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Don Cherry on a cross-check at Sens Greig from Morgan Rielly's corner

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Morgan Rielly may be glad to know he has a coach in his corner when he sees his potential suspension in the Ottawa Senators' showdown.

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“I say he gets two games,” Don Cherry said on his Grapevine podcast Sunday after the Ottawa Senators' 5-3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs with son Tim and daughter Cindy.

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Time will tell what the NHL decides during the Maple Leafs defenseman's hearing on Tuesday, but Cheri Ridley Greig said as she fired a shot into an empty net to lead the Senators to victory at the Canadian Tire Center in the capital. To add salt to the Leafs' wounds, he violated the NHL's unwritten code of showing them when the team is down.

“I'm glad Rielly played and I'm glad he did it,” said Cherry, the former Boston Bruins coach and longtime star of the Coaches Corner on Hockey Canada Night. “I know there's no rule in the book that says you don't do it, but you don't.”

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Morgan Rielly of the Toronto Maple Leafs stands over Ridley Greig of the Ottawa Senators after scoring an empty net goal at the Canadian Tire Center on February 10, 2024 in Ottawa.
Morgan Rielly of the Toronto Maple Leafs stands over Ridley Greig of the Ottawa Senators after scoring an empty net goal at the Canadian Tire Center on February 10, 2024 in Ottawa. Photo by Chris Tanouye/Freestyle Photography /Getty Images

Rielly didn't like that. After Greig was poised to pounce on the loose net, Rielly gave the rookie a two-handed check that appeared to hit Greig in the face and head before he was doubled over on the ice.

Cherry pointed to the unwritten rule of “no football” in hockey. He questioned what was going through Greig's mind and why he did it.

There's a theory about Grapes, who had Rielly's back when he returned a playoff field goal against Florida last spring.

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“I think the reason he did it is because Leaf fans go 'Go Leafs Go' (in Ottawa), so he did it.”

Sure enough, the arena seems to be filled with most of Leafs Nation. Grieg said the home team will win this round of the Battle of Ontario.

Veteran Rielly made his statement.

“It was a spur of the moment thing,” Cherry said.

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While he thinks NHL umpire George Parros will issue a two-game suspension, not six, as many pundits say, he added that Rielly “used the stick” as part of the punishment, but added, “I think he meant it. put it on the shoulder, but he put it on the back of the neck.

That being said, Cherry took a bit of a dig at Grieg, who quipped, “He laid well there.”

Oops. Twice.

It's great to hear Don's perspective because as Tim says, “Everybody wants to know what you think.”

So he has to go back to the hockey party in Canada!

Maybe even Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Premier Doug Ford agree, because Grapes says he's been taking notes for the past 90 years.th both of their birthdays. “I want to thank everyone for their well wishes,” Cherry said.

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By the way, the Grapes also picked the Kansas City Chiefs to win the Super Bowl. But it was his take on the Rielly story that got people interested.

I think it was an illegal, dirty play that probably hurt Grigg, he didn't foul the rules and could have scored anyway. I pointed out that the Leafs didn't show that kind of fire inside when the Bruins' Brad Marchand hit Timothy Liljegren on the board in November or when Florida Panthers forward Sam Bennett sacked rookie Matthew Knize last year. playoffs with a concussion.

But as the Vine explained – the Leafs players and coaching staff have spoken about the lack of that answer and vowed never to let it happen.

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In Michigan-style lacrosse-style goals, whether players put the puck on the face of their stick and throw it into the net or celebrate a goal that embarrasses the other team, Cherry says on the ice. , players don't like any of these skills.

If you decide to do something like this, you will pay a price. Greig paid the price. Rielly could miss games and pay, possibly a fine.

If Cherry had his say, Rielly would be back in the lineup on Saturday, February 17. vs. Anaheim Ducks.

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