Wild forward Ryan Hartman was fined over $4.4K, the maximum allowable under the Collective Bargaining Agreement, for high-sticking Jets forward Cole Perfetti during Sunday’s 3-2 loss, the NHL Department of Player Safety announced today. This is the seventh fine of Hartman’s career, as The Athletic’s Michael Russo notes, and his second disciplinary punishment of the season after being assessed a two-game suspension for tripping Red Wings winger Alex DeBrincat in November.
The incident in question was confirmed to be deliberate, inexplicably coming out of Hartman’s mouth during gameplay. Perfetti, who was wearing a microphone for Sunday’s game, told reporters today that Hartman told Perfetti that the high stick was retribution for the Brenden Dillon cross-check that injured Wild star Kirill Kaprizov the day before (via the Winnipeg Free Press’ Mike McIntyre). Perfetti, who turned 22 yesterday, was not involved in the Dillon/Kaprizov altercation.
For the Wild, the lack of a suspension for Hartman is great news. Already dealing with injuries to two-thirds of their first line in Kaprizov and Mats Zuccarello, middle-six bruiser Marcus Foligno is now a game-time decision for tonight’s clash against the Flames with a lingering undisclosed injury, per NHL.com’s Jessi Pierce. The 32-year-old Foligno, who has four points in his last five games, skated in a third-line role alongside Frédérick Gaudreau and Pat Maroon in Sunday’s loss.
His absence would force the Wild to dress 11 forwards and seven defensemen, as veteran d-man Jonathon Merrill is the only healthy extra skater on Minnesota’s roster. The Wild are eligible to use an emergency recall in Foligno’s absence, but without ruling him out for tonight’s contest, they wouldn’t be able to do so until after the game.
Elsewhere in the Central Division today:
- Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog returned to Denver from Sweden to continue his recovery from a right-knee cartilage transplant earlier this season, leading to increased hope that he could return for a potential 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs berth and suit up for the first time since Colorado captured the championship in 2022. The Denver Post’s Corey Masisak revealed last weekend that Landeskog’s family has now moved back to Colorado, furthering confidence that the long-time first-line fixture will resume his career at some point. The 31-year-old has now undergone multiple knee surgeries over the past three years and has not eclipsed the 70-game mark in a season since the 2018-19 campaign, five years ago.
- After being sent down for salary cap management purposes yesterday, Stars netminder Matt Murray was recalled from AHL Texas today, per team radio analyst Bruce LeVine. The 25-year-old is once again in the NHL on an emergency basis while starter Jake Oettinger is sidelined week-to-week with a lower-body injury. He has not made an appearance since Oettinger exited the lineup over two weeks ago, however, leading to seven straight starts for veteran backup Scott Wedgewood. The 31-year-old Ontarian has been up to the task, posting a 6-1-1 record and .906 SV% since Oettinger left a December 15 game against the Senators less than halfway through the first period. The Stars have not had back-to-back games since Oettinger was injured. Murray, who does not require waivers and has a .908 SV% through 13 games with AHL Texas this season, will continue to back up Wedgewood for the foreseeable future.
Cla23
Hartman is a coward!! Going after one of the Jets small players that doesn’t fight .
Why not go after Dillon ????
Oh ya Hartman would get his ass kicked !!
yeasties
Well, the fine does suggest that DoPS is giving the greenlight for Dillon to give Hartman a humongous beating the next time he sees him. Hartman is a punk and deserves to get the crap kicked out of him, anyways
Bigd93
While I don’t condone Hartmans behaviour,why was there no call on the two cross checks that put Kaprisov out for next two weeks. Make a call on the cross check and it might stifle the retribution.
Hannibal8us
You’d think the act of admitting it was a deliberate attempt to injure someone as payback would be enough to warrant a suspension.
RichP
Speaking of cowardliness let’s give some credit to the NHL discipline & George Parros for being inconsistent and worthless!
fightcitymayor
There is waaaay too much wannabe-toughguy behavior running around the NHL right now. Anytime anyone is remotely breathed upon, one of their teammates has to take exception and start a scrum or cheapshot a guy. Someone needs to tell the players to stop acting like angsty teens.
jjschwertner9
Well said. Every time there is a huge, but good clean hit in a game the receiving team loses their mind. I see harder hits in my son’s high school games. Someone needs to remind them they are playing hockey, not soccer.
Wilfrid Wilson
Why didn’t Hartman get a six games suspension like the guy from the Red Wings did?