Bloodied but unbowed: Skate to the face can't keep Jets forward Morgan Barron off NHL post-season ice - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 08:54 AM | Calgary | -13.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Bloodied but unbowed: Skate to the face can't keep Jets forward Morgan Barron off NHL post-season ice

A day after a skate blade came frighteningly close to his right eye, Winnipeg Jets forward Morgan Barron was given Wednesday off. "I would say that's well-deserved, but we expect him to play [Thursday]," Jets coach Rick Bowness said.

Shrugging off scary injuries 'in a hockey player's DNA': ex-teammate

The blade of ahockey skate is seen pushing up under the visor and against the temple of a Winnipeg Jets player.
The skate of Vegas Golden Knights goalie Laurent Brossoit cut the face of Winnipeg Jets centre Morgan Barron during the first period of Game 1 on Tuesday night in Las Vegas. (John Locher/The Associated Press)

A day after a skate blade came frighteningly close to his right eye, Winnipeg Jets forward Morgan Barron was given Wednesday off.

"I would say that's well-deserved, but we expect him to play [Thursday]," Jets coach Rick Bowness said.

The Jets will try to take a 2-0 lead in the first-round NHL playoffs series against the Golden Knights when the teams meet Thursday night in Las Vegas.

Barron didn't even miss much of the series opener, getting cut by Vegas goalie Laurent Brossoit's skate blade during a first-period scramble in front of the net. After going to the locker room, Barron returned a period later with more than 75 stitches and a full cage.

Jets player wearing a cage-style mask and a bandage on his right temple.
Winnipeg Jets centre Morgan Barron plays with a bandage and a cage-style face mask against the Vegas Golden Knights during the second period of Game 1 on Tuesday night in Las Vegas. (John Locher/The Associated Press)

It fits the mindset of an NHL locker room. Short of an arm falling off, hockey players are expected to play, especially this time of year.

Boston captain Zdeno Chara played the final three games of the 2019 Stanley Cup final with a broken jaw after taking a puck to the face. Bruins teammate Patrice Bergeron finished the final in 2013 with a broken rib, torn cartilage and a punctured lung.

In 2017, Pittsburgh's Ian Cole played the last two rounds of the playoffs with a broken hand and broken ribs. Chicago's Duncan Keith lost seven teeth during a game in the 2010 final and returned in the same game.

"I think it's in a hockey player's DNA," said Colorado forward Alex Newhook, who has known Barron since they attended an Ontario prep school. "You just want to play. Regardless of what happens, if you're able to get out there, most guys are getting back out there."

Knights centre Chandler Stephenson was part of the scrum when Barron got hurt and was the first to see blood. Stephenson then helped Barron get off the ice.

"Any time you take a skate to the face, you're worried for the guy," Stephenson said. "He got off and glad he's OK. When it happened, I asked [a Jets player]if his eye was good. A cut is a cut, but if it's to his eye, you never want to see that."

A Golden Knights player looks on in concern as a Winnipeg Jets player bleeds from his right temple.
Vegas Golden Knights centre Chandler Stephenson, right, helps Winnipeg Jets centre Morgan Barron after his face was cut by a skate during the first period of Game 1 on Tuesday night. (John Locher/The Associated Press)

Stephenson said the injury reminded him of when Knights teammate Alec Martinez was forced out of the lineup for 135 days after taking a skate to the face on Nov. 11, 2021. He needed more than 50 stitches.

Martinez, who took a maintenance day Wednesday and was not available for interviews, also played in the 2021 playoffs with a broken foot.

Then there is what Barron did Tuesday night.

"A scary situation," Jets defenceman Josh Morrissey said. "Those things kind of ripple through the team. To have him come back was definitely a boost. He's a character guy, a tough guy. That's what the playoffs are all about battling through injury."

With files from Stephen Whyno and Pat Graham