Marty is punch drunk though. I mean, he won a lot more than he lost, but he sounds so brain dead.
I don’t know if we listened to the same interview. Marty sounds coherent, his recall is strong, and he’s clearly relived this incident a great many times. Doesn’t sound impaired in any way or fashion from where I sit.
Also, I don’t think he comes off as blaming Brashear, so much as he still feels this was all an accident that happened in the scope of players doing their jobs. He said Vancouver scored an empty net goal, that Crawford threw Brashear onto the ice with 22 seconds left, turned to the Bruins bench and smiled / smirked, and Burns immediately instructed McSorley to get out there. McSorley felt/knew his job in that moment was to get Brashear to fight, and that he wasn’t aiming for his head - he said if you watch the video, Brashear turns to the right, his right shoulder drops, and McSorley’s stick initially strikes Brashear’s shoulder, rides up and hits him in the head.
He also said he felt for Bertuzzi for what happened to him - he felt in that moment Bertuzzi was doing his job, that he was likely instructed to do his job, and that he never intended for what happened to Moore to actually happen. But that he felt, like his situation, they were two guys instructed to go and do their jobs and it had unexpected ramifications - and when those ramifications came down on them, McSorley at least felt like he was left out in the cold by his team and the league.
Brashear was an absolute cancer that I hated almost as much as Mark Messier. Addition by subtraction when he finally left.
I don’t know how much of Brashear’s attitude was really public knowledge until after he was traded. He was certainly cocky and disrespectful as a fighter, but his attitude on the team and in the room was certainly a problem as well. The Canucks got off to a lousy start that season, and when Brashear was dispatched for Hlavac, a big turnaround began almost immediately.