Friday, 31 May 2019

[cactuswings 4050] Aircraft Stored at Tucson International

Hi.

I am going to be visiting the Tucson area in October and wondered whether anyone has an up to date list of aircraft that are stored at Tucson International.

Any help, or pointers to where I can find information, would be gratefully received.

Ray Goddard

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Friday, 24 May 2019

{coyotes} NHL players want to see LeBron on skates

 
There's no doubt King James dominates on the court. But our players have spoken – and they all want to see LeBron on skates!

Video: https://youtu.be/PJ5AcM06ZL4

With the 15th consecutive All-NBA honour of his career, there's no doubt LeBron James dominates on the court. But our players have spoken and they all want to see the King on skates. And if he takes them up, T.J. Oshie better be ready!

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Thursday, 23 May 2019

{coyotes} Faces of concussions: NHL's head-on battle with an epidemic

 

HOMER GLEN, Ill. (AP) -- Wearing a black shirt with ''Fight for your happiness'' on the front and ''Sick not weak'' on the back, Daniel Carcillo eats an apple as his wife makes a cappuccino nearby and their oldest daughter scampers around the kitchen.

This is the family he always wanted, just not the life he expected.

Carcillo is hurting inside and out after seven documented concussions in the National Hockey League and what he believes could be literally hundreds of traumatic brain injuries. Once his wife Ela, son Austin, daughters Laila and Scarlett and dog Bubba left the house, Carcillo explained where his head is at. It has been nearly a year since his last round of neurological treatment and right now the bad days outnumber the good. Darkness has returned.

This is a bad day.

''I'm going to choose when I'm going to go,'' Carcillo said. ''I'll make that decision of how much pain I'm going to put my loved ones through that are around me.''

He is just 34, hung up his skates in 2015 and wants to be known as Daniel Carcillo who used to play hockey, not Daniel Carcillo the hockey player. He spends his days now trying to manage the damage the sport did to him while also crusading against the concussions crisis that has hit the NHL over the past decade-plus. The league has taken steps to address the topic, but it has not faded from view by any means as the Stanley Cup Final opens Monday.

The league last fall settled a lawsuit for $18.9 million with more than 300 retired players after winning a key victory against class-action status. It included $22,000 for each player and provisions for testing but no acknowledgement of liability for the players' claims the NHL failed to protect them from head injuries or warn them of the risks involved with playing. Commissioner Gary Bettman has consistently denied there is a conclusive link between repeated blows to the head and the degenerative brain disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

Carcillo calls the concussions issue an epidemic, though even the players' union and attorneys involved in lawsuits against the league cannot or will not provide an estimate of just how many former players might be suffering the same problems as Carcillo - the kind of problems loved ones of players like Todd Ewen and Wade Belak noticed before their suicides.

Carcillo doesn't remember any of his first five concussions but can't seem to escape the anxiety, depression, lack of impulse control and suicidal thoughts that creep in. He feels better in the immediate aftermath of functional neurology therapy but that only helps Carcillo get back to his ''new normal.'' It also costs $10,000 each time.

''My greatest fear moving forward is that I will contract some sort of neurodegenerative disease like early-onset dementia, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, CTE,'' Carcillo said. ''And then my wife and my two daughters and my son will have to watch me deteriorate and die.''

Carcillo spends his days now speaking out about the dangers of brain injuries in hockey and other sports. He frequently takes to social media, hoping to use the platform for the greater good.

But time is running out for the journeyman forward who played most recently for the Chicago Blackhawks. Carcillo doesn't have a full-time job and estimates he has two years until he goes bankrupt. He considers selling his two Stanley Cup rings to pay for treatment and support his family.

Carcillo wants his day in court with the NH, to chart a path for the rest of his life and to save others. It is also a battle just to save himself after those 429 NHL games over nine seasons.

''I keep up with my treatment,'' Carcillo said. ''I describe it as when you're losing your quality of life. Good days and bad days are normal, all good days aren't normal and all bad days aren't normal but you just have to weigh it. I've been in really, really bad places, like on the edge of killing myself. I just kind of weigh it against that - not waiting until I get to that place.''

Eric Lindros is fine most days.

The jarring Scott Stevens shoulder-to-head hit on Lindros in Game 7 of the 2000 Eastern Conference final that was applauded and legal at the time is cringe-worthy now. It came two years after Lindros took another devastating hit from Darius Kasparaitis.

Lindros was concussed at least five times during a dominant but injury-shortened career that landed him a spot in the Hockey Hall of Fame. Now a 46-year-old husband and father, he isn't sure what the benchmark should be for how he should be feeling. He his own baseline.

''I'd like to think I'm pretty normal,'' Lindros said. ''I think so. We all have our moments.''

Lindros could easily be the poster boy for concussions in the NHL given his experience as a star whose career was cut short. He was aware of the lawsuit but didn't join. Lindros doesn't want the threat of concussions to deter kids - even his own - from playing hockey. Still, he ponders an uncertain future.

''You'd be a fool not to,'' he said.

Carcillo can't change the punch to the head that gave him his seventh concussion but wants to document every step of his journey so that if he can't save himself, maybe he can save others.

''It's been pretty, pretty miserable: a lot of searching, a lot of treatment and a lot of money spent, a lot of friends lost,'' he said. ''I need to get it figured out, or else I don't think I'll be here that long. If I continue to feel this way, it doesn't bode well for my future.''

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Wednesday, 8 May 2019

{coyotes} NHLPA Player Q&A | Clayton Keller

 

The person Clayton Keller admires most is his mom, and according to his Player Q&A, he takes great care of her year-round too!

Name: 


Hometown:

Name something popular now that you think
will be embarrassing in 5 years:

The best concert you ever saw was:


People might be surprised to learn you have never:


People might be surprised to learn that you can:

Your favourite hockey memory is:

The person you admire most is:
  
 



Complete the following...



The best locker room DJ is...


My post prized possession is...


In a movie about my life, I would like... cast to play me.


The teammate with the best tape job is...


My favourite thing about my hometown is...  


If I could be teammates with any
former NHL player it would be...


My favourite purchase this year is...
 

The strangest gameday superstition
you have heard of or seen is...

 

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{coyotes} Gary Bettman and the NHL still won’t meet concussion problem head on

 

Eric Lindros had it right. A few months back, when the Hockey Hall of Fame centreman travelled from his Toronto home to Parliament Hill to testify before a committee of MPs studying what might be done about the difficult problem of sports-related concussions, Lindros offered a warning.

Don't even bother attempting to persuade professional sports leagues about the merits of improving policies around concussion prevention and treatment, Lindros said.

"Quite honestly, any time you mix athletics and money, the lines blur," Lindros said.

And so Lindros, or anyone who's been paying attention to the NHL's baffling stance on brain injuries and their scary consequences, couldn't have been surprised to hear NHL commissioner Gary Bettman's predictable testimony before that same committee on Wednesday afternoon in Ottawa. If the optimistic among us held out a smidgen of hope that the passage of time might have brought with it an evolution in Bettman's views on a topic that profoundly affects so many of his players, current and former ... well, the optimists should have listened to realists like Lindros, who's seen a thing or two.

Sure, Bettman has been on the job more than 26 years. He's been an honoured member of the hockey hall since he was inducted last fall. But Wednesday confirmed they didn't put him there because he benevolently served the good of the sport, its players and its future. They gave him the blue blazer and the ring because he profitably grew the business of his employers. And the business of his employers is clearly still served best by concussion denial.

Asked to clarify his position on the link between repetitive brain injuries and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), the degenerative disease that's been found in the brains of a considerable list of NHL alumni, Bettman announced that his head remains firmly implanted in the sands of shamelessness.

"Based on everything I've been told — and if anybody has any information to the contrary, we'd be happy to hear it — other than some anecdotal evidence, there has not been that conclusive link," Bettman said, speaking of concussions and CTE.

Even the NFL, the original League of Denial, moved off this indefensible position a few years ago. But this is the maddening technicality in which Bettman still chooses to bunker himself. Science, by its ever-evolving nature, is never truly conclusive. It changes with research. It is built to be constantly challenged. That's always been true. But what's also true, and what Bettman continues to disingenuously ignore, is that the best available evidence tells us CTE is caused by repetitive hits to the head. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tells us CTE "is believed to be caused in part by exposure to repetitive head impacts, including concussions as well as subconcussive trauma." The organization also tells us "the greatest risk factor for CTE is the number of years of exposure to repeated head or brain injuries."

That's why progressives who care about the game have been trying to improve it. But, on Wednesday, Bettman pooh-poohed the suggestion popularized by fellow hall of famer Ken Dryden that the league mandate a zero-tolerance policy on hits to the head.

"Such a rule is very easy to propose. It is difficult if not impossible to implement and apply in practice," Bettman said. "It would not be possible to consistently and fairly enforce a rule that prohibits head contact of any kind or nature if the NHL is to be maintained as a physical, contact sport."

And Bettman, too, reiterated a handful of old arguments the league's grey-haired governors, stuck in the past as they are, have been making for years.

"People believe (fighting is) still an important thermostat," Bettman said, for one.

Great stickler for conclusive scientific evidence that he is, Bettman offered zero research to back up this tired old saw. But why should the commissioner need conclusive evidence to prove his arguments?

If the MPs on the committee were hoping for a productive exchange of ideas from someone who actually cares about the good of the game, they invited the wrong man to the proceedings. What they got instead was Bettman patting his league on the back for being pioneers in baseline testing going back to 1997, never mind that many consider baseline tests ineffective.

As San Jose's Marc-Edouard Vlasic said a couple of seasons ago, dismissing the validity of one of the linchpins of the league's return-to-play protocol: "It's just a written test. In order for me to fail that, I'd have to be in a coma … The baseline cannot show how I'm feeling."

And as for the idea that the world's best league ought to set an example for the way the game is played down to the grassroots, he seemed unconcerned.

"I understand and agree that not everything done at the NHL level should apply to younger, non-professional players," Bettman said. "Our players like the way the NHL game is played and understand the implications of playing a physical contact sport at the highest professional level in the world."

Do they, though? Can any young adult, drafted as a teenager, truly understand the implications of playing a game that so obviously scrambles brains? Can they see ahead to the troubles of Johan Franzen, the 39-year-old former Detroit Red Wing who, in the wake of a career in which he endured multiple brain injuries, has described his struggles with post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety and depression?

"Sometimes my whole world falls apart and I can't see the light at the end of the tunnel," Franzen told a Swedish newspaper last year.

Can players living their dream envision the day their families donate their bodies to science after they've died before their time? It's a grim experience that's been lived by the kin of former NHLers such as Bob Probert, Rick Martin, Zarley Zalapski and Derek Boogaard, whose brains have tested positive for CTE. Bettman had the gall to come to Ottawa Wednesday and call the NHL "a family," but he couldn't tell you anything about the fates of those particular members, or about the root of the struggles of so many more, inconclusive evidence and all.

As Lindros said: Any time you mix money and sports, the lines blur. Who needs honest discussion and clear-eyed progress when you're happily stuck in the past and blinded by profit?

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Monday, 6 May 2019

{coyotes} At least 137 former players accept NHL concussion lawsuit settlement

 

The National Hockey League has reached settlements in its concussion litigation with at least 137 former players including Joe Murphy, Bernie Nicholls and Gary Leeman, court records show.

There were 318 former players, including 146 named plaintiffs, who were eligible for a settlement.

Others who have accepted settlements include Reed Larson, Dan LaCouture, Kevin Stevens, Chris Simon and Guillaume Latendresse.

Players who accept the settlement will receive at least $22,000 (U.S.). The league also agreed to fund neuropsychological testing and reimburse up to $75,000 in medical treatment expenses for players who qualify.

The lawsuit was first filed in 2013 and set the NHL on a years-long battle with its former players. Players alleged that the NHL has glorified and profited off of violence while ignoring warnings from the scientific community about the long-term implications of repeated brain trauma.

The NHL argued that players knew its brand of hockey is violent and that they would possibly be hurt and that players could have done their own research if they wanted to learn about brain injuries.

The NHL, which denied any liability in the settlement, also promised to create a "common good" fund worth more than $2.5 million. The settlement is expected to cost the NHL a combined $18.9 million.

The league chose not to exercise its right to walk away from a settlement if 100 per cent of eligible players didn't accept the terms of the deal.

Michael Cashman, a lawyer involved with the case, said that dismissal motions need to be filed with U.S. federal court in Minneapolis for players who accept the settlement and that some of these motions may not yet have been filed.

Another 172 former NHL players who retained lawyers to pursue a claim against the league but didn't file a case in court are also eligible for settlements. It's unlikely their identities will be made public, Cashman said.

Former NHL players Dan Carcillo and Nick Boynton and the families of Todd Ewen and Steve Montador have not agreed to a settlement and have said they are moving forward with individual lawsuits against the NHL.

On April 4, U.S. federal court judge Susan Nelson published a ruling establishing the Sapientia Law Group as a claims administrator, meaning the law firm will be responsible for ensuring players get their settlements.

Nelson has scheduled a hearing for June 16 to discuss how individual concussion lawsuits against the NHL will proceed.

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Friday, 3 May 2019

{coyotes} Tator says there is direct hockey concussions-CTE link, disagrees with Bettman

 

Renowned concussion specialist Dr. Charles Tator says he disagrees with Gary Bettman's statement before a parliamentary panel where the NHL commissioner questioned any direct link between multiple hockey concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain condition associated with repeated blows to the head.

TORONTO — Renowned concussion specialist Dr. Charles Tator says he disagrees with Gary Bettman's statement before a parliamentary panel where the NHL commissioner questioned any direct link between multiple hockey concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a degenerative brain condition associated with repeated blows to the head.

Tator, a University of Toronto neurosurgery professor, said Thursday that there is a conclusive link.

"In my view there is," Tator said. "We don't know how many players with multiple concussions will get it. That's an important rider."

CTE, which can only be diagnosed after death with a brain autopsy, can be profoundly debilitating with symptoms that include memory problems, personality changes, aggression and depression. Bettman weighed in on the link issue on Wednesday in Ottawa.

"I don't believe there has been, based on everything I've been told — and if anybody has information to the contrary, we'd be happy to hear it — other than some anecdotal evidence, there has not been that conclusive link," Bettman said.

Tator said that information is available on the Canadian Concussion Centre website (www.canadianconcussioncentreuhn.com), adding he'd be happy to meet with Bettman to discuss further if interested. He also dismissed the suggestion that there has not been a conclusive link.

"It's spelled Steve Montador," Tator said. "Just repeat the Steve Montador case as a retort to what Bettman says. How many Steve Montadors does he need to convince him of the relationship?"

Montador, who played 571 career NHL regular-season games, was diagnosed with CTE after his death in 2015. He was 35.

"I personally counted in Steve Montador's records that he had at least 19 concussions and his brain at autopsy showed CTE," Tator said. "So why doesn't Gary Bettman acknowledge that?"

A special committee of MPs has spent months holding hearings on the issue of concussions in sports and a report is expected to be tabled in the coming weeks. Several experts and athletes appeared before the cross-party panel and Bettman and his deputy Bill Daly were the final witnesses.

The committee has focused on amateur athletics but could recommend concussion protocols for pro sports.

The subject of the link between athlete concussions and CTE has also been a hot topic on the gridiron in recent years.

In November 2017, CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie said there is not enough evidence to confirm a connection between football head injuries and CTE.

However, Jeff Miller, the NFL's top health and safety officer, acknowledged the link during a discussion on concussions convened by the U.S. Congress in March 2016. It marked the first time a senior league official conceded football's connection to CTE.

Bettman, meanwhile, told the parliamentary panel that hockey is safer for players and different in terms of physical contact from football, where there are repeated blows to players' heads.

Tator noted that more football player brain samples have been examined than those from hockey players.

"So the information is, let's say, less compelling," he said. "But in my view, it's sufficiently documented already to say, 'Yes, in some players, CTE is from repetitive blows to the head.'"

The NHL has faced criticism for its handling of head injuries despite a long list of rules, studies and league-player committees focused on safety. The league reached a settlement last year with hundreds of retired players who claimed harm from head injuries while playing, but the NHL did not admit fault or wrongdoing.

"We have said definitively that repetitive concussions in some hockey players cause CTE," Tator said. "We have had other players who have had dozens of concussions — literally dozens — who don't have CTE. And that's the frustration is that not everyone gets it and we have not yet learned who's going to get it and who isn't.

"Some brains can tolerate more blows to the brain than other brains. There's a great individual variation."

Awareness of concussions and CTE has risen significantly in recent years and researchers have been delving deeper into the subject.

"We see patients who have a single concussion who have symptoms afterwards for years and years," Tator said. "Then we see other people who've had dozens of them and don't show any deterioration clinically and at autopsy their brains are clean. So that, we haven't figured out yet — why some get it and some don't.

"But there is no doubt in our view that some do have brain degeneration called CTE after repetitive blows and unfortunately many of them are very good athletes."

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Tator says there is direct hockey concussions-CTE link, disagrees with Bettman"

Wednesday, 1 May 2019

{coyotes} Widow of former NHLer Todd Ewen files lawsuit against league

 

Kelli Ewen, the widow of former NHL enforcer Todd Ewen, is suing the league for allegedly profiting off of a culture of violence and continuing to downplay the potential long-term consequences of repeated brain trauma.

Ewen's lawsuit was filed in California district court on April 30, a day before NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is scheduled to testify in Ottawa before a federal government hearing on concussions in sports.

A copy of the lawsuit says Ewen is seeking "compensatory damages and all other damages permitted by law."

Todd was posthumously diagnosed with the brain-withering disease chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, in 2018 by a Boston University neuropathologist – a development that contradicted the findings of a Toronto neuropathologist, who three years ago announced he didn't have the disease.

Todd, who fought his way through a dozen NHL seasons, battled depression, anxiety and memory loss for the last 20 years of his life. Ewen says her husband was certain he had CTE.

On Sept. 19, 2015, Todd, then 49, killed himself in the basement of his family's home in St. Louis.

Months later, when a doctor reported his tests for CTE were negative, the NHL pointed to his case as an example that the narrative about a connection between head trauma and long-term brain diseases was dangerously speculative.

"Todd's death can no longer be exploited to justify the NHL's complete lack of concern over head hits and violence on the ice," says Ewen's 80-page statement of claim. "Rather, his death and CTE diagnosis should be a motivating force for positive change in NHL gameplay, and is further evidence that repeated head hits experienced in the NHL by players lead to long-term neurocognitive deficits.

"To this day, the NHL continues to downplay and deny the long-term neurocognitive effects of repeated head hits and the link between head hits and CTE, leading former NHL players to believe that the neurocognitive symptoms they suffer are not a result of their head hits during their time in the NHL."

An NHL spokesman did not respond to a request for comment on the lawsuit.

Todd's case has played a key role in the debate over CTE and concussions in hockey.

Ewen asked Boston University researcher Dr. Ann McKee to re-test her husband's brain after Toronto neuropathologist Dr. Lili-Naz Hazrati declared in February 2016 that Todd didn't have CTE. Dr. McKee found Stage Two CTE in Todd's brain in February 2018.

Dr. Hazrati later said she accepted Dr. McKee's findings.

"...although I respect Ann's findings and [am] not contesting any of it, I am just surprised to see that Todd had so very little [of the] disease for an enforcer," Dr. Hazrati wrote in a Nov. 26, 2018 email to TSN. "Todd was 50 and already many years progressing with his disease and still not much to find. Just an interesting point I think one should ponder on. We and others have seen more widespread disease in younger players with less exposure time and less years to progress (such as Steve Montador.)"

Bettman used Todd's case in his defence of the NHL to U.S. lawmakers.

In a July 26, 2016, letter to U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal, who had asked for information from the NHL about the impact of concussions in hockey, Bettman blamed the media for stoking fear of the long-term effects of head injuries and ended his letter by retelling Todd's story.

Bettman, relying on Dr. Hazrati's negative CTE test, wrote that Todd's story "is precisely the type of tragedy that can result when plaintiffs' lawyers and their media consultants jump ahead of the medical community and assert, without reliable scientific support, that there is a causal link between concussions and CTE."

Bettman's letter was also filed in a U.S. court in connection with the NHL concussion lawsuit. (A tentative settlement has been reached in that litigation, although some former players are expected to opt out.)

Other NHL players who have been diagnosed with CTE include Bob Probert, Derek Boogaard, Jeff Parker, Wade Belak, Larry Zeidel, Reggie Fleming, Rick Martin, Steve Montador and Zarley Zalapski. Four unidentified former junior hockey players who all died of suicide before the age of 30 also tested positive for the disease.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Widow of former NHLer Todd Ewen files lawsuit against league"

{coyotes} Bettman: Banning hits to head would mean end of all hits in NHL

https://assets1.sportsnet.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Gary-Bettman-1040x572.jpg

OTTAWA — The commissioner of the National Hockey League hit back Wednesday at the notion of banning any kind of head contact in hockey, telling a parliamentary panel that such a rule would be impossible to enforce and lead to the end of hitting in hockey.

The league has faced calls to penalize any head contact in the hope of eliminating potentially debilitating concussions. Those calling for a strict rule include Ken Dryden, the former Montreal Canadiens goalie and cabinet minister in Paul Martin's Liberal government.

In sometimes combative testimony, commissioner Gary Bettman said such a rule at the NHL level would mean larger players would inevitably land blows on smaller players' heads in the normal course of play, leading to penalties. Ultimately "there would be no more body checking" — something that players and fans feel is an "exciting, appealing, entertaining" and important part of the game.

Bettman decried what he called "blanket statements about changing a rule" on head contact that might not address "where the injuries are being caused."

He said the game he oversees is safer for players and different in terms of physical contact from football, where there are repeated blows to players' heads, and he questioned any direct link between multiple hockey concussions and chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), which is a brain condition associated with repeated blows to the head. CTE can be profoundly debilitating, with symptoms that include memory problems, personality changes, aggression and depression.

"I don't believe there has been, based on everything I've been told — and if anybody has information to the contrary, we'd be happy to hear it — other than some anecdotal evidence, there has not been that conclusive link," Bettman said.

When asked if there were any rules or changes he would make to the game to reduce head contact, Bettman told MPs he likes the way professional hockey is being played, adding: "Right now, I don't believe there's much we can do."

The special committee of MPs has spent months holding hearings on the issue of concussions, including options for treatment, prevention and what, if anything, the federal government should be doing about sports-related head injuries. Experts and athletes have appeared before the cross-party panel, as well as high-profile figures such as CFL commissioner Randy Ambrosie and former NHL player Eric Lindros, whose hall-of-fame career was cut short by multiple concussions.

Bettman and his deputy Bill Daly were the final witnesses of the committee's study before it tables a report in the coming weeks. Although attention has focused on amateur athletics, the committee could recommend concussion protocols for professional sports.

"I'm hoping that's not the case," Bettman said after the meeting about that possibility.

The National Hockey League has faced criticism for its handling of head injuries — despite a long list of rules, studies and league-player committees focused on safety that Bettman listed — and CTE after it was found in former players Steve Montador and Derek Boogaard of the NHL. Montador had lost almost a year of his career recovering from a severe concussion and died suddenly at 35; Boogaard died of a drug overdose at 28 while recovering from a concussion.

A recent post in The Player's Tribune by retired player Nick Boynton said that fighting during his career has affected his mental health.

Bettman said there were "no shortage of opinions on this subject," adding that fighting deterred players from targeting more skilled stars on the ice. Fighting levels have gone down over decades, he said, as have the number of fight-related concussions.

"You should have none, quite frankly. It is too dangerous," said Liberal MP Doug Eyolfson, who worked as an emergency-room physician for 20 years.

"But you and I don't know the consequences of that," Bettman responded.

The league is also facing a lawsuit, filed Tuesday, from the widow of the late right-winger Todd Ewen, whose brain was found to have CTE after he died at 49 in 2015.

"There are some accusations that have been made about the diagnosis and we'll be dealing with that in due course because I think there are some allegations that have been made that have absolutely no support," Bettman told reporters after the hearing.

"We believe the lawsuit is without merit as was the main concussion class action and we'll deal with it appropriately."

The NHL reached a settlement last year with hundreds of retired players who claimed harms from head injuries while playing. The league did not admit fault or wrongdoing.

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Read More :- "{coyotes} Bettman: Banning hits to head would mean end of all hits in NHL"

{coyotes} NHLPA Player Q&A | Oliver Ekman-Larsson

 

Get to know the captain for the Arizona Coyotes and King Clancy Memorial Trophy finalist, Oliver Ekman-Larsson!



Name:

Hometown:

What number do you wear:
Favourite cheat meal:

Favourite NHL jersey growing up:
The best quality in a teammate:

The most superstitious teammate you've played with:

Complete the following...



The best advice I ever got was...

  ... is a hockey player's best friend.

My favourite thing about my home town...

I fell in love with hockey when...

Putting pineapple on pizza is...

My favourite purchase this year is...

If I wasn't a hockey player, I would be a...
When I'm not playing hockey, I like to...

 

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Read More :- "{coyotes} NHLPA Player Q&A | Oliver Ekman-Larsson"