Toronto Star

99 hopes NHL can move past dispute

Concussion settlement helps point the way forward, Gretzky says

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

Daniel Carcillo wants Wayne Gretzky to step up and help the players who protected the hockey legend during his career. But Carcillo, one of the plaintiffs in a concussion lawsuit against the NHL, will have to settle for a show of support for the research that has been done on the issue.

Speaking before the Hockey Hall of Fame induction ceremony Monday night, Gretzky didn’t answer whether he felt $22,000 (U.S.) — the agreed-upon amount in the settlement for each player who opts in — is a good number for the players. However, he did give his thoughts on concussion­s.

“When I played, we didn’t know what concussion­s were,” Gretzky said. “My kids ask me all the time, ‘Dad, did you ever have a concussion?’ I probably did, but we didn’t know. Hopefully, we’ve got enough knowledge now that we protect the players of today; hopefully, we take care of the players the best (we) can from the past and we move forward.”

The $18.9-million settlement, announced Monday, is with more than 300 retired players who sued the league and accused it of failing to protect them from head injuries or warning them of the risks involved with playing.

The lawsuit, consolidat­ed in federal court in Minnesota, was by far the largest facing the league. The NHL, as it has for years, did not acknowledg­e any liability for the players’ claims in the proposed settlement and can terminate the deal if all 318 players or their estates don’t elect to participat­e.

Carcillo, who played 429 NHL games, used Twitter on Monday to urge Gretzky to “use his platform to help the men who protected him throughout his career.”

Glenn Healy, the executive director of the NHL Alumni Associatio­n, says discussion on the issue will continue in the aftermath of the settlement.

“For me, I don’t play the blame game,” he said. “I don’t analyze it in any way. The plaintiffs had legal representa­tion. That’s what the settlement is, but for me this is not the finish line. This is the start line, and it’s up to me to move forward to make things better.”

The settlement is significan­tly less than the billion-dollar agreement reached between the NFL and its former players on the same issue of head injuries. The NFL settlement involved more 20,000 players, while the NHL’s had 318.

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