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'Tough one to swallow': Capitals' Hathaway ejected for spitting on Ducks' Gudbranson

Washington Capitals forward Garnet Hathaway has been ejected from a game for spitting on a player from the Anaheim Ducks.

Washington forward receives match penalty as tempers flare following big hit

Washington Capitals forward Garnet Hathaway was ejected for spitting during a brawl with Derek Grant's Anaheim Ducks on Monday. (Nick Wass/The Associated Press)

Just as combatants were being separated in the aftermath of a heated brawl, Erik Gudbranson gave Garnet Hathaway another punch and received something he didn't expect in return.

Hathaway spit on him and was thrown out of a feisty matchup Monday night he and the Washington Capitals won 5-2 against Gudbranson and the Anaheim Ducks. Hathaway said he regretted the loogie that could spark further punishment from the NHL in the form of a fine or suspension, and the Ducks were spitting mad about the entire incident.

"That's about as low as you dig a pit, really," Gudbranson said. "It's a bad thing to do. It's something you just don't do in a game, and he did it."

Hathaway was given a match penalty for spitting in the latter stages of the fracas late in the second period. Gudbranson got a 10-minute misconduct, Anaheim's Nick Ritchie was also ejected for being the third man into a fight and a total of 50 penalty minutes were doled out.

WATCH | Hathaway ejected after spitting on Gudbranson during brawl:

Capitals' Hathaway spits on Ducks' Gudbranson during brawl

5 years ago
Duration 0:26
Washington forward Garnet Hathaway was ejected from a game for spitting on Anaheim defenceman Erik Gudbranson.

"These games can get physical and they can get nasty," Ducks coach Dallas Eakins said. "These guys'll throw down, drop their gloves, that stuff goes on in the game, but what I saw there I haven't seen — I think I've been in pro hockey 30 years maybe — and I've never seen that before. It's just something you don't see in the game."

After some off-and-on hostilities in the first 39 minutes, Washington's Brendan Leipsic incited the brawl by bulldozing Anaheim's Derek Grant just before Chandler Stephenson scored to make it 3-0 Capitals with 33.4 seconds remaining in the second. Almost all 10 skaters on the ice got involved, and Hathaway fought Gudbranson, Grant and Ritchie in a matter of minutes.

'It just escalated'

Officials were attempting to separate players when Gudbranson rabbit-punched Hathaway, who then spit in his face with referee Peter MacDougall a few feet away. Officials checked the video before confirming a five-minute match penalty and game misconduct on Hathaway for spitting, which carries an automatic ejection.

"Unfortunately, spit came out of my mouth after I got sucker punched and it went onto him," Hathaway said. "It has no place. It was an emotional play by me. You don't plan any of that stuff in your head, and it was a quick reaction and unfortunately the wrong one for me to a sucker punch."

Ducks defenceman Brendan Guhle had been agitating much of the night, almost dropping the gloves with Tom Wilson and tripping up Leipsic in various incidents. It all paved the way for the brawl.

"It just escalated," Guhle said. "It for sure was in the works. There were scrums all night. Guys were going after each other. That's how it goes sometimes."

The fighting and Hathaway spitting overshadowed the NHL-leading Capitals winning their second in a row and picking up at least one point for the 14th time in 15 games. Alex Ovechkin scored his 254th career power-play goal, Richard Panik, Stephenson and Jakub Vrana also scored, Wilson sealed it with an empty netter and Braden Holtby made 32 saves for Washington.

Anaheim is an angry team after seeing Hathaway spit on Gudbranson.

"At the end of the day, it's probably the least respectful thing you can ever do to somebody," Grant said. "We're all competing out there and sometimes the game gets that way. As a group, I thought we did a good job sticking up for each other. That's a tough one to swallow."