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NHL saying 'hold on' to Hockey Canada five is a good message, but still lacking

NHL saying 'hold on' to Hockey Canada five is a good message, but still lacking

Let's begin by giving the NHL some credit: they made clear this week that just because a court says you're not guilty of something, that doesn't mean you are suddenly in the 'good' column again.
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'The allegations made in this case, even if not determined to have been criminal, were very disturbing and the behaviour at issue was unacceptable,' the NHL said Thursday about the Hockey Canada five being found not guilty of sexual assault. 'We will be reviewing and considering the judge's findings. While we conduct that analysis and determine next steps, the players charged in this case are ineligible to play in the league.'
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Carter Hart, Alex Formenton, Cal Foote, Michael McLeod and Dillon Dube are still on the hot seat as far as the NHL is concerned. There's an expectation of good conduct here, the NHL is reminding everyone.
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The NHL's standard player contract has a clause declaring players must conduct themselves on and off the ice 'according to the highest standards of honesty, morality, fair play and sportsmanship, and to refrain from conduct detrimental to the best interest of the Club, the League, or professional hockey generally.'
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In other words, do what you want on your own time, but if your dirty laundry gets out, we're going to have to talk about it.
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That, presumably, is the crux of the NHLPA's challenge to the league's eligibility position.
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'After missing more than a full season of their respective NHL careers, they should now have the opportunity to return to work. The NHL's declaration that the players are 'ineligible' to play pending its further analysis of the court's findings is inconsistent with the discipline procedures set forth in the CBA,' the PA insists. The PA's job is to protect their members' working conditions.
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But in the end, both the league and the PA are missing the bigger picture: there's a broader cultural leadership role to play and neither organization has said or done what needs to be here.
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And a huge factor in this is the NHL being the only league of the big four North American professional sports leagues to not have a clearly defined policy around domestic violence and sexual assault.
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The NFL, for instance, does. That's how they handed Deshaun Watson an 11-game ban after being accused by more than two dozen women of sexual assault and sexual misconduct during massage therapy sessions.
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The NFL took those accusations and had their own investigation under the auspices of the policy.
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But everything the NHL does is ad hoc. They have an amorphous standard that they can enforce capriciously. Doing it this way doesn't exactly lay out to players what the expectations are beyond 'don't get your name splashed about in public.'
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That's no way to lead. All it does is perpetuate a 'boys will boys' culture, where the worst sin is getting caught.
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Todd: Gary Bettman has NHL fate of five acquitted former junior stars in his hands
Todd: Gary Bettman has NHL fate of five acquitted former junior stars in his hands

Montreal Gazette

timean hour ago

  • Montreal Gazette

Todd: Gary Bettman has NHL fate of five acquitted former junior stars in his hands

Hockey Over to you, Gary. With the help of a roomful of pricey legal eagles, Michael McLeod, Dillon Dubé, Carter Hart, Alex Formenton and Cal Foote might managed to skate past Ontario Superior Court Justice Maria Carroccia last week — but they're going to have to get past a tougher and less pliable judge if they wish to return to the National Hockey League. Early indications are, it's going to take more than some fancy stickwork if you want to slip by the most powerful individual in hockey, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. The NHL statement, issued immediately after Justice Carroccia delivered her not guilty verdicts in the trial of the five members of the 2018 World Junior championship team charged in connection with the alleged sexual assault in a London hotel room, was unequivocal. 'The allegations made in this case, even if not determined to have been criminal, were very disturbing and the behaviour at issue was unacceptable,' the statement read. 'We will be reviewing and considering the judge's findings. While we conduct that analysis and determine next steps, the players charged in this case are ineligible to play in the league.' Predictably, the NHLPA begged to differ. The union never has a problem with the miscreants in its ranks, whether they're putting other union members in jeopardy on the ice or bringing the game into disrepute away from it. That won't trouble Bettman in the least. His career record against the NHLPA is roughly 117-0, so if they want to tangle with the Queens bulldog they're welcome to try. Bettman understands that in this case there is a wide gulf between 'not guilty' and 'innocent' and he clearly wishes to set a higher standard for player behaviour going forward. The league will take its time. Ultimately, I would expect the players to be suspended for at least another year and to have to satisfy Bettman that they have some degree of remorse and a desire to be better before they will be allowed to return — following the pattern that saw Stan Bowman and Joel Quenneville back in the league. Individual teams will also have a say with players who will be free agents when and if they are reinstated. The Calgary Flames embarrassed themselves by lying about the reason Dubé left the club in the first place, claiming it was for mental health reasons. Would they want to taint their image further by trying to re-sign Dubé, whose contract with Dinamo Minsk expired in May? Doubtful. As for the other skaters, McLeod is eminently replaceable and Foote and Formenton were marginal players even before they were charged. That leaves Carter Hart and a Flyers team that used three underwhelming goalies last year — Samuel Ersson, Ivan Fedotov and Aleksei Kolosov. But Hart's three-year deal expired last year, leaving him an unrestricted free agent. If Hart is eventually cleared to play, someone, sadly, will take the plunge. Maltos for the kick: On an Alouettes roster loaded with physical specimens who appear to have negative body fat, Jose Maltos stands out because he looks like he got lost trying to find the press box and ended up in uniform. But the Alouettes kicker has the leg and then some. The blast that won last Thursday's game in Calgary was as powerful as it was clutch. Officially, the kick was 58 yards. Unofficially, it was closer to 65 yards and right down the middle. Maltos is still four yards short of Paul McCallum's CFL record 62 yards but it's a good bet he'll break that record before he's through. Catch of the year: Milt Stegall has been emphatic about it, and I agree. At its best, the CFL is a great league. More than worthy of the attention of anyone fed up with the greed and hype of the NFL. Sunday night, B.C. Lions defensive back Robert Carter Jr. put an exclamation point to Stegall's claim with a catch that will go down as one of the greatest in the history of the game. If you haven't seen it, it's worth a Google. OH. MY. GOODNESS. WHAT AN INCREDIBLE CATCH BY ROBERT CARTER JR. FOR THE INTERCEPTION #CFL — TSN (@TSN_Sports) July 28, 2025 Happy Birthday, Rachel: On July 19, Rachel Robinson, possibly the wisest individual it has ever been my pleasure to interview, passed her 103rd birthday. Incredibly, it has been 79 years since she and her husband, the incomparable Jackie Robinson, broke the colour barrier in white baseball right here in Montreal. Robinson was born in 1922. She has seen it all, from the long fight to end in segregation in the U.S. South to the riots following the assassination of Martin Luther King. Sadly, her most recent birthday passed with the U.S. in the grip of a wave of virulent racism that has spread from the White House across the country. Ending it, I fear, will take the courage and class of many more like Rachel Robinson. Heroes: Jose Maltos, Robert Carter Jr., Summer McIntosh, Leylah Fernandez, Gabriel Diallo, Kabion Ento, Tadej Pogacar, Xander Zeyas &&&& last but not least, Rachel Robinson. Now and forever.

Todd: Gary Bettman has NHL fate of five acquitted former junior stars in his hands
Todd: Gary Bettman has NHL fate of five acquitted former junior stars in his hands

Ottawa Citizen

timean hour ago

  • Ottawa Citizen

Todd: Gary Bettman has NHL fate of five acquitted former junior stars in his hands

Article content Over to you, Gary. Article content With the help of a roomful of pricey legal eagles, Michael McLeod, Dillon Dubé, Carter Hart, Alex Formenton and Cal Foote might managed to skate past Ontario Superior Court Justice Maria Carroccia last week — but they're going to have to get past a tougher and less pliable judge if they wish to return to the National Hockey League. Article content Article content Early indications are, it's going to take more than some fancy stickwork if you want to slip by the most powerful individual in hockey, NHL commissioner Gary Bettman. Article content The NHL statement, issued immediately after Justice Carroccia delivered her not guilty verdicts in the trial of the five members of the 2018 World Junior championship team charged in connection with the alleged sexual assault in a London hotel room, was unequivocal. Article content Article content 'The allegations made in this case, even if not determined to have been criminal, were very disturbing and the behaviour at issue was unacceptable,' the statement read. 'We will be reviewing and considering the judge's findings. While we conduct that analysis and determine next steps, the players charged in this case are ineligible to play in the league.' Article content Predictably, the NHLPA begged to differ. The union never has a problem with the miscreants in its ranks, whether they're putting other union members in jeopardy on the ice or bringing the game into disrepute away from it. Article content Article content That won't trouble Bettman in the least. His career record against the NHLPA is roughly 117-0, so if they want to tangle with the Queens bulldog they're welcome to try. Bettman understands that in this case there is a wide gulf between 'not guilty' and 'innocent' and he clearly wishes to set a higher standard for player behaviour going forward. Article content The league will take its time. Ultimately, I would expect the players to be suspended for at least another year and to have to satisfy Bettman that they have some degree of remorse and a desire to be better before they will be allowed to return — following the pattern that saw Stan Bowman and Joel Quenneville back in the league. Article content Individual teams will also have a say with players who will be free agents when and if they are reinstated. The Calgary Flames embarrassed themselves by lying about the reason Dubé left the club in the first place, claiming it was for mental health reasons. Would they want to taint their image further by trying to re-sign Dubé, whose contract with Dinamo Minsk expired in May? Doubtful.

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