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Rod Brind'Amour just snapped and Gary Bettman is now in the middle of a massive controversy

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 24, 2026  (6:09)
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Rod Brind'Amour just snapped and Gary Bettman is now in the middle of a massive controversy
Photo credit: Screenshot

Alexandre Texier gave Martin St-Louis the one kind of playoff controversy Montreal did not need against Rod Brind'Amour's Hurricanes.

This one is not fading.

Not after Rod went to the mic and basically said out loud what a lot of people already thought when they saw the replay.

He was asked if the officials gave any explanation at the end of the second period.

His answer was sharp and direct.

«No, they didn't say a word to us. They didn't come over. They stayed their distance.»

Then he went where this story really lives.

«The hit? Or the spear? ... clearly, that's a spear. I mean, there's not a person that could tell you that it wasn't.»

That is the line that keeps this alive.

Rod Brind'Amour just made things very uncomfortable for Gary Bettman with one direct statement

He did not hide behind playoff emotion.

He did not say maybe.

He did not dress it up.

He flat-out called it a spear and made it clear Carolina got no explanation from the referees after the play on K'Andre Miller.

That matters because coaches usually know where the line is after a game. They can push, but they also know when to leave themselves a little room.

Rod left none.

He even added that he had played the game long enough to know exactly what he was looking at, then pointed out the obvious modern problem for players trying to get away with things: the cameras are everywhere now.

That is what makes this ugly for Montreal.

Texier escaped the heavier punishment in the moment. But once a coach says the officials stayed away from his bench and once the replay starts making the rounds, the smaller call stops being the story.

The missed standard becomes the story.

And from the Canadiens' side, there is not much clean defense here.

You can talk about playoff chaos.

You can talk about scrums getting messy.

You can talk about the whistle and what the refs decided.

But the clip is still the clip.

That is why this has legs.

Texier may have gotten only a lighter penalty on the ice, but the reaction around the play now feels a lot bigger than the original call.

For St-Louis, that is the part he has to hate.

His team has built this run on pace, nerve, and structure. A sequence like this drags the Canadiens into a different conversation and hands Carolina something to rally around.

And Rod made sure everybody heard it.