Chris Simon, former Capitals enforcer, dies at age 52
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CAPITALS
Chris Simon, former Capitals enforcer, dies at age 52
By Ben Sumner
March 20, 2024 at 8:36 a.m. EDT
Chris Simon, seen here in 2004, died on Monday in his hometown of Wawa, Ontario. (AP Photo/Ed Betz, File)
Chris Simon, a hard-knuckled pugilist who found fame with the Washington Capitals with a mix of brutal hits and goal scoring, died Monday in his hometown of Wawa, Ontario, the NHL Players Association said. He was 52. A cause of death was not immediately available. ... Fresh off winning the Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche when he joined the Capitals in 1996, the 6-foot-4, 230-pounder provided grit and protection on a Capitals team that made its first Stanley Cup finals appearance in 1998. Two seasons later, Simon became an unexpected scoring threat with a team-leading 29 goals, while also leading the team in penalty minutes (146).
The Capitals recognized Simons appeal with fans and featured him in marketing campaigns under new owner Ted Leonsis. In one commercial, he knocked over an elderly woman at a grocery store to provide protection for teammate Peter Bondra. The teams fan club named him the winner of the 1999-2000 Yvon Labre award, given to its favorite player, besting five-time winner Bondra. The Capitals also made him their first bobblehead, which they gave away to fans at a game in 2001.
Despite his quiet demeanor off the ice, his game-time aggression often boiled over in Washington; the league suspended him three times, including for a 1997 incident in which he used a racial slur against Buffalos Mike Grier. But his disciplinary issues in D.C. paled in comparison to his time later with the New York Islanders, when he sat 25 games in 2007 for hitting Rangers forward Ryan Hollweg in the face with a stick, and 30 more for slamming his skate on Pittsburghs Jarkko Ruutu.
Simon almost didnt make it to the NHL; he nearly found himself out of hockey by 19 because of alcohol abuse. Coaches and family intervened. ... You grow up fast in junior hockey, and I didnt handle it properly, he told Sports Illustrated in 1996. Some guy would recognize me in a bar and say: Youre pretty tough as a hockey player. Lets see how tough you really are. If Id been drinking, I didnt give a d---. Id fight them.
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By Ben Sumner
Ben Sumner works in The Posts IT department and often writes about hockey and professional wrestlers. Twitter
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