Asian Fever

Bertuzzi/Moore 7 years later

Cock Throppled

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It's been 7 years since Todd Bertuzzi blind-sided Steve Moore.

For all the Bert lovers who defended him, it looks like Moore's brain injuries are permanent and still affect him after his hockey career is over.

But 7 years? Part of the delay was waiting to see if Moore recovered, but - 7 years?
 

wilde

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Jun 4, 2003
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I expect that at some point closer to trial, the NHL will push for a settlement to avoid a trial where not only Bertuzzi but the NHL culture will also be put on trial. Steve Moore's lawyers will refuse until the pot is sweet enough.
 

luvsdaty

Well-known member
Moore was some snot nosed kid trying to score brownie points with his coach by taking Naslunds head off.Not saying he got what he deserved,but live by the sword die by the sword,& no bitching when things don't go your way.I'd say half of everything Bert owns is gonna go to Moore.The other half will go to Berts wife when she divorces him.
 

wilde

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Jun 4, 2003
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Bertuzzi was the only one charged after all this. I dont see crawford,nhl,or the canucks paying out anything.
You do know the difference between being charged and being sued, I hope.





Steve Moore set for justice
Trial committed for Bertuzzi suit
By STEVE SIMMONS, QMI Agency


Ex-NHLer Steve Moore speaks about his injuries and former Canucks forward Todd Bertuzzi pleading guilty to a charge of assault causing bodily harm at a press conference at his lawyer's office in Toronto on December 23, 2004. (MIKE CASSESE/Reuters file photo)

TORONTO - The unfortunate anniversary of Steve Moore’s last night of professional hockey comes Tuesday, seven years after his head was pile-driven to the ice by Todd Bertuzzi — and still there is nothing resembling justice.

There is no official trial date set for the civil suit launched by Moore. There is no judge yet assigned to the case. But there is, finally, after so much paper work filed, after so many depositions and counter-claims, some hope that justice is on its way.

To be accurate, the matter has been officially set for trial. Maybe it will begin late this year. More likely, the expected two-month trial that is certain to rock the hockey world, will find its way to court in early 2012. Already, some national networks have talked about applying to have the case televised live, which is highly unusual by Canadian judicial standards.

But this is not just a hockey story anymore. It’s about a career ruined and a life seemingly placed on hold. It’s about a Harvard graduate still having headache issues almost every time he thinks. It’s about the premeditation of an on-ice stalker. And now, with brain injuries and concussions and head shots being so much the focus of the problems of pro hockey, the trial arrives with new information about the largest single issue facing the sport.

Moore’s case is considered by many to be the single largest civil suit involving professional athletes in Canadian legal history. And with each passing year, the price has gone up.

“It has been very difficult for the process to take this long,” said Tim Danson, the lawyer representing Moore in his action against the Detroit Red Wings’ winger. “But actually, we needed the passing of time to fully understand the magnitude of the brain injury. This (incident) just didn’t terminate his NHL career. It impacted everything in his life. It impacted his future and his future employment.

“We’ve had years to look at this now and because Steve Moore has exceptionally high intelligence and is a Harvard graduate, we needed to evaluate all the factors involved. If we went to a jury too early, you wouldn’t have had the answers. It has been a lot of years and a lot of tests and we’ve learned a lot about the brain. I can’t really go into details right now because that will be a live issue at the trial.”

This will be a civil trial of suits and counter-suits, with a litany of lawyers everywhere and fingers pointed in all directions. Moore is suing Bertuzzi and Orca Bay Ltd., the former owner of the Vancouver Canucks, and the figure he is asking for is certain to be enormous. Danson will represent Moore. Geoffrey Adair will represent Bertuzzi, who has blamed then coach Marc Crawford, now head coach in Dallas, for his part in the incident. Crawford is represented by the impressive Jessica Kimmel. Orca Bay is represented by Alan D’Silva.

Understand this: This is an all-star team of litigators, playing for keeps here, with third-party actions involved. Bertuzzi has counter-sued Crawford and Orca Bay has legally pushed to separate itself from Bertuzzi, whose career earnings since the injury to Moore have been just below $20 million US and that includes a season locked out. And dealing with Bertuzzi won’t necessarily be easy.

In one of his depositions, Bertuzzi refused to answer 63 different questions. He won’t be given similar latitude in court.

Right now, Moore, the former Colorado Avalanche player, is going through another round of comprehensive medical tests. He must wonder how many times he must be poked and prodded before he sees anything resembling a settlement. It has been far too long already for a player whose life has been so severely altered by Bertuzzi’s assault.

“This is a unique trial,” Danson said. “The actual event was captured by multiple television cameras. We have video of the game and the assault from seven or eight different angles. There’s not really dispute over what happened.”

Just over how it happened. Why it happened. And who ultimately is responsible?

No doubt the names called to the witness stand in the case will include Bertuzzi, Crawford, Moore, then Canucks’ general manager, Brian Burke, his successor, Dave Nonis, NHL vice-president Colin Campbell. They will be among the headliners.

But this will be a case for the headlines if not the ages, right from beginning to end.
 

Cock Throppled

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Moore was some snot nosed kid trying to score brownie points with his coach by taking Naslunds head off.Not saying he got what he deserved,but live by the sword die by the sword,& no bitching when things don't go your way.
Don Cherry Neanderthal thinking still exists.
 

overdone

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Ya exactly right Cock T....

no bitching when things don't go your way.

"no bitching" about permanent brain damage. Give your fucking head a shake man. You really must be Cherry's long lost brother. Back under your rock

No one deserves what Bertuzzi brought that March 8th. Nobody.

giddyup
No one deserves it, but anyone who has any intelligence and plays or played hockey would have expected some kind of retribution.

Steve Moore got what was and always was expected. He went after another teams better player. A better player than him. Bottomline, he would have had to be brain damaged before not to expect someone from Van team to ask him to fight or attack him in some way.

If he was a half way good hockey player or any kind of man he would have just turned around and fought Bert when asked and it would have been over. He didn't have the balls to take what he gave.

He didn't so he got what was coming to him, maybe not what he deserved, but what any rational person playing at that level would have expected.
 

Oceans11

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Dec 2, 2008
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Ya exactly right Cock T....

no bitching when things don't go your way.

"no bitching" about permanent brain damage. Give your fucking head a shake man. You really must be Cherry's long lost brother. Back under your rock

No one deserves what Bertuzzi brought that March 8th. Nobody.

giddyup
I think that it was really bad luck that Moore ended up so severely injured. It was a sucker punch, but I believe that 99% of the time you wouldn't end up with this result. It's very sad for both of them. What Moore did to Naslund had the potential (also remote) to cause similar injury. Bertuzzi's actions were dirty, but understandable. The consequence for Moore was way out of proportion to what anyone would have predicted. The extent of the injury, alone, doesn't make Bertuzzi a monster.

Decking someone who takes liberties with your star player is as much a part of hockey as a big open ice hit. Unfortunately, both have the potential to end careers.

I don't think that Bertuzzi "deserves whatever he has coming", any more than I believe Moore deserved permanent brain damage and the loss of his career. I feel terrible for both of them.
 

bcneil

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I was at that game. All I remembering was people cheering when it happened.
Then days after everyone pretending they weren't
 

Cock Throppled

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No doubt Bertuzzi didn't want to permanently cripple the guy, but apparently the league called the teams between periods and warned that it was all over. Moore had already fought with (Brad May?) and the league expected that was the end of it and told both coaches it was over, or else.

It was Bertuzzi (on Crawford's instructions?) who chose the actions he took.
 

bcneil

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storm rider

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Yup it has been 7 years now since Bertuzzi dummied Moore with a sucker punch...the intent of which was meant to punish and send a message but not to end his career in the NHL....the intent and the act of doing it were and are dispicable....yes Moore knew he had something coming to him but he sure as hell did not imagine or think of that situation....this is far from over though....it will drag on for a long time as Moore wants to get paid from this and so do the lawyers involved on all sides...it is a pretty complex legal arguement with a shitload of angles involving players/owners/a coach and the NHL....I myself think that Moore is in for one hell of a big payday at the end of it.....cant imagine what the legal fees will be though.

SR
 

wilde

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manni

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that's a shame about Moore…
but he knew there was a price to pay for that hit on Naz.
a hidden code amongst players ie: touch Gretz and you'll deal with Semenko, etc.
 

wilde

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Evolution is overrated Wilde.Like i said Moores gonna end up with more money than he ever would of made as an NHL'r,probably would have toiled in the minors.
His lawyers are going to get a big chunk of any settlement. I believe the going rates for these contingency cases are in the 40% vicinity. But he would still end up with more than he would have ever made playing hockey.
 
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