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| Bertuzzi's attack on Moore continues to resonate |
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| Features | |
| Written by Denis Gorman | |
| Tuesday, December 22, 2009 00:00 | |
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Editor's note: This is the first in a series highlighting the NHL's most memorable and important moments of the decade. It is the night of March 8, 2004, and Denver’s Pepsi Center is hosting a regular-season game between two NHL Western Conference rivals, the Vancouver Canucks and Colorado Avalanche. There is an air of expectation. Something is going to happen.
In the final period of what would be an 8-2 win for the Avalanche, Naslund’s linemate and arguably the league’s most dominant player, Todd Bertuzzi, decided to extract his pound of flesh. He trailed Moore closely, challenging him to a fight. It did not matter that Moore had fought Bertuzzi’s teammate Matt Cooke early in the match. Bertuzzi wanted Moore. He may have wanted to send the proverbial message, to both his team and the Avalanche. What happened next was horrifying, and almost certainly not what Bertuzzi had in mind. Bertuzzi punched Moore in the back of the head before driving him head-first into the ice. Avalanche players and Canucks jumped onto the two men, creating a mountain of humanity. Eventually, the players were pulled off of Moore. The Avalanche winger did not get up. Moore had to be taken off the ice by the on-site emergency medical technicians after suffering a concussion, facial lacerations and three fractured vertebrae in his neck. Neither man has been the same since. Moore has not played an NHL game, while Bertuzzi has become a journeyman. Moore has twice filed lawsuits against Bertuzzi in Canadian courts. According to a recent report in the Denver Post, Moore's lawyer believes an Ontario court will hear the case before the end of next year. Bertuzzi filed a negligence lawsuit in 2008 against Marc Crawford, his coach in Vancouver. The suit charges that the current Dallas Stars coach should have had the foresight to recognize that Moore would be attacked, and should share the responsibility of paying damages with Bertuzzi, if the court rules in Moore's favor. As the first decade of the third millennium comes to its end, did the Bertuzzi-Moore incident change anything in the sport of hockey? The answer, simply, is no. Following the lockout and the rewriting of the league's rules, there was speculation that fighting, while not abolished, would not be a frequent occurrence. Instead, the opposite has happened: Fighting majors have gone up every year, from 466 in 2005-06, to 497 in 2006-07, to 664 in 2007-08 and 734 last season. As of this writing, the league's 30 teams had combined for 534 fighting majors, an average of 1.078 per game. When the Anaheim Ducks won the Stanley Cup in 2007-08, they led the NHL with 69 fighting majors. The Ducks' general manager that year was Brian Burke who, at his introductory press conference with the Toronto Maple Leafs, was quoted as saying that “we require, as a team, proper levels of pugnacity, testosterone, truculence and belligerence. That's how our teams play. I make no apologies for that. Our teams play a North American game. We're throwbacks. It's black-and-blue hockey. It's going to be more physical hockey here than people are used to." On the night that the lives of Bertuzzi and Moore became forever attached, Burke was the general manager of the Canucks. He, too, was named a responsible party according to motion records filed by Moore's lawyers and obtained by the Toronto Star:
“There have been classic violent episodes going back to the mid-1930s, and Eddie Shore and before that. Eddie Shore nearly killed (Ace Bailey). Ace Bailey’s father tried to shoot and kill him with a gun. It was a running story for a long time,” Stan Fischler said prior to a recent New York Rangers home game. • March 13, 1955: The legendary Maurice Richard was suspended for the final three games, and all of the playoffs, for punching a referee in a fight with Boston Bruin Hal Laycoe. Many in and around the game believe the instigator rule has eliminated a code of honesty, saying that current players such as Patrick Kaleta, Sean Avery and Matt Cooke, among others, would not be allowed to perpetuate their deeds without being held accountable. There have always been violent incidents in team sports. Jack Tatum paralyzed Darryl Stingley with a vicious hit on a football field. Kermit Washington threw the most devastating punch in basketball history and shattered Rudy Tomjanovich’s face. Juan Marichal attempted to imbed a baseball bat in the head of Johnny Roseboro.
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, December 23, 2009 13:00 |

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