The Detroit Red Wings and New Jersey Devils don’t meet again for another 3½ months.

Will the Red Wings have moved past Jonas Siegenthaler’s blindside hit on Lucas Raymond by then? Or will the tension and hostilities from the end of Monday’s game carry over into that March 8 matchup at the Prudential Center?

Siegenthaler leveled Raymond when he wasn’t looking and didn’t have the puck with 6:11 left in the Devils’ 4-3 victory. Raymond was shaken up momentarily but finished the game. No penalty was called for interference.

“I was joining the rush and turned around. I wanted to change and ran into him,” Siegenthaler told New Jersey reporters. “It wasn’t a very hard (hit), I would say. But he can act however he wants. I don’t think it was bad.”

The Red Wings pressured the Devils in the final minutes. Tempers flared after the final horn with a lot of pushing, shoving and wrestling between Dylan Larkin and Nico Hischier, Alex DeBrincat and Jesper Bratt and Raymond and Siegenthaler.

Devils goaltender Jacob Markstrom tried to get into the fray but was held off by James van Riemsdyk. Cam Talbot was on the bench after having been pulled for the extra skater, so there was no potential for a goalie fight.

Raymond was furious and threw his helmet down the runway leading to the dressing room after leaving the ice.

“I think the emotions got going because everything was tight and close at the end,” Red Wings coach Todd McLellan said in his postgame availability. “There’s a couple heavy hits, so I think that’s where (the scraps at the end) came from.”

Van Riemsdyk told reporters in New Jersey: “I thought it was good that we stuck together as a team. I think it was definitely a hard-fought game. I think tempers raised a little bit at the end there. But obviously we are going to stick together as a team if we feel like we didn’t like the play that was made a little bit earlier in the period there.”

It was a physical, chippy game well before Siegenthaler’s hit. J.T. Compher leveled Hischier with a big shoulder check into the boards earlier in the game. That prompted Stefan Noesen to seek retribution later in engaging Compher to fight.

“They’re going to take liberties,” Larkin told media. “Our guy takes one early in the game and he stands up for it, and they don’t do the same. I thought we showed good composure and still had a lot of looks there at the end.”

The Devils’ lone appearance at Little Caesars Arena is on April 11, the Red Wings’ home finale.