New York Post

Pelech: No malice intended

- By ETHAN SEARS

Adam Pelech and Noah Dobson alike had little time for Rangers coach Peter Laviolette’s accusation that they had viciously hit Mika Zibanejad and Vincent Trocheck during Tuesday’s 4-2 Islanders win over their archrivals.

“I’ll just say it was completely unintentio­nal and I hope Mika’s OK,” Pelech said prior to Thursday’s night’s 3-2 overtime victory over the Canadiens in which Dobson left the game in the first period with an upper-body injury. “I think if the camera showed me at all after the collision, you could tell that I felt sick about it ’cause he didn’t look good going down and getting up off the ice. So like I said, it was completely unintentio­nal and I hope he was OK.”

Zibanejad returned to the Rangers’ bench at the end of Tuesday’s game and played Thursday against the Flyers.

Laviolette described the collision as intentiona­l on Pelech’s part, to which Pelech expressed surprise. The defenseman’s shoulder hit Zibanejad as the center was skating off the ice for a change.

“I was following the play up the ice, they kinda had the puck,” Pelech said. “I stopped in the neutral zone to see what was going on. I was looking up ice the whole time and we collided.”

After the game, Islanders coach Patrick Roy was incredulou­s at being asked about the play, which he described multiple times as accidental. Regarding Laviolette’s comments, Roy said, “Sometimes, frustratio­n makes you say things.”

Dobson, who hit an off-balance Trocheck into the boards as the seconds ticked down while the Rangers were skating at six-onfive, said there was no malice on his part either.

“It was just a hockey play,” he said. “In my mind, we were trying to battle, trying to win a game, trying to get a playoff spot. The intensity’s high. Trying to go for the puck and obviously, he falls. I’m not trying to hurt anyone on the play. Glad he was able to get up.”

After not-so-coincident­ally echoing Laviolette’s language, Dobson shrugged it off.

“I don’t care too much what other teams’ coaches are saying. We got enough to focus on,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States