Huge clerical error from the Leafs

Pietrangelo

Registered User
Oct 26, 2015
836
1,130
Watching the SN feed and the broadcasters mentioned that Toronto had on their roster “#92 - Nylander” (Alex, not William) up until the last minute until someone noticed and corrected it. If this error would have went unnoticed until puck drop the Leafs would have been forced to sit out William Nylander. Yikes.
 
But how do you even get Alex Nylander instead of William Nylander? That would require you to use the name string as the key, right? That sounds ridiculously stupid when you could just use the playerID which would make any such mixups impossible.
 
Officials notifying the leafs about it and allowing them to change it seems a bit sketch, no ?

They were within their rights to change it, as it had not been officially registered yet.

As for the officials notifying them, it was obviously an error. It’s not like they were giving lineup advice, they basically said “this looks like a mistake, please verify”. It’s fine.
 
Officials notifying the leafs about it and allowing them to change it seems a bit sketch, no ?
There's a reason the officials look at the game sheet/lineup before the game. Of course they're allowed to change stuff on it before the game starts.
I'm a Leafs fan, and I kind of agree. Surely, it's not the ref's job to make sure the lineup is correct?
In some ways it actually is. I've notified quite a few coaches that they have x amount of players on the ice for warmup & y number of players on the game sheet & to please fix it. I'd also notify them if I thought/knew a player's name was wrong, as it was in this instance, although I don't remember that ever happening.
The first example is 100% the refs job while the second example you wouldn't blame a ref if he missed it but it also shouldn't be a conspiracy theory if they didn't.
 
Officials notifying the leafs about it and allowing them to change it seems a bit sketch, no ?

I'm a Leafs fan, and I kind of agree. Surely, it's not the ref's job to make sure the lineup is correct?

i assume they check the lineup, that’s why they’re given it, and they notice somethin weird- it is an interesting concern, but to me it falls into the camp of “basic human decency.” You know someone screwed up, you’d do the same for the other team, it’s ok with me. But I do get the concern- when does the ref’s job begin? What crosses the line into unfair help?

Although goddamn that woulda been so funny. Is Alex even there? Would they just dress William and hope no one notices?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Coffee
i assume they check the lineup, that’s why they’re given it, and they notice somethin weird- it is an interesting concern, but to me it falls into the camp of “basic human decency.” You know someone screwed up, you’d do the same for the other team, it’s ok with me. But I do get the concern- when does the ref’s job begin? What crosses the line into unfair help?

Although goddamn that woulda been so funny. Is Alex even there? Would they just dress William and hope no one notices?

I don't think they put Alex's name? They just put the wrong number for Nylander.

Worst case they might have to press a 92 jersey for him.
 
I don't think they put Alex's name? They just put the wrong number for Nylander.

Worst case they might have to press a 92 jersey for him.

Ah gotcha- that’s just weird in that case, and there is an argument that’s a clerical thing it isn’t their job to correct. Idk, when I thought it was a whole wrong human it seemed a bit more normal to point out- now I think refs shoulda chosen chaos.
 
It wouldn’t even have been the first time this happened to the Leafs in the playoffs.
Back in 2002 Mikael Renberg was injured and unavailable and Robert Reichel was healthy and expected to play.
But Renberg’s name was put into the lineup instead of Reichel. The Islanders who were the Leafs 1st round opponent noticed and the Leafs had to play the game without either player.
 
  • Like
Reactions: D1az

Users who are viewing this thread

Ad

Ad