John Tortorella was suspended by the NHL on Monday for 15 days without pay from the Vancouver Canucks, after an incident Saturday night when he was caught on camera forcefully chasing the Calgary Flames coaches back to their dressing room after the first period.
Tortorella will miss six Canucks games; Vancouver has 10 games left before the Sochi Olympics break in the schedule.
The incident was sparked by
Flames coach Bob Hartley’s decision to start his fourth line in the
game, prompting Tortorella to send out his fourth line. The resulting line brawl resulted in 152 penalty minutes in just two seconds of play.
Hartley was given a $25,000 fine
by the NHL for “conduct prejudicial to or against the welfare of the
League”; in other words, for instigating the brawl with his player
selection.
But it was Tortorella’s actions
in the hallway to the Flames' dressing room that drew the biggest rebuke
from the League. Hartley refused to acknowledge Tortorella when the
Canucks coach profanely protested the lineup move with a tirade directed
at the Calgary bench.
So Tortorella followed the Flames to their dressing room entrance and had to be physically restrained from going after them.
Here’s NHL VP of Hockey Operations Colin Campbell on Hartley:
"We are holding Mr. Hartley responsible for the actions of Flames' right wing Kevin Westgarth, who took the game's opening face-off and attempted to instigate a premeditated fight with an unwilling opponent -- the Canucks' Kevin Bieksa."
(Interesting that Bieksa moved up
from his defensive position to take that faceoff against Westgarth to
protect rookie Kellain Lain, making his NHL debut. It was a move
Tortorella likely instructed, having done much the same thing as coach
of the New York Rangers when he moved Stu Bickel up to take a draw in
order to protect Brandon Dubinsky in a pending line brawl against the
Devils in 2012.)
As for Tortorella, Campbell said:
"Mr. Tortorella's actions in attempting to enter the Calgary Flames locker room after the first period were both dangerous and an embarrassment to the League. Coaches in the NHL bear the responsibility of providing leadership, even when emotions run high, and Mr. Tortorella failed in his responsibility to the game."
Tortorella is not permitted to
have any interaction with the Canucks prior to, during or after games.
The suspension is retroactive to Jan. 19.
There’s no question Hartley instigated the incident. It’s something other coaches have done, including Tortorella himself in a Dec. 20, 2011 game at the Devils.
Was there a way for Tortorella to defuse the incident by, say, putting
his skill players out there? Potentially, although he ran the risk of
having a John Scott-chasing-Phil Kessel incident like we saw earlier
this season.
But more to the point: Hartley
challenged the toughness of Tortorella’s team, and then antagonized a
coach with the League's shortest fuse.
Tortorella’s response, however,
was an embarrassment to the League, even if it may have crystallized his
stature with the Canucks in the dressing room. It was a coach
completely out of control, and then lying through his teeth about the
deplorability of Hartley’s tactics as badly as Hartley lied about using
them.
So the NHL came down with a
suspension that impacts Tortorella financially – how much was
undisclosed – and takes him off the bench for six games within the
competitive Western Conference.
It’s a ruling that hits
Tortorella hard, while still holding Hartley accountable for his role in
the melee. But will it be enough to cool a personal rivalry that goes all the way back to 1995, and apparently still rages 19 years later?
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