Sharks' Hertl, Braun regret insulting Winnipeg in interview | CBC Sports - Action News
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Hockey

Sharks' Hertl, Braun regret insulting Winnipeg in interview

Tomas Hertl and Justin Braun have learned their lesson. They won't make fun of Winnipeg again.

Both players say they were joking when they made fun of the city

San Jose Sharks' Tomas Hertl and Justin Braun say they were joking when they made fun of Winnipeg in an interview where they were asked about the worst NHL city to visit. (Christian Petersen / Getty Images )

Tomas Hertl and Justin Braun have learned their lesson. They won't make fun of Winnipeg again.

The Sharks teammates had made fun of the city this past summer in a videotaped interview that was released by the team's official broadcaster. Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman and Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister had been outraged and fans frothed at their answers when Hertl and Braun were asked to name the worst NHL city to visit.

Winnipeggers react to chirps about their city

7 years ago
Duration 0:50
After the San Jose Sharks tweeted a video of some of their players saying Winnipeg is the worst city to play in, we asked Winnipeggers to respond.

Hertl called Winnipeg "cold and dark," while Braun said the Fairmont Hotel where the team stays at was "questionable" and wondered whether the city has Wi-Fi yet.

Following San Jose's morning skate prior to their game against the Jets on Tuesday night, both players were peppered with questions from the media about the months-old incident.

Hertlsays comments were a 'joke'

"I really had no idea. For a full day I was saying 'What is actually happening?' I had no interviews in Winnipeg and then I see it was something we did in the summer," said Hertl, a Czech, about the response he got after the video was released. "There were 50 different questions and somebody asked me this question and it was more like a joke, you know, it's 'dark and cold.'

"They wanted me to answer something. It was bad timing, everything, you know. I say 'Sh-t happens' but it was not anything good. Hopefully we can move on."

Braun, who was raised in St. Paul, Minn., didn't think anything of the video until the negative press started to roll in.

"Yeah, I more than likely thought I'd never see that again. I was joking around, and it blew up huge," said Braun. "Thankfully, I don't have social media and people couldn't find me and yell at me. It wasn't the intention I was looking for, bringing negative press to the Sharks and myself. I kind of regret that a little bit."