Senators-Flyers 2004 brawl in Philadelphia still holds NHL record for most penalty minutes
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The root of one the wildest brawls in NHL history came only a week earlier, when Ottawa’s Martin Havlat’s rocked Mark Recchi in the face with his stick and drew a two-game suspension.
The Ottawa instigator was a repeat offender, and his strike on the long-time popular Flyers forward led Philadelphia coach Ken Hitchcock to declare of Havlat: “Someday somebody’s going to make him eat his lunch.”
Boy, did the Flyers listen.
What happened on March 5, 2004 on Philadelphia’s home ice — years before goons went the way of helmetless hockey and before the troubling consequences of repeated blows to the head were laid bare — became the stuff of NHL legend.