Posted: Friday, November 20, 2009, 2:12 PM | 42 comments |
 
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SAN JOSE – Mike Richards’ hit on David Booth back on Oct. 24 is still reverberating through the hockey world. Last week at the NHL’s general manager meetings in Toronto, many GMs pointed to that hit as the reason why head shots and dangerous hits need to be taken out of the game.

This week, the hit is still reverberating in a different place. David Booth told The Sporting News in today’s issue that he is still feeling the effects of the hit daily. Booth made a pass near the Flyers’ blue line and turned his head at the very second Richards came across the ice and drilled him with a shoulder.

The hit – which knocked Booth unconscious, cut him and kept him in Pennsylvania Hospital for a night – was reviewed by the NHL but not deemed worthy of a suspension. Booth’s head scraped along the Wachovia Center ice on the way down.

Booth has not been back on the ice since. I reported news from the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in Thursday’s paper about Booth’s setbacks. He has not been able to do light exercises for more than three consecutive days without headaches.

Video of the hit is at the bottom of this post.

The Sporting News caught up with him for a revealing Q&A in their Nov. 20, 2009 issue. Here is an excerpt:

Question: How would you describe the symptoms right now?
Booth: It’s kind of fatigue mostly, and headaches … I never had a headache for the longest time [before the hit]. Now, it seems like everything I do, my head starts pounding.

Question: Was it a dirty hit?
Booth: Since I was the one receiving it, I looked back on it and my viewpoint is going to be different than other people’s. Yeah, I guess everyone has their opinions, I’m sure you know where I stand on it.

Question: At the GM meetings in Toronto, that hit seemed to be the one that rallied for a rule protecting players from hits to the head. Is that something positive you can pull out of this?
Booth: Yeah, but it kind of sucks it had to come at my expense. That’s the way it goes.

Question: So you’d like to see rule changes?
Booth: Yeah, I think you could answer that for me.

Question: I read somewhere that your career might be in jeopardy because of this hit. Do you worry about not playing again?
Booth: No. That’s not in my mind. That’s never crossed my mind. I’ve never even had that thought.

Question: I imagine the best advice is to not rush back?
Booth: That’s the biggest thing. You feel good during the day, you want to get back out there … I hate doing nothing. I feel like a slob. I want to do anything I can. It’s been difficult.

Question: So what do you do to pass the time?
Booth: Nothing … The first couple of weeks, I’d go for a walk or something and I found that to be detrimental … I think I just have to do nothing.

That is powerful stuff. The "I feel like a slob" line really got me. It is amazing to see how a few milliseconds can change a life.

Anyways, the Flyers are back on the ice tonight (10:00 p.m. EST, Comcast SportsNet) against the San Jose Sharks. I looked at how the Flyers’ defense has made a big impact in the scoring column in today’s paper.

The Flyers’ lines are expected to stay the same:

Hartnell - Richards - Pyorala
Van Riemsdyk - Carter - Briere
Powe - Giroux - Laliberte
Carcillo - Betts – Laperriere

Flyers coach John Stevens said that Oskars Bartulis will remain in the lineup as the sixth defenseman, leaving Ole-Kristian Tollefsen, Danny Syvret and Riley Cote as healthy scratches.

The Sharks are walking wounded right now, missing Rob Blake, Devin Setoguchi, Jody Shelley and Brad Staubitz. All four will be out tonight.

Here were the Sharks' depleted lines from practice on Thursday:

Marleau – Thornton - Heatley
Clowe - Pavelski - Malhotra
Ortmeyer – Nichol – McLaren

The San Jose Mercury News is saying that Logan Couture, Jamie McGinn and Benn Ferriero are likely to play tonight as call-ups from Worcester (AHL).

For the latest updates, follow Frank Seravalli on Twitter at http://twitter.com/DNFlyers.


Posted by Frank Seravalli @ 2:12 PM  Permalink | 42 comments
42
Comments   
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:02 PM, 11/20/2009
    I've watched this over and over and it's just a strange looking hit. Like Richards is trying to line something up, then ends up glancing off Booth's shoulder and across Booth's face. It's extremely unfortunate, but I don't think Richards was intending to take off Booth's head. At one point it almost looks like Richards is trying to get around him. I don't know, it's definitely not your typical cheap-shot if it was one at all.
    rwright611
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:44 PM, 11/20/2009
    someone should ask Booth why he was admiring his pass
    BHite15
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:45 PM, 11/20/2009
    Does anyone not remember the Panthers' own Jay Bouwmeester and his dirty hit on Gagne, and oh by the way it knocked Gagne out for a whole season? What comes around, goes around. Florida Panthers need to shut up and quit crying.
    phlyFANinTX
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 3:50 PM, 11/20/2009
    this is hockey, not basketball. physical contact is allowed. it was a clean hit.
    phlyFANinTX
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:09 PM, 11/20/2009
    BS. Richards had his feet on the ice and his elbows by his side. His shoulder barely even hit Booth - he almost hit him with his back! I feel bad for Booth, but this was his fault as much as Richards -- an accident in a very fast and physical game. The aforementioned hits on Lindros, Primeau and Gags were much worse.
    rstone
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:14 PM, 11/20/2009
    Objectively speaking, this check was a poor decision on Richards' part, given how long he had the player lined up across the ice. Something was going to change by the time he made contact - and it did. The player was no longer at the same angle for a highlight reel, pancake check. Booth continued to admire the pass, as I'm sure Richards was expecting his head to return to the normal position, but it didn't. All of these circumstances, however unfortunate, still don't add up to a dirty check for reasons already mentioned. Lindros's career ended the same exact way, as he could/would not keep his head up just like Booth in this instance. If they start penalizing players for unintentional hits, it will get like the stupid NFL quarterback contact rules - which has changed that game. Quarterbacks want defensive players suspended because they can't make plays while avoiding a hit. So now it is the NPL, or National Passing League. The whole point of football is to hit the guy WITH the football. Same thing in hockey. Guy with the puck gets hit. Part of any physical game is learning how to avoid hits, or at the minimum, remembering where you are at all times. If a player cannot master the skill, doesn't belong out there. The other choice is just to remove contact from all sports. That'll be really fun, watching our wives play professional sports.
    Danno
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:15 PM, 11/20/2009
    Lindros dealt with this his whole career. It is hockey...which is less interesting today than it was in the days before Gary Bettman. That is a fact. 6 Year olds and all througout a players development, they hear the same words: "keep your head up". There is a reason for that. It is a contact sport with the world's greatest athletes....incidents will happen. Does not mean rules need to change everytime.
    bvl390
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:20 PM, 11/20/2009
    Imagine that, more Flyers fans that think the world is against them. You always complain about people "crying" about questionable hits and now you all are doing the exact same thing by trying to complain to everyone that nobody treats you fairly. It was a fairly clean hit, not worthy of a suspension, but don't try to say he didn't attempt to hit him. I doubt there was an attempt to injure, but definitely an attempt to hit him where it counts. Also, you flyers fans should stop complaining considering the league is on your side for this one. Also, Lindros' career was NOT shortened due to "deliberate shots to the head" as "horsesareathletes" claims above. Both Eric and hit brother suffered numerous concussions from being physical players and therefore receiving hits in retaliation just as they did to other players. As you all said above, hockey is a rough, physical and sometimes dangerous sport. Lastly, if you want to see some success in this city, then I would suggest you convince ownership that brutality doesn't win in this league as it did in the 70's and 80's. Notice the teams that are winning lately, young players from Europe, not just Canada, and those players with more skill than brute force. You can beat up the entire opposition, and you may think that it's "cool", but at the end of it, your team is just another bunch of toothless guys who just so happen to be trophy-less.
    aisaac
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:40 PM, 11/20/2009
    This was just a hockey play. Booth crossed the middle of the ice while admiring a pass. Unfortunately the camera usually leaves, but defensemen routinely get hit after making outlet passes. Obviously, the outcome was an unintended consequence, but the moral outrage aimed at Richards is ridiculous. Booth is being a wee bit whiny about it, its b/c of this type of false sense of entitlement that he probably got drilled in the first place.
    mike
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:41 PM, 11/20/2009
    anyone who posts 'you flyers fans' should have their post deleted immediately.
    Bex
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:45 PM, 11/20/2009
    aisaac, are you kidding? In all seriousness, go back and watch the Kasparitis hit on Lindros. He left his feet and threw an elbow. Watch the Stevens hit on Lindros, the puck wasn't there yet, and Lindros was K.O.'ed before he hit the ice b/c he got a shoulder to the head. Look at the video on Primeau's last 2 concussions. compare those with Richards-Booth.
    mike
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 4:54 PM, 11/20/2009
    Getting a little tiring, this was not an intentional dirty hit, anyone with a brain can see that. It happens during the course of a game, unfortunate yes, dirty no! Drop it allready and move on to something else!!!
    DJ


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About Frank Seravalli
Frank Seravalli is in his fourth year with the Daily News and third season covering the Flyers. He started at the Daily News as an intern writing about the boozing legends of the Lincoln Financial Field lots and hasn't left. Since joining the Flyers beat, he has covered everything from the Winter Classic to the Stanley Cup Final and everything in between. Prior to joining the Daily News, the Bucks County native did a large amount of freelance work for local media outlets, covering high schools, colleges and all four of Philly's major sports teams. He resides in Center City. E-mail Frank at seravaf@phillynews.com and follow him on Twitter @DNFlyers.

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