Snoop Dogg didn’t actually file for a trademark for his cannabis brand until July 2018. Then, in December, MLSE finally filed the legal paperwork challenging Snoop’s trademark. Intellectual property law is intricate and complicated, making it difficult to prove when one company is actually infringing on the IP rights of another. But the Maple Leafs’ case against Leafs By Snoop makes several arguments–whether a judge finds them convincing is a different matter.

Hockey franchise says Snoop’s branding is too similar

In the first place, the Toronto Maple Leafs have a problem with the way Snoop’s brand spells “leafs.” In standard English, of course, the plural of leaf is leaves. So the Maple Leafs organization say that’s strike one against Snoop’s brand. “The LEAFS mark reflects a highly unusual and distinctive spelling,” the organization wrote in its filing.

Then, there’s the issue of the logo itself. Leafs by Snoop uses a logo featuring white text over a green, 7-point leaf design. Any marijuana consumer would instantly recognize it as an homage to a cannabis plant leaf. The Toronto Maple Leafs also use white text over a broad-leaf design. But that leaf, taking a cue from the flag of Canada, is a maple leaf, not a cannabis leaf.

Now, does the maple leaf as displayed on the Canadian flag and the hockey team’s logo kind of look like a pot leaf? Sure: legalization advocates have long waved Canadian flags emblazoned with a weed leaf where the maple leaf should be. (Interestingly enough, some in Canada’s government tried to ban cannabis-themed merch like that in the lead up to legalization.)

Are hockey fans really that confused?

The Maple Leafs insist that the similarities in spelling and appearance of the two trademarks “could lead to confusion.” The hockey franchise also claimed in its legal filing that Snoop’s business was infringing on rights it hand long-established. “The Toronto Maple Leafs hockey club has been an iconic member of the NHL since the league’s inception in 1917.” The filing goes on to mention the team’s “large fan base” in the U.S. and Canada.

If there’s anything Canadians love more than cannabis, it’s hockey. And that’s exactly what puts the argument that a 100-year-old hockey team could be confused with a 3-year-old cannabis brand based in Colorado, on thin ice.