This is more journalism related than sports related so this seemed like the best place for it...
ESPN has had a story on their NHL page for the last 4 hours which incorrectly says:
Now common sense would say that the Sharks are not going to take on a dead contract (even if Montreal is still covering most of it) without getting something in return -- that something being a fifth round draft pick in 2026. That was the entire point of the trade and it took me less than 5 minutes to cross-reference and verify that this is the actual trade not what is written at the top of the ESPN article. Gannon Laroque goes to Montreal to play for their AHL team and the Sharks helped Montreal to get under the salary cap in exchange for a low value pick in next year's draft.
My point isn't the trade itself, but does ESPN.com not even have an editor or a fact-checking department anymore? All they did was copy a typo from another source and print it on their own page as news. It's not like this is a company which doesn't have money -- ESPN is owned by Disney. They own most of the entertainment industry at this point. How are you going to have a news article up on your platform for multiple hours where the top line is blatantly wrong and no one has even noticed or bothered to change it?
ESPN has had a story on their NHL page for the last 4 hours which incorrectly says:
The Montreal Canadiens traded goaltender Carey Price to the San Jose Sharks on Friday, in exchange for defenseman Gannon Laroque and a fifth-round draft pick in 2026. (link)
Now common sense would say that the Sharks are not going to take on a dead contract (even if Montreal is still covering most of it) without getting something in return -- that something being a fifth round draft pick in 2026. That was the entire point of the trade and it took me less than 5 minutes to cross-reference and verify that this is the actual trade not what is written at the top of the ESPN article. Gannon Laroque goes to Montreal to play for their AHL team and the Sharks helped Montreal to get under the salary cap in exchange for a low value pick in next year's draft.
My point isn't the trade itself, but does ESPN.com not even have an editor or a fact-checking department anymore? All they did was copy a typo from another source and print it on their own page as news. It's not like this is a company which doesn't have money -- ESPN is owned by Disney. They own most of the entertainment industry at this point. How are you going to have a news article up on your platform for multiple hours where the top line is blatantly wrong and no one has even noticed or bothered to change it?