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NHL player safety surprises fans with decision after Canadiens game 1

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Skyler Walker
May 22, 2026  (2:47 PM)
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Sebastian Aho hit in game one vs. Canadiens
Photo credit: Screenshot

George Parros stepped into the spotlight as Canadiens head coach Martin St. Louis and the Hurricanes opened the Eastern Conference Final.

That became one of the night's real stories away from the ice.

Parros, the NHL's head of player safety, was at PNC Arena for Game 1 between Montreal and Carolina.

That kind of in-person appearance doesn't happen often, especially in the middle of a playoff round already carrying extra heat.

The NHL Department of Player Safety has also made the official decision to not suspend Sebastian Aho for his hit in Game One.

Fans weren't happy with the hit to say the least.

"Dirty. Jumped into the high contact."

"How are you a hockey channel?
Both his skates left the ice
Thats charging / rouging"

"2 arms to the head, leaves his feet before impact, Evans doesn't touch the puck. Clown"

George Parros' timing matters.

Recent weeks brought heavy criticism over league discipline, both for suspensions that were handed out and for incidents that drew nothing at all.

With that backdrop, Parros showing up himself instantly changed the feel around the series.

Cory Lavalette of The North State Journal flagged it during the game with a post that quickly grabbed attention.

"The head of the player safety department, George Parros, is in the building for Game 1."

Parros sends a message before this series turns nasty

That line landed because it suggested more than a routine visit.

It felt like the league planting itself right inside the building before this matchup has a chance to boil over.

And that's the part that stands out most.

The NHL does not usually send its top disciplinary voice into the arena unless it wants a closer read on the temperature of a series.

Montreal and Carolina may not be expected to turn every shift into a grudge match, but the league clearly sees enough tension to stay close.

That opens the door to plenty of speculation.

Is the NHL worried things could get out of hand between the Canadiens and Hurricanes?

Is Parros there to track possible supplemental discipline in real time? Is he watching how the standard gets enforced by the officials as much as the players themselves?

Those questions won't disappear after one game.

His presence alone sent a message that this conference final will be monitored tightly from the opening puck drop.

Every hit, every scrum, and every borderline moment now carries a little more weight.

That doesn't guarantee major discipline is coming.

But it does tell both benches that the league is watching this series differently. And if something crosses the line, nobody will be able to say Parros didn't have a front-row seat for it.