PDA

View Full Version : Avs' Moore Has Fractured Neck; Police Investigating Hit


Nicki Is Here
March 10th, 2004, 09:23
Updated: 10:00 AM EST
Avs' Moore Has Fractured Neck; Police Investigating Hit
Canucks' Bertuzzi Suspended Indefinitely for Hit From Behind

TORONTO (March 10) -- It will be a while before Steve Moore gets back on the ice for the Colorado Avalanche. Todd Bertuzzi might have to wait just as long.

Moore will miss the rest of the season with a broken neck, the result of a sucker punch from Bertuzzi. Moore also sustained a concussion and deep cuts on his face, and he'll remain hospitalized in Vancouver indefinitely.

Bertuzzi, an All-Star forward for the Canucks, was suspended indefinitely pending a hearing at the NHL office in Toronto on Wednesday. The hearing, which had been scheduled for the morning, was delayed until the afternoon to give both sides more time to prepare, said Gary Meagher, an NHL spokesman.

B.C. Solicitor General Rich Coleman and Vancouver police are investigating the punch, the second time in four years police have looked into an on-ice hit at an NHL game in the city.

"It doesn't matter what the score was, what the time was, what the place was, what the history was, there's no room in our game for that," Colorado coach Tony Granato said.

Bertuzzi slugged Moore in the side of the head late in Monday night's 9-2 Colorado victory. He hit Moore from behind and drove his head into the ice. Moore landed face-first -- with the 245-pound Bertuzzi on top of him -- and lay in a pool of blood for several minutes before he was removed on a stretcher.

"All I'm concerned with is he regain his health," said Pierre Lacroix, Avalanche president and general manager. "All legal matters and all medical matters, I don't want to think about."

Bertuzzi's punch appeared to be retaliation for an open-ice hit Moore delivered to Canucks captain Markus Naslund last month, knocking him out for three games. Vancouver players vowed to get even with Moore for that hit, which wasn't penalized.

The Canucks didn't go after Moore in last week's rematch in Denver, a 5-5 tie attended by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. Naslund said he didn't believe Bertuzzi planned to hurt Moore.

"He tried to do something he thought was right for his team, to challenge someone," Naslund said. "He wanted to make a point that you don't go out and hit our players."

Bertuzzi's punch and its aftermath sent shock waves through the league, with players condemning his actions and calling for tough penalties.

"As NHL players, we get fired up and sometimes do stupid things on the ice, but nobody wants to see injuries to the extent of Moore's," Detroit Red Wings veteran Brendan Shanahan said.

Even the NHL's so-called goons were appalled.

"It doesn't matter what your name is, this is not right," said the Calgary Flames' Krzysztof Oliwa, a well-traveled fighter. "This is not hockey, this is being cheap."

Wayne Gretzky said it was an example of something that can happen in a sport that often turns violent.

"It's a very emotional game and you can quickly lose your temper and lose your focus," the Hall of Famer said in Lakeland, Fla., where he was watching the Toronto-Detroit game.

"What happened was wrong, and I am sure that nobody feels worse about it than Todd."

In February 2000, former Boston Bruin Marty McSorley was charged for hitting then-Vancouver Canuck Donald Brashear with his stick. McSorley was convicted of assault with a weapon, but he received an 18-month conditional discharge, meaning no jail time and no criminal record after probation.

The league suspended him for a year, ending his 17-year NHL career.

When Moore's condition improves, he'll be transferred to Craig Hospital in Denver and evaluated by neurosurgeons, the Avalanche said.

"Steve knows he has the support of the entire Avalanche family and hockey fans throughout the world," Lacroix said.

Vancouver general manager Brian Burke said Bertuzzi was "too distraught" to attend Tuesday's news conference, but the Canucks right wing tried to contact Moore at the hospital.

"That, to me, shows the sincerity more than any statement that we could issue," said Burke, who will fly to Toronto to be with Bertuzzi at his hearing Wednesday.

Bertuzzi was an All-Star last season when he was fifth in the league in scoring. This year, he was an All-Star again and has 60 points, 23rd in the league.

"If most people knew how upset Todd was by the result of what happened they would have a different view on things," said teammate Trevor Linden, also president of the NHL Players' Association.


03/10/04 09:51 EST

Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

Wrath
March 10th, 2004, 10:03
http://forums.seawolf.cc/showthread.php?t=702

Wrath
March 10th, 2004, 14:30
Bertuzzi disciplinary hearing over but league has no timetable on decision

Wednesday, March 10, 2004

TORONTO (CP) - The NHL disciplinary hearing into Todd Bertuzzi's attack on Steve Moore ended early Wednesday afternoon but the league had no timetable for a decision on the Vancouver player's suspension.

The hearing was supposed to start at 9 a.m. EST at the NHL's offices in Toronto, on the 11th floor of the Air Canada Centre, but was delayed to around 1 p.m. and ended just over an hour later. A television network had a clip of Bertuzzi and Canucks GM Brian Burke quickly leaving in a black limo without speaking to the large media contingent.

The meeting was run by NHL vice-president Colin Campbell, the league's disciplinarian. NHLPA officials also attended.

"I have no time frame on when a decision might be made," Gary Meagher, the league's vice-president of public relations, said before the hearing.

Moore was hospitalized with a fractured neck and a concussion after he was sucker-punched by Bertuzzi in the third period of a 9-2 Colorado win Monday night at Vancouver's GM Place.

The Avalanche forward landed face first on the ice, with Bertuzzi on top of him.

There has been bad blood between the two teams since a hit by Moore in a game Feb. 16 sidelined Canucks captain Markus Naslund for three games with a concussion. Moore was not penalized on the play.

Outside the Air Canada Centre on Wednesday, two fans waited along with reporters, who interviewed both in the absence of any other news.

One wore a Canucks shirt and hockey gloves with a sign taped to a hockey stick that said "Colin, Ernie says free Bert."

The sigh had pictures of Muppets Ernie and Bert on the sign as well as a Bertuzzi photo, newspaper clipping and hockey card

The other held up a sign asking for a four-year ban of Bertuzzi and a fine of $3.2 million.

Striking CN railworkers also arrived at the Air Canada Centre to take advantage of the assembled media and draw attention to their own protest.

http://www.canada.com/national/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=dc74e2ac-20c8-47f7-9765-723ab7961be2

IMO Bertuzzi should be out with no pay until Moore can return as well.