Bruins’ Montgomery sounds off on Sam Bennett’s punch to Brad Marchand
Like most, Bruins head coach Jim Montgomery didn’t see exactly what happened on the center ice collision that left Brad Marchand with wobbly legs and in some serious discomfort on the B’s bench.
But upon seeing subsequent replays, and with Boston likely down their captain and leading scorer for Sunday’s Game 4 at TD Garden, Montgomery was one unhappy bench boss.
“There’s a history there with Bennett,” Montgomery began. “A good, hard player. But there’s clearly evidence of what went on. And people can say it wasn’t intentional, [but] we have our view of it.”
When asked what he meant by history, and specifically if Bennett has history with Marchand or just in general, Montgomery noted that it was in general and “in [Bennett]’s career.” To that end, Bennett had a similar-looking incident during Florida’s second-round series with Toronto last year, where he had a butt-end, rabbit punch to the head of Toronto winger Matthew Knies.
Shockingly, Montgomery’s feelings on the matter were not shared by Panthers head coach Paul Maurice.
“No, and I don’t think most of you would either,” Maurice said when asked about seeing a Bennett punch on the incident between the two. “It was just a collision. In a perfect world, every team has everybody healthy. Nobody likes to see anybody hurt.”
The Bennett-Marchand incident ultimately went unpenalized, and will not come with any supplemental discipline (per the Boston Herald’s Steve Conroy), but it certainly seems likely to come up with the Bruins’ upcoming talk with the crew supervisor of the Bruins-Panthers series.
“I have not,” Montgomery said when asked if he or the B’s have talked to the league about the incident. “We do meet with the supervisors, we tell them our views on things. And I really like the way the process works with the league. It’s kept private, and it should be kept private.”
The Bennett-Marchand incident, and lack of follow-up from the league comes on the heels of the NHL apparently putting the Bruins and Panthers on notice following a misconduct-filled Game 2 in Sunrise.
The Bruins will look to even the series up at 2-2 with a Sunday night showdown, and with puck drop set for sometime after 6:30 p.m. at TD Garden.