stop talking about it if the series ends with a Winnipeg win.

 ?? PETER J THOMPSON ?? Toronto Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan continued the unselfish play he has displayed all season in Game 2 against Washington and still scored 37 points.
PETER J THOMPSON Toronto Raptors guard DeMar DeRozan continued the unselfish play he has displayed all season in Game 2 against Washington and still scored 37 points.
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