AP/ April 21, 2012, 2:09 PM

Coyotes' Torres suspended 25 games for Hossa hit

Chicago Blackhawks' Marian Hossa (81) falls down after taking a hit from Phoenix Coyotes' Raffi Torres (37) during the first period of Game 3 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup first-round playoff series in Chicago, Tuesday, April 17, 2012. Hossa was carried off on a stretcher.

Chicago Blackhawks' Marian Hossa (81) falls down after taking a hit from Phoenix Coyotes' Raffi Torres (37) during the first period of Game 3 of an NHL hockey Stanley Cup first-round playoff series in Chicago, Tuesday, April 17, 2012. Hossa was carried off on a stretcher. / AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

(AP) NEW YORK - Raffi Torres of Phoenix was suspended 25 games by the NHL on Saturday for a late hit that resulted in Chicago's Marian Hossa being taken off the ice on a stretcher. The ban ensures that the Coyotes' forward will miss the rest of the playoffs.

The announcement came hours before the Coyotes had a chance to eliminate the Blackhawks in Game 5 of their first-round series.

Torres left his feet to hit an unsuspecting Hossa during Game 3 on Tuesday night, smashing the Blackhawks forward into the ice. Hossa hasn't appeared again in the series.

Torres was not penalized during the game for the hit. His suspension is the longest since New York Islanders forward Chris Simon was banned 30 games for stomping on the ankle of Jarrko Ruutu in December 2007.

This is the third time Torres has been suspended by the NHL for a questionable hit in the last 13 months. He had a goal and an assist and averaged more than 19 minutes of ice time for Phoenix in the first three games of the series.

"The ruling is very severe for Raffi and our hockey club," Coyotes general manager Don Maloney said in a statement. "Raffi plays a hard, physical game yet this contact crossed the line on what is acceptable in our game today. We hope Marian Hossa makes a full and speedy recovery as we all enjoy watching him perform."

If the 25 games aren't exhausted during the playoffs — the Coyotes would need to play four straight seven-game series to complete the suspension — the ban carries over into the next regular season. Torres would not be able to play in any preseason games in that case.

As a repeat offender, Torres would forfeit $21,341 in salary for every regular-season game he sits out. Torres served the first game of the suspension Thursday while waiting for Friday's hearing with league disciplinarian Brendan Shanahan.

Shanahan said in a statement Saturday that Torres' hit violated three rules: interference, charging and illegal check to the head. Shanahan said two factors figuring into the length of the suspension were that "this violent and dangerous hit caused a severe injury" and that Torres' "extensive supplemental discipline history consists mainly of acts very similar to this one — including two this season."

"Despite knowing that Hossa no longer has the puck, Torres decides to finish his check past the amount of time when Hossa is eligible to be body-checked," Shanahan said.

"While we acknowledge the circumstances of certain hits may cause a player's skates to come off the ice," he added, "on this hit, Torres launches himself into the air before making contact. ... The position of Hossa's head does not change just prior to or simultaneous with this hit. The onus, therefore, is on Torres not to make it the principal point of contact. By leaping, Torres makes Hossa's head the principal point of contact."

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
6 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
54fighting says:
Gary Bettman, Brendan Shanahan, and anybody else involved in NHL discipline...F*** you and the horse you rode in on. Given your standard from earlier the same week, this offense, if indeed there is one, is no more than a $2,500 fine.

Hossa is half the problem here, as he is skating with his head down and turned into the check. Hossa knew Torres was on the ice and should have known better. Other than the argument that he was late and the puck was gone (which is weak given it had just been poked off his stick) this was a CLEAN HIT!!!

Is Torres a violent player? Yes, and I can't stand the SOB when he plays against the Wings? Is he dirty? I don't think so. I saw someone else mention Scott Stevens in a post, which was my first thought as a comparison. I'd love to see this guy in a Winged Wheel jersey. Dirty is Chris Pronger, Claude Lemieux and Darcy Tucker. Dirty is grabbing a guy by the back of the helmet and slamming his head on the boards hard enough to break his helmet. Dirty is apparently worth $2,500.

Bettman and Shanahan...you're a joke and you have no credibility.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Ourdoc1 says:
He should be in jail for assault period. There is no excuse for this it is a violation of law, not just sport rules.
reply
stanleyblog replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
EXACTLY, HE SHOULD be charged like that other player, that whacked another with his hockey sick. he should be jailed, and sued, 25 GAMES suspension is too lenient. he should be kicked off the league. if I want to watch WWF Wrestling or boxing or UFC, instead of hockey
linkicon reporticon emailicon
pwgrant says:
I will NEVER support this game, go to a game, buy or endorse anything associate with a hockey team in anyway, UNTIL there is a clamp down on flagrant, unsportsmanlike conduct, checking, and the vitriolic efforts to maim opposing players.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
psrd says:
He should be banned from the sport--period. No excuse for having three similar hits in such a short time.
reply
taewolf replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
I agree. 25 game suspension is far too lenient.

From CBS Sports

    Latest Headlines