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NHL hands down punishment to Nikita Zadorov after cross-check on Rasmus Dahlin

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Skyler Walker
April 27, 2026  (12:05)
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Apr 26, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Bruins defenseman Nikita Zadorov (91) gets set for a face-off during the third period in game four of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Buffalo Sabres at TD Garden.
Photo credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Nikita Zadorov got off light, and Marco Sturm won't have to reshuffle Boston's blue line over this one.

The NHL fined Zadorov $5,000 on Sunday for cross-checking Buffalo Sabres captain Rasmus Dahlin, the maximum allowed under the CBA. That's the whole punishment.

For Boston, that's a break.

A hearing that ended with games on the sideline would have hit the Bruins harder than the dollar amount ever could.

The play was ugly enough to spark real suspension talk the second it made the rounds.

Dahlin was vulnerable, the contact was forceful, and the sequence had all the signs of a mess that could have grown legs fast.

What stands out now is the gap between the reaction and the ruling.

The league looked at it, slapped on the max fine, and decided that was enough.

Zadorov has always played on the edge.

That edge can help a team when the playoffs get heavy, but it also drags attention from Player Safety when it crosses the line.

The cross-check comes down high, Dahlin folds forward, and the whole sequence turns from hard hockey to something a lot uglier in a second. The league's ruling followed this clip:

Boston avoids a bigger problem with dodging a Zadorov suspension

That matters because Boston is not sitting in a spot where it can shrug off top-four minutes.

Sturm also avoids a nasty late headache around deployment.

A suspension would have forced Boston to patch together pairs, lean harder on depth, and change the bench rhythm right away.

Instead, Zadorov stays available, and that's the real story here.

The fine hurts the wallet, but it doesn't touch the lineup card.

That won't sit well in Buffalo. Dahlin is the kind of player every shift runs through, and a lot of people around the league will look at this ruling and say the bar for a suspension stayed too high.

Boston won't apologize for escaping bigger damage. The Bruins got the best possible outcome once the incident was under review, and Zadorov walked out of an ugly moment with the lightest serious punishment the league could hand down.


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