JXC
17-4 since 2001
This guy has been a pest for the Stars and should have probably been suspended for stuff before this, but six games for this quote, is kind of a little extreme, IMHO.
Flames defenseman Dion Phaneuf is now dating actress Elisha Cuthbert, who is Avery's ex-girlfriend. Canadiens defenseman Mike Komisarek has also been romantically linked to her, too. And Avery's other ex, model and actress Rachel Hunter, is now Kings center Jarrett Stoll's girlfriend. I guess all of this led to this quote from Avery on camera Tuesday:
So now because of that he gets six games, and has to go to anger management. Avery is an idiot, but I dunno about six games for this.
The Associated Press: Stars' Avery suspended 6 games by NHL
Flames defenseman Dion Phaneuf is now dating actress Elisha Cuthbert, who is Avery's ex-girlfriend. Canadiens defenseman Mike Komisarek has also been romantically linked to her, too. And Avery's other ex, model and actress Rachel Hunter, is now Kings center Jarrett Stoll's girlfriend. I guess all of this led to this quote from Avery on camera Tuesday:
I am really happy to be back in Calgary, I love Canada. I just want to comment on how it's become like a common thing in the NHL for guys to fall in love with my sloppy seconds. I don't know what that's about. Enjoy the game tonight.
So now because of that he gets six games, and has to go to anger management. Avery is an idiot, but I dunno about six games for this.
The Associated Press: Stars' Avery suspended 6 games by NHL
NEW YORK (AP) ? Sean Avery was suspended for six games by NHL commissioner Gary Bettman on Friday after the league's most notorious agitator made a crude comment regarding his ex-girlfriends dating other hockey players.
Avery already has served two games of the suspension and will miss an additional four, making him eligible to return Dec. 16 against Phoenix, if Dallas Stars management and his teammates accept him back.
Avery, who has twice led the NHL in penalty minutes and is second this season, also agreed to be evaluated for anger management. The league cited his "pattern of unacceptable and anti-social behavior."
"He looked me in the eye and said, 'I need help,'" Stars general manager Brett Hull said Friday. "It was brought up by him."
This is Avery's first league suspension in his seven seasons. Stars owner Tom Hicks said he would have suspended Avery if the league hadn't.
Bettman deemed Avery's behavior "detrimental to the league or game of hockey" and said in a statement the 28-year-old player has "expressed remorse for his recent comments." Bettman said completion of the anger management evaluation is a condition for Avery's return.
He added that Avery has been warned repeatedly and too often his actions have been "at odds with the manner in which his more than 700 fellow players conduct themselves."
"Playing in the National Hockey League is a privilege, requiring a high standard of personal behavior," Bettman said. "Mr. Avery forfeits that privilege for six games."
Avery had been under an indefinite suspension from Bettman since Tuesday when the forward sought out reporters to make his vulgar remark. He spent three hours Thursday at a hearing at league headquarters in Manhattan.
"We have to fix him," Hull said. "There were a lot of words thrown out ? anger management, depression. He's going to use this time to figure things out."
Hull played with Avery several years ago in Detroit and was influential in bringing him to Dallas. The GM insisted that this treatment is merely a beginning.
"It's a process. You don't go to a retreat for a weekend and it's fixed," Hull said. "There will be apologies made, probably more privately.
"Once the suspension is over and once we find out the process he's trying to go through, as an organization, we're going to decide as a group what direction we're going to go. The players will have a chance to give their input."
Avery sat out Dallas' 3-1 win over the Flames on Tuesday and again Wednesday when the Stars lost at Edmonton 5-2. He was denied a chance by teammates to apologize to them, and his message of contrition Wednesday was distributed by his publicist.
On Tuesday, reporters in Calgary, Alberta, were waiting to speak with Avery about his disparaging remarks last month concerning Flames star Jarome Iginla. Avery walked over to the group and asked if a camera was present. When told there was, he said he was "just going to say one thing."
"I'm really happy to be back in Calgary; I love Canada," he said. "I just want to comment on how it's become like a common thing in the NHL for guys to fall in love with my (former girlfriends). I don't know what that's about, but enjoy the game tonight." He then walked out.
Avery's ex-girlfriend, actress Elisha Cuthbert of the television show "24" and the movie "Old School," is dating Calgary defenseman Dion Phaneuf. She also had been romantically linked to Mike Komisarek of the Montreal Canadiens. Avery also dated Rachel Hunter, the former Sports Illustrated swimsuit cover model and actress who is the girlfriend of Los Angeles Kings center Jarrett Stoll.
Avery left the New York Rangers this summer after 1 1/2 seasons and signed a four-year, $15.5 million deal with the Stars. Dallas entered Friday with the fewest points in the Western Conference. This week, coach Dave Tippett questioned whether Avery would be welcomed back in the locker room.
"It's up to us as a group to decide if that's possible," Hull said. "Anybody who uses him as an excuse for their poor play, I'm not sure I want them on my team."
In 2005, Avery was cited for making derogatory comments about French-Canadian players after then-Phoenix defenseman Denis Gauthier hit Kings teammate Jeremy Roenick in an exhibition game. Avery apologized after an NHL reprimand.
Against Edmonton, Georges Laraque, who is black, accused Avery of using a racial slur, which Avery denied. Avery also unleashed a profane tirade at an Anaheim Ducks television commentator.
Last season, Avery was fined $2,500 for his role in pregame skirmishes against Toronto and New Jersey. During a playoff game, he face-guarded Devils goalie Martin Brodeur and waved his stick in front of him, prompting the league to outlaw such actions with the "Avery Rule."
This season, at Madison Square Garden, Avery argued with a cable network reporter, then referred to Rangers backup goalie Steve Valiquette as a "minor leaguer" during an interview.
AP Sports Writer Jaime Aron in Dallas contributed to this report.
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