Lethbridge Herald

Bettman upholds Rielly’s five-game suspension

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NHL commission­er Gary Bettman has upheld Morgan Rielly’s five-game suspension for cross-checking after the NHL Players’ Associatio­n filed for an appeal.

The league’s department of player safety banned the Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman last week for his crosscheck to the head of Senators forward Ridly Greig in the dying moments of Ottawa’s 5-3 victory on Feb. 10.

Rielly, who was assessed a major penalty and game misconduct, lunged at Greig up high after the centre fired a slapshot into an empty net from close range with 5.1 seconds left in regulation. Greig wasn’t injured on the play.

Bettman’s ruling on the appeal is final. Players only have the right to a subsequent appeal to an independen­t arbitrator on suspension­s of six or more games.

The hearing between Bettman and Rielly’s representa­tives took place at the NHL’s office in New York on Friday.

According to Bettman’s ruling, the NHLPA argued that Rielly did not intend to hit Greig in the head, stating the primary point of contact was his body before the stick rode up Greig’s arm.

The NHLPA cited Rielly’s clean record — the blueliner had not been suspended in his 819-game career (including playoffs) — and Greig’s lack of injury. It also argued the department of player safety’s ruling was excessive based on prior discipline for similar infraction­s.

In his decision, Bettman stated that Rielly had sufficient time to engage

Grieg differentl­y, “e.g. with a push or a shove or even by dropping his gloves to fight.”

“Had he done so, there likely would have been no need for supplement­al discipline,” Bettman wrote.

The commission­er also disputed the claims that Rielly did not intend to hit Greig’s head, stating that the crosscheck was delivered high and forcefully.

Bettman said much of the testimony offered by Rielly, Toronto GM Brad Treliving and president Brendan Shanahan concerned whether Greig’s slapshot was provocativ­e but called that discussion “utterly irrelevant.”

“Mr. Rielly’s actions were not taken in self-defence. They were not accidental and they were not reflexive. They were not simply careless or merely reckless,” Bettman wrote.

“With plenty of time to think about what he was going to do next, Mr.

Rielly approached Mr. Greig from the side then used his stick as a weapon to deliver the kind of blow to the head that the league has repeatedly made clear will not be tolerated.”

Bettman acknowledg­ed Rielly’s clean supplement­al discipline history and Greig’s lack of injury but stated the department of player safety took that into account with its initial ruling.

“Mr. Rielly’s suspension almost certainly would have been considerab­ly longer if he did not have a clean record or if there had been an injury,” he wrote.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO ?? Columbus Blue Jackets right wing Justin Danforth fans on a shot as Toronto Maple Leafs’ Morgan Rielly defends during third period NHL hockey action in Toronto on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023.
CANADIAN PRESS PHOTO Columbus Blue Jackets right wing Justin Danforth fans on a shot as Toronto Maple Leafs’ Morgan Rielly defends during third period NHL hockey action in Toronto on Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023.

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