Toronto Maple Leafs forward Nazem Kadri has been suspended for the rest of his team’s opening-round playoff series against Boston after he took a major penalty for a vicious cross-check to the head of Bruins forward Jake DeBrusk on Saturday night.
The NHL came down hard on the veteran forward for the incident that took place at 14:03 of the third period in a 4-1 loss at Boston that evened the best-of-seven Eastern Conference quarter-final at one game apiece.
The league’s department of player safety said in a video that Kadri’s poor disciplinary track record and the intentional targeting of DeBrusk’s head were factors in determining that supplementary discipline was necessary.
“This is not a hockey play. Instead, this is a player retaliating against an opponent by using his stick as a weapon,” the league’s department of player safety said in a video.
“The edge for everybody’s a little bit different, to be honest with you,” Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock said before the NHL handed down its decision. “But obviously any time you put yourself in a situation where someone else gets to decide your future, probably not a good thing in anything you do in life.”
WATCH | NazemKadri cross-checks Jake DeBrusk:
“He’s obviously gritty, a guy who does it right, a big part of the team,” Maple Leafs’ star Auston Matthews said of Kadri in an interview with The Canadian Press. “We need other people to step up. We’ve lost him before. We feel like depth on this team is something we have and we can take advantage of.”
Kadri, who had scored the lone Toronto goal a few shifts earlier, was suspended three games a year ago when he took a run at defenceless Bruins forward Tommy Wingels in Game 1 of their best-of-seven East quarter-final.
Toronto’s Nazem Kadri suspended three games for boarding Boston’s Tommy Wingels. https://t.co/YKyNt1Kcu0
“I thought it was clean,” said Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy after the game. “Looking back on it, shoulder-to-shoulder. Obviously, Kadri stayed down, I mean that’s his prerogative when you get hit.”
Maple Leafs forward Nazem Kadri is attended to by a trainer in the second period of Saturday’s game at Boston after absorbing a knee-on-knee hit from the Bruins’ Jake DeBrusk, who wasn’t penalized on the play. (Mary Schwalm/Associated Press)
Nazem Kadri’s NHL suspensions
- Nov. 15, 2013: Sat 3 games for hit to the head of Minnesota’s Niklas Backstrom.
- March 18, 2015: Sat 4 games for illegal check to the head of Edmonton’s Matt Fraser.
- April 4, 2016: Sat 4 games for cross-checking Detroit’s Luke Glendening in the head.
- April 13, 2018: Sat 3 games for boarding Boston’s Tommy Wingels.
Kadri was offered an in-person hearing with NHL Player Safety in New York ahead of Monday’s Game 3 at Toronto (CBCSports.ca, 7 p.m. ET), giving the league the option to ban the 28-year-old for at least five games. It would be a five-game ban should the series go the distance.
A native of London, Ont., the intense and physical Kadri was among the Leafs’ best players on Saturday.
Nylander centring 3rd line Monday
“It was a physical game,” said Babcock. “The referees, the way they reffed the game, let a lot of stuff go, obviously.”
Kadri is fresh off a 44-point regular season in 73 games and had a goal and two points in the first two games of the series, giving him 10 points in 19 NHL post-season starts.
William Nylander will shift from the wing and to take Kadri’s place centring the third line with Patrick Marleau and Connor Brown.
“He’s got to play hard,” Babcock said of Nylander on Monday. “It’s real simple. The team that played the hardest won Game 1. The team that played the hardest won Game 2. He’s got to compete at a high level with and without the puck.”
Nylander, who had just seven goals in 54 games following a contract dispute that stretched into December, scored in Toronto’s 4-1 victory in Game 1.
Ennis excited for ‘fun challenge’
Kadri’s absence also means Tyler Ennis will draw in on Toronto’s fourth line with Frederik Gauthier and Trevor Moore for his first playoff action for the Leafs.
“As a line, we’ve always tried to use our speed and get to pucks first and just create a lot of energy and outwork the other lines,” said Ennis, who had 12 goals in 51 games in the regular season. “It’s going to be the same game plan, the level’s just going to be ramped up because it’s playoffs.
“It’s going to be a fun challenge.”
Cassidy confirmed both DeBrusk and defenceman Torey Krug, who took a huge hit from Toronto’s Jake Muzzin in Saturday’s second period and didn’t return, will play Monday.
Game 4 will also be played in Toronto on Wednesday before the series switches back to Boston’s TD Garden for Game 5 on Friday.
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