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CarltonTheBear said:Heroic Shrimp said:https://twitter.com/thee4thidiot/status/1419076988975919105
This was my biggest problem with the draft selection. When this news originally broke and the reports were some teams were taking him off their draft lists and some weren't I figured somebody would have still drafted him (wouldn't have guessed 1st round though) and the reaction to the pick would have of course been pretty bad still but I don't think it would have quite reached these levels.
Then the kid did the best, smartest, and most responsible thing he could have done in the situation (aside from you know sincerely apologizing to his victim) and he asked to be withdrawn from the draft. He said very clearly "being drafted into the NHL is an honour and a privilege that no one takes lightly. The NHL Draft should be one of the most exciting landmark moments in a player's career, and given the circumstances I don't feel I have demonstrated strong enough maturity or character to earn the privilege in the 2021 Draft. If I were to ever have the honour of being selected I would want a fanbase to be proud to welcome me to their organization".
This was the path of rehabilitation he, his family, his agents, and anyone else counselling him on this issue decided was best for him. He could have taken the next year to hopefully reflect on his own personal issues and became a better person for it. And then in 2022, in his own words, been worthy of being drafted and could have had a once in a lifetime draft experience that wasn't completely tarnished by his past mistakes.
And the Canadiens pretty blatantly said, "nah, f*@k how you want to rehabilitate yourself, we want a good hockey player".
Didn't Arizona walk away from a pick for him also being a colossal douchebag?Nik said:I try not to be cynical but honestly, I think what the Habs knew is there's no real downside for them in drafting him. Oh sure, they'll be clowned on twitter for a day or two but then we'll be on to the next thing. Meanwhile if he goes on to be a good player then the fawning hockey media will write article after article about how "brave" the Habs were for "showing faith in him even when he didn't have it in himself" or something.
Bender said:Didn't Arizona walk away from a pick for him also being a colossal douchebag?Nik said:I try not to be cynical but honestly, I think what the Habs knew is there's no real downside for them in drafting him. Oh sure, they'll be clowned on twitter for a day or two but then we'll be on to the next thing. Meanwhile if he goes on to be a good player then the fawning hockey media will write article after article about how "brave" the Habs were for "showing faith in him even when he didn't have it in himself" or something.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:If the NHL were serious about these issues (which they aren't), here's a straightforward solution: if you are convicted in court of abuse of any kind, you're banned from the league for life. No exceptions. That'll do more to get rid of toxic masculinity in elite competitive hockey at all levels than all this hand-waving "concern."
It's not a perfect solution. If you can manage to settle a case with a victim (looking at our very own #34 here) to avoid a conviction, then you can wiggle out of it.
Of course it will never happen.
Bullfrog said:From the Canadiens' side, I think Nik is right (if I'm understanding correctly), it's probably going to more-or-less blow over and they may have a steal of a pick. I'm not convinced they can convincingly spin it into such a positive (bravery, showing faith, etc), but I'm convinced it's not really going to hurt them at all.
Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:If the NHL were serious about these issues (which they aren't), here's a straightforward solution: if you are convicted in court of abuse of any kind, you're banned from the league for life. No exceptions. That'll do more to get rid of toxic masculinity in elite competitive hockey at all levels than all this hand-waving "concern."
It's not a perfect solution. If you can manage to settle a case with a victim (looking at our very own #34 here) to avoid a conviction, then you can wiggle out of it.
Of course it will never happen.
Frank E said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:If the NHL were serious about these issues (which they aren't), here's a straightforward solution: if you are convicted in court of abuse of any kind, you're banned from the league for life. No exceptions. That'll do more to get rid of toxic masculinity in elite competitive hockey at all levels than all this hand-waving "concern."
It's not a perfect solution. If you can manage to settle a case with a victim (looking at our very own #34 here) to avoid a conviction, then you can wiggle out of it.
Of course it will never happen.
The kind of labels that are being pinned to this 18 year old weren't being pinned on Matthews when he pulled his own douchey move when he was 4 years older/wiser?
Severity of douchebaggery needs to be part of the discourse before we simply "cancel" kids, or organizations, and write them off as terrible people.
Bullfrog said:Zanzibar Buck-Buck McFate said:If the NHL were serious about these issues (which they aren't), here's a straightforward solution: if you are convicted in court of abuse of any kind, you're banned from the league for life. No exceptions. That'll do more to get rid of toxic masculinity in elite competitive hockey at all levels than all this hand-waving "concern."
It's not a perfect solution. If you can manage to settle a case with a victim (looking at our very own #34 here) to avoid a conviction, then you can wiggle out of it.
Of course it will never happen.
I think that's an extreme solution. I also don't think the NHL should be the morality police.
Bullfrog said:From the Canadiens' side, I think Nik is right (if I'm understanding correctly), it's probably going to more-or-less blow over and they may have a steal of a pick. I'm not convinced they can convincingly spin it into such a positive (bravery, showing faith, etc), but I'm convinced it's not really going to hurt them at all.
LittleHockeyFan said:as if I needed any more reasons to hate the habs.
this doesn't sit well with me at all. and i know it's not gonna matter a good g d to the habs.
i'm just infuriated....and i wouldn't be surprised if this was all done as a stunt to make sure no one would even think about drafting him because the habs wanted him all along.
bustaheims said:LittleHockeyFan said:as if I needed any more reasons to hate the habs.
this doesn't sit well with me at all. and i know it's not gonna matter a good g d to the habs.
i'm just infuriated....and i wouldn't be surprised if this was all done as a stunt to make sure no one would even think about drafting him because the habs wanted him all along.
I'm with you until the bolded. Would have been a weird choice. It's not like he fell dramatically down the rankings. He was still taken very much in the range he was expected to go.
While I'm sure part of his request to not be drafted was about trying to save face and improve his reputation around the league, I just can't see it being part of a plan to get drafted by Montreal.
Frank E said:Montreal wouldn't have drafted him without speaking with him and his family about it.
CarltonTheBear said:What surprised me quite a bit is that prior to the selection being made they actually didn't speak with him at all since he released his statement requesting not to be drafted. Guess they didn't really care how he felt about that request being ignored.