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‘Crazy’ Sean Avery threatens neighbor, teens in parking dispute

Sean Avery became embroiled in a row with some neighbors.

, the latest installment in this series happened when the former Rangers forward confronted a group of people — including some teenagers — over how they parked on the street, outside a home where he said he was house sitting in Hollywood Hills, Calif. In the video, Avery said he lived two streets down from where the incident took place.

Avery was of the belief that the teens blocked the driveway of said home, and had a prolonged, profane back-and-forth that was captured on video.

“The next time one of you guys parks your cars there, I’m going to snap your windshield wipers off,” Avery told the group.

One of the recipients of the rant asked him if he was crazy.

“100 percent,” Avery answered. “Ask around.”

The man recording the video told Avery, “You don’t talk to little kids like that.”

A screengrab of the Sean Avery dispute
TMZ Sports
Sean Avery
TMZ Sports

To this, Avery invited the man to take the first shot.

“You can kick or punch me … You’re too f–king to short to actually challenge anyone,” Avery said.

The man continued to wonder why Avery was yelling at teens who were not his kid.

“If this was my kid, I’d pull his f–king hair into the house and I’d tell his dumb f–king friends to go home,” Avery said.

According to TMZ, police were not called in the incident.

Sean Avery played in the NHL from 2000-2012.
NHLI via Getty Images
Sean Avery got in a dispute with neighbors over where teens were parking their cars.
TMZ

This past June, Avery was found guilty of using a scooter to bash someone’s car in Manhattan. He had accused that person of blocking a bike lane several years back.

“If I need to be the poster boy for defending the bike lanes, I will absolutely do that. We need to be able to just bike in freedom,” Avery told The Post in 2019.

Avery played in the NHL from 2000 through 2012 for the Red Wings, Kings, Rangers, Stars and then the Rangers again. While with the Kings, he twice led the NHL in penalty minutes.