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Dangerous hit on Lane Hutson forces Gary Bettman decision before Game 3

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David St-Jean
May 24, 2026  (2:42 PM)
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Dangerous hit on Lane Hutson forces Gary Bettman decision before Game 3
Photo credit: Screenshot

Lane Hutson took a knee from Taylor Hall in Game 2, and the Canadiens want the NHL's Department of Player Safety to answer for it before Monday's puck drop at the Bell Centre.

The series is tied 1-1. Game 3 goes Monday night in Montreal. And the entire conversation around the Habs right now is about one play.

Hall, 34, leaned into Hutson's knee on a contact sequence that looked anything but accidental on replay. The angle, the timing, the trajectory. Carolina's veteran picked his target.

This is the same Taylor Hall who's been around long enough to know exactly where his knee was. He's not a kid learning angles. He has 80 regular-season games and 10 playoff games this spring alone.

Hutson is the engine. He posted 78 points in 82 games as a 22-year-old defenseman, including 66 assists. Take him off the ice and the Habs power play stops working. Take him off the ice and the breakout collapses.

He's also been the team's best player in this run. Two goals, 12 assists, 14 points in 16 playoff games. Plus-one. Quarterbacking everything.

George Parros faces a credibility test on Monday morning

That's the part that should worry George Parros. Because if a knee-on-knee on a 78-point, 22-year-old star defenseman doesn't move the needle, what does?

Hall's playoff line of 3 goals, 9 assists, 12 points in 10 games means he's been useful. But he's also been physical in a way that's drawn attention before.

Martin St-Louis isn't going to whine about it publicly. That's not his style. Kent Hughes isn't going to call a press conference either. But the Canadiens want this looked at, and they want it looked at fast.

The series context matters. Carolina finished 53-22-7, second overall, 113 points. The Habs finished 48-24-10. Montreal stole Game 1 in Raleigh 6-2 and dropped Game 2 in overtime. Tight series. One knee changes it.

If Hutson misses any time, the math gets ugly. He plays 25-plus minutes a night. He runs PP1. He's on the ice for every defensive-zone faceoff in a tight third period.

Carolina's depth at forward is real. The Habs don't have a Lane Hutson replacement. There isn't one on the roster. There isn't one in Laval. There isn't one anywhere.

So now Parros and his department have a decision. Suspend Hall and tell the league knee-on-knee on a star still matters. Or hand out a fine and let everyone draw their own conclusions about what the standard actually is in May.

The ruling, whatever it is, lands before Monday's puck drop. The Bell Centre will be watching.