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Should the NHL ban hockey players who have multiple suspensions for intentional injury?

Results so far:

Yes
77% 335 votes Total: 433 votes
No
23% 98 votes

by Jeff Gulley

Created on: August 20, 2008

Hockey can be a graceful sport, no question about it. From the early days of the high-flying Ace Bailey, through the steely-eyed determination of Maurice "Rocket" Richard, to Rick Nash's stellar highlight reel goal this past season against the Phoenix Coyotes, hockey has dazzled fans for generations. The game of hockey has witnessed incredible innovations through the ages: the introduction of the slapshot by Bernie "Boom Boom" Geoffrion, the mastery of the backhand by Dave Keon, the Savardian Spin-a-Rama (after Denis Savard), and many other feats by the greatest players in the game have all added to the allure of the so-called coolest game on earth.

However, hockey also has an ugly side. Although the game has changed a lot, one of the constants through all those years of innovative greatness has been a penchant for downright brutality.

Recent cases of extreme hockey violence have been Marty McSorley's high-stick to the head of Donald Brashear in 2000, and Todd Bertuzzi's vicious attack from behind on Steve Moore four years later. Brashear went on to play hockey again, but Moore was not so lucky; he suffered cracked vertebrae and was forced into very early retirement. Both McSorely and Bertuzzi went on to face court charges for their action.

However, these two incidents were not isolated. Both McSorley and Bertuzzi are well-known for their toughness and willingness to drop the gloves for a fight, if necessary. McSorley stands as the fourth-most penalized player of all-time in the NHL. After his incident with Brashear, McSorley was suspended for a year, but never banned from the NHL. Bertuzzi, before his assault on Steve Moore, had previously been suspended for 10 games in 2001 for leaving the bench to join a fight. After the Moore incident, Bertuzzi was suspended for what was eventually 20 games, but has since been reinstated in the NHL, looking to start the coming 2008-09 season with the Calgary Flames.

Furthermore, and what should be even more pressing for the NHL, these types of incidents are hardly anything new in hockey. The aforementioned Ace Bailey's career was cut short when he was viciously upended by Eddie Shore. Maurice Richard, the "Rocket" himself, was suspended for the duration of the 1955 Stanley Cup playoffs after a high-sticking incident eerily similar to McSorley's.

It is unfortunate that it is these such events that push NHL hockey into international headlines, when annual Stanley Cup game results are regularly relegated to the back page scoresheets

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