Calgary·Poll

Dennis Wideman's bizarre hit on linesman: What's your verdict?

Calgary Flames defenceman Dennis Wideman's collision with a linesman has divided the hockey community, with some calling for his suspension and others saying the cross-check was unintentional. What do you think the NHL should do?

Calgary Flames defenceman's bizarre collision with official divides hockey community

Flames defenceman Dennis Wideman hits linesman

9 years ago
Duration 1:22
Linesman Don Henderson would stay in the game.

UPDATE: The NHL has indefinitely suspended Wideman pending a hearing after the All-Star Game.

The talk of the NHL has been last night's hit by Calgary Flames defenceman Dennis Wideman on linesman Don Henderson.

The bizarre incident has divided the hockey community, with some saying Wideman should be suspended for cross-checking the official from behind and others saying the collision was incidental and unintentional.

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Wideman himself had just taken a hit from the Nashville Predators' Miikka Salomaki and was making his way to the bench in obvious distress.

There was no penalty called on the play.​

"I took a pretty hard hit down in the corner and had some pretty good pain in my shoulder and my neck and I was just trying to get off the ice and I was kinda keeled over and at the last second, I looked up and I saw him and I couldn't avoid it," Wideman explained.

Do you believe his account of the incident? What do you think the NHL should do about it?

For the record, Rule 40 of the NHL Official Rules states that "any player who deliberately strikes an official and causes injury or who deliberately applies physical force in any manner against an official with intent to injure, or who in any manner attempts to injure an official shall be automatically suspended for not less than twenty (20) games."

The rulebook adds: "Any player who deliberately applies physical force to an official in any manner (excluding actions as set out in Category I), which physical force is applied without intent to injure, or who spits on an official, shall be automatically suspended for not less than ten (10) games."

The last player punished under that rule was Dennis Carcillo who was initially suspended 10 games for elbowing linesman Scott Driscoll in 2014, but later saw that suspension reduced to six games.

Here's what some others had to say about Wideman's hit: