BOSTON – Ryan Hartman will be out of action for the next month-plus after the NHL Department of Player Safety issued its stiffest punishment of the season.
The Wild forward was suspended 10 games for roughing — “using his forearm to violently slam the head of Senators forward Tim Stützle into the ice” — during the Wild’s 6-0 loss Saturday. Hartman won’t be eligible to return until March 9 vs. Pittsburgh.
Hartman, 30, will forfeit $487,804.90 in salary. He has until Wednesday night to file an appeal, which would be heard by Commissioner Gary Bettman.
This is the fifth suspension of his 628-game NHL career, third in two seasons and longest to date. He was ejected for intent to injure Stützle after the two squared off for a faceoff late in the second period.
While Stützle was bent over the dot, Hartman pushed Stützle’s down and his helmet flew off as he hit the ice. Stützle was bleeding, with a cut near his left eye.
Hartman was assessed a match penalty, and the Senators scored three times on the ensuing five-minute power play in the third period.
In a video explanation for the suspension, the NHL Department of Player Safety mentioned Hartman took his hand off his stick, put his forearm on the back of Stützle’s head and used his body weight to “intentionally drive Stützle downward, slamming him face-first into the ice.”
The video went on to include that Hartman contended he was trying to use his hand to regain his balance while using Stützle for support and that their fall to the ice was accidental, but the league disagreed, calling the sequence dangerous, unacceptable and faulting Hartman for taking advantage of a vulnerable player.