Since the Islanders announced Simon's leave of absence for counseling, I have learned that Simon has been battling with alcoholism for many years now. His personal issues off the ice weigh far greater than this suspension right now. For a man who once hoisted the Stanley Cup in 1996 with the Colorado Avalanche, this is a bitter end to his hockey career.
While some rejoice that there will be no more senseless violent acts from Chris Simon, there is also the human side to all of this. First and foremost, you never bring what is happening in the outside world to the ice. It can endanger someone's life.
The Islanders should have addressed this situation during his last suspension when he viciously attacked Ryan Hollweg in the heat of the moment. Twenty-five games and a whole off-season could have provided a lot of much needed counseling time for Simon. The warning signs were there all along. The acts of senseless violence against others while Simon was on the ice have been accumulating over the years.
In a brief second, he can snap. Hockey fans have seen it before. Most times, we are not cheering him on. We are just nodding our heads in disbelief and thinking, "How stupid could he be??? Why would he do something like that?"
NHL teams have stood behind their players while they are going through the roughest patches of their lives. They have always offered the support the player needed and backed them up, until it got too out of hand. They never turn their backs on a fellow player.




Comments
Re: Chris Simon Issued 30-Game Suspension From NHL
By AeroCanuck, December 19, 2007 at 14:57Good length of suspension.
Just leave the game...get help..and move on to a new chapter in your life Chris.