COACH

Caps' Wilson Suspended 20 Games for Hit in Preseason Game

Wilson delivered a blindside hit to the head of St. Louis Blues center Oskar Sundqvist Sunday

What to Know

  • Wilson's blindside hit to the head of St. Louis Blues center Oskar Sundqvist resulted in a 10-minute penalty.
  • The NHL's Department of Player Safety met with Wilson Wednesday.
  • He was suspended for three games during the Stanley Cup playoffs for a check to the head of a Pittsburgh Penguins player.

The NHL suspended Washington Capitals right winger Tom Wilson 20 games for a blindside hit to the head of St. Louis Blues center Oskar Sundqvist during a preseason game Sunday.

Wilson's fourth ban in less than 13 months will cost him nearly a quarter of the 82-game regular season — only five NHL players have been suspended longer for on-ice play — and $1.26 million in salary. It was announced just hours before the reigning Stanley Cup champion Capitals were to raise a banner and open their title defense by hosting the Boston Bruins.

Wilson had an in-person hearing with the NHL's Department of Player Safety in New York on Wednesday.

The video released to explain the punishment says, "Wilson delivers a high, forceful hit, which makes Sundqvist's head the main point of contact on a hit where such head contact was avoidable and causes an injury." It also admonishes him for taking "a poor angle of approach."

Blues coach Mike Yeo said Sundqvist is “not good” and called the hit “predatory.”

Wilson's suspension, which he can appeal, is the longest handed down by the league since Raffi Torres of the San Jose Sharks was banned a record 41 games in 2015, also for a preseason hit.

The league noted that Wilson "is considered a repeat offender" — and, indeed, this is hardly the first time the sixth-year player has been in trouble for the way he has taken out an opponent.

He was suspended twice because of preseason hits a year ago, then had to sit out three games during the playoffs for a check to the head that broke Pittsburgh Penguins center Zach Aston-Reese's jaw and caused a concussion.

"In short, including preseason and postseason games played, this is Wilson's fourth suspension in his last 105 games, an unprecedented frequency of suspensions in the history of the Department of Player Safety," the NHL video says.

The Capitals see Wilson as a vital part of the franchise, and general manager Brian MacLellan signed him to a $31 million, six-year contract this offseason.

During a conference call with reporters in July to discuss his new deal, Wilson spoke about how he needed to adjust his playing style.

"It would be stubborn on my part not to admit that the game is changing. There is definitely an eye on that part, the physical part of the game, in the NHL right now. I want to be contributing. I want to be a part of the success of the group. If I'm not going to adapt and change with the times, I'm not going to be able to do that. I want to be on the ice and not in the box or not in the stands," Wilson said at the time.

"That physical part of my game is always going to be there. That's the nature of who I am. That's how I play the game. I'm not going to let anyone take that away from me," he added. "But I have to be smart about it. You've got to play within the rules."

Wilson doubled his career high with 14 goals and set a new mark with 35 points last season, when he was the only NHL forward with 30-plus points and 90-plus penalty minutes, finishing with 187 and a league-high 41 minors. Then he contributed 15 points in 21 games during Washington's run to its first championship.

"There are certain ways they are calling things. You need to be aware of how they're making their calls on suspensions. He's a big, strong guy who skates really well. There is a lot of force behind his contact," MacLellan said Tuesday, the day before the suspension was issued. "He needs to be aware of how they're determining what's legal and what's illegal from the league's standpoint."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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