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Senators' Greig: Slap shot happened in 'heat of the moment' - ESPN

OTTAWA, Ontario — Ridly Greig, speaking for the first time since the Ottawa Senators center was cross-checked to the face by Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Morgan Rielly, summed up the ensuing fallout by saying he «didn't think it would get this far.»

But three days after the incident, and fresh off Ottawa's 6-3 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets on Tuesday night, Greig held court at his locker stall, taking questions about not only his decision to fire a slap shot into an open net against the Maple Leafs but how he felt the NHL responded.

«I've tried to stay offline the past couple of days,» Greig said. «Everyone's going to have an opinion on it. They're probably going to love it or hate it. It doesn't matter to me.»

Earlier in the day, Rielly was suspended five games by the league's Department of Player Safety for the cross-check. The hit came in the moments following Greig's short-distance goal with 5.1 seconds remaining in what was a 5-3 Ottawa victory.

«In short, this is not a hockey play. This is an intentional, forceful strike to an opponent's head, using a stick as a weapon to exact retribution on an opponent well after a goal is scored,» NHL Player Safety said in its ruling on Tuesday.

Greig, who left the decision to «the league,» agreed with a reporter in that Rielly caught him off guard after the goal.

«A little bit,» Greig said. «I don't think you're ever expecting a guy to cross-check you in the face. But I'm also not sure if he meant to do that.»

Typically, with empty-net goals — a sign the game's outcome has been decided — the scoring team simply pushes the puck into the net or perhaps tries a wrist shot, so as not to show up the losing opponent. Very rarely do players wind up with a slap shot, especially

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