Radko Gudas’ five-game suspension has reopened a wound that never really healed for fans of Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins. The NHL’s Department of Player Safety confirmed the ban Saturday after a kneeing incident left Auston Matthews with a season-ending MCL tear. For many watching across the league, the moment felt painfully familiar. A hard collision. A star player down. And a sense that the consequences stretch far beyond the final whistle.The reaction spread quickly because the story connects two teams, two captains, and one defender who has suddenly become the center of a heated debate. Earlier in the week, Mitch Marner revealed that Crosby had suffered a grade 2 MCL sprain in his right knee after a collision with Gudas. The detail, reported by Sporting News, gave fresh context to the outrage. Crosby’s injury had already forced him to miss Canada’s Olympic gold medal game, where Team USA men’s national ice hockey team edged Canada 2-1.
Radko Gudas suspension raises new questions after Sidney Crosby and Auston Matthews injuries
The Radko Gudas suspension landed at a tense moment in the NHL season, and the timing explains much of the anger around it.Before the Milan collision that injured Crosby, the Penguins captain was producing at a steady pace. Crosby had 27 goals and 59 points through 56 games, guiding Pittsburgh to a 32-18-15 record that kept the club alive in the Metropolitan Division race. His absence reshapes everything for the Penguins. Without Crosby, Pittsburgh loses its calmest decision-maker along the boards and the center who handles the toughest matchups every night.That absence becomes clear on nights like the upcoming road game in Utah. Players such as Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell can finish chances, but neither offers Crosby’s control below the circles or his ability to guide a breakout under pressure.Toronto faces its own version of that problem now. Matthews finished the season with 53 points in 60 games before the injury. As captain of the Toronto Maple Leafs, he anchors the power play, takes the hardest draws, and forces defenses to adjust their coverage. When that presence disappears, the entire lineup shifts upward. Depth players suddenly handle responsibilities meant for stars.That ripple effect explains why fans view the incident as more than one bad collision. They see a defender whose physical style has now affected two playoff races and an Olympic storyline. The five-game suspension feels minor compared to the lasting impact on standings, lineups, and memories.By Saturday night in Utah, that frustration may still echo around the league.
