Playbook
Winnipeg Free Press Logo

Send Bieksa back to his cave

Good morning, folks.

Hope you all had a lovely weekend. Looks like someone has decided to finally turn on the heat. I’m still, however, looking for the person with the switch to tone down the gale-force winds.

Oh well, if that’s my only problem these days, I’m doing pretty well, right?

Advertisement

 

On the subject of turning up the heat and hot air, how about that exchange between Kevin Bieksa and his co-workers — Jennifer Botterill, Kelly Hrudey and Ron MacLean — during the first intermission of Hockey Night in Canada‘s Saturday night telecast of the Sens-Jets game.

In case you missed it, Bieksa was on one side of assessing last week’s Rangers-Caps/Tom Wilson three-ring circus while the others were expressing a different — let’s call it enlightened — viewpoint.

Bieksa put it best himself when he said: “It looks like I’m on my own here.”

Um, yep.

I’m going to try to be tactful. Ok, maybe not.

Bieksa’s take on Tom Wilson’s antics last week was ridiculous and is unfortunately representative of the backwards-thinking that keeps hockey in the dark ages.

The former NHL defenceman has mostly been well-spoken and offered plenty of interesting insight since joining the HNIC crew, but Saturday night he embarrassed himself with his Don Cherry-like logic.

Kevin Bieksa

Kevin Bieksa

If you didn’t catch the brouhaha last week, Wilson punched Pavel Buchnevich in the head a couple of times after the whistle while the Rangers forward lay prone on the ice with no way to defend himself. In the enusing mayhem he rag-dolled Artemi Panarin, dangerously tossing the helmetless Rangers superstar head-first to the ice.

Wilson later referred to the melee as a “fairly routine hockey scrum.”

Bieksa agreed, calling the punches to the head of a defenceless player “noogies” and flippantly suggested he’d been in worse pillow fights.

Therein lies the problem. If the perception by a so-called hockey expert is that this is no big deal, no wonder senseless acts of violence continue to occur in hockey. Just part of the game, right?

What shocked me most about Bieksa’s comments was he blamed the Rangers, suggesting they need a change in player culture that would prevent players like Wilson from taking liberties with their star players.

Is having an enforcer on your team even a thing these days?

I guess I shouldnt be surprised by this rubbish. After all, it’s coming from a guy who is known for his Superman punch — a cheap-shot approach he had to hockey fighting, in which he would leave his feet and lunge at his opponent, hoping to deliver a shot to the chin.

Kevin Bieksa needs to go back to the cave he surfaced from. And take the rest of his Neanderthal-thinking cohorts with him.

Listen, growing up I was a huge fan of the Big Bad Bruins and at the time I loved every punch thrown by the likes of Wayne Cashman and Terry O’Reilly.

Now, I cringe when I see players square off to fight. I would be just fine if I never witnessed another hockey fight.

Recently, I was watching a game with someone who has not watched a lot of pro sports/hockey when two players dropped their gloves to square off in a fight. “They just let them do that?” she asked.

Yep, they do that. Still.

I was wrong to once admire O’Reilly and Bobby Nystrom of the Islanders pummel each other. I had no idea at the time how dangerous it was.

Now we do.

And kudos to Botterill, who spoke to exactly that issue — player safety.

As a result of Wilson’s recklessness, Panarin suffered a lower-body injury which has sidelined him for the remainder of the season.

According to Bieksa, that’s his own fault: just because he’s a skilled played, it doesn’t allow him to jump on Wilson without posisble facing the consequences.

Panarin was forced into trying to deal with an out-of-control Wilson in an effort to assist his teammates.

Good for him, for trying. But he shouldn’t have to.

And not because the Rangers should have a goon to look after it — but because the NHL should do something to curtail situations that require skilled players to deal with the lunatic fringe.

If the NHL handed out unsportmanlike penalties for all these bush-league scrums and noogies, they’d stop pretty quickly.

But they aren’t serious about changing, now, are they?

And with the likes of Bieksa around, it’s hard to say when and if they will change.

Wilson, by the way, left a Saturday night game against the Philadelphia Flyers with an apparent knee injury after a leg-on-leg collision with forward Nicolas Aube-Kubel in the neutral zone.

He later returned and finished the game, but reportedly did not look totally himself.

There was a time when I would have suggested he got what he deserved — you live by the sword and die by the sword.

I hope he’s OK.

As always folks, you can reach me by replying to this mailing or by sending me an email here.

 

Advertisement

 

Our Coverage

Limping in: The Winnipeg Jets are wrapping up their schedule this week and Jason Bell has details on how the team did Monday night vs the Vancouver Canucks in it’s third-last game of the regular season;

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS“At the end of the day, hockey’s just a game. Being a human being is about being a good person. I love this game, I play it with everything I have, but I pride myself on being a good person first,” said Winnipeg Jets goaltender Eric Comrie.

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS“At the end of the day, hockey’s just a game. Being a human being is about being a good person. I love this game, I play it with everything I have, but I pride myself on being a good person first,” said Winnipeg Jets goaltender Eric Comrie.

Stick with it: Mike McIntyre has a column on Jets No. 3 goalie Eric Comrie being the team’s nominee for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy, awarded to the NHL player who best exemplifies perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey. Mike says it couldn’t have happened to a nicer guy;

SUPPLIEDMelissa Bustos is making a name for herself in Chile playing for Fernandez Vial.

SUPPLIEDMelissa Bustos is making a name for herself in Chile playing for Fernandez Vial.

All in the family: Taylor Allen has a story on Melissa Bustos, the younger sister of Canadian Premier League star Marco Bustos, who has overcome two ACL tears and is now playing professional soccer in Chile;

Stickwork: And, Mike Sawatzky has a yarn on Denton Mateychuk. The Dominion City product, a late call-up to the national U18 team when an injury sidelined Winnipeg’s Carson Lambos, was part of Canada’s unbeaten effort that resulted in a world title in Texas last week.

 

What we’re reading

The next one: Connor McDavid is dominating the NHL – now it’s time for a Stanley Cup, writes Globe and Mail columnist Cathal Kelly; 

Behind the scenes: Sportsnet’s Ryan Dixon takes us inside Perdita Felicien’s moving story of motherhood and perseverance.

 
 

Advertisement

 

You might also want to know

The Canadian Press:

Canadiens clinch playoff spot with OT loss

MONTREAL - Connor McDavid provided yet another highlight-reel goal Monday night with a game winner at Bell Centre. Fortunately for the Montreal Canadiens, it came in overtime. McDavid, sent in alone a... Read More

 

Lori Ewing, The Canadian Press:

Raptors eliminated from post-season contention

The law community has been waiting for this decision since the pandemic began, one employment lawyer says. ‘I think it’s going to kick off quite a bit of litigation.’ Read More

 

Lori Ewing, The Canadian Press:

Siakam says tough season put things in perspective

Seven workers at the Holiday Inn Toronto Airport have tested positive for COVID-19. Read More

 
 

Neil Davidson, The Canadian Press:

Dwayne De Rosario opens up in new autobiography

Four-part PBS documentary series, beginning May 11, explores the history of vaccines and the role they’ve played in longevity. Read More

 

Greg Beacham, The Associated Press:

Shohei Ohtani making history with 2-way success for Angels

ANAHEIM, Calif. - The only weakness in Shohei Ohtani's incredible two-way game these days is his control, and it's bugging the Los Angeles Angels' star.Although Ohtani is off to a superb start to a se... Read More

 

John Wawrow, The Associated Press:

Debate over surgery has Eichel questioning future in Buffalo

The Liberal government’s controversial Bill C-10 is being put on hold after a committee of MPs tasked with studying it decided to ask for a new statement from the Department of Justice on whether it violates freedom of expression rights for social media users. Read More

 
 

In case you missed it

Mike McIntyre:

Great White North green with envy

U.S. teams will live in COVID protocol luxury while Canadian clubs toe the line during NHL playoffs Read More

 

Taylor Allen:

Sport Manitoba names new CEO

Decades of experience will come in handy leading the organization out of pandemic Read More

 

Mike Sawatzky:

Hungarian soccer’s Winnipeg connection

Pair of local women making it big in European footy Read More

 

Mike Sawatzky:

Kirchmann playing it cool

Winnipeg cyclist preparing for Olympics by competing against best in world Read More

 

Jeff Hamilton:

Modest mentor gets his due

Legendary Coach Kusano named to Manitoba Basketball Hall of Fame Read More

 
 
 

Share:

     
 

Download our News Break app