David Kampf signs one-year contract with Canucks

It didn’t take long for former Maple Leaf David Kampf’s services to be picked up by another team.

Despite a report from TSN’s Darren Dreger saying that Kampf would likely make his decision on Sunday, it was officially announced on Saturday night that Kampf would sign a one-year contract with the Vancouver Canucks. The contract is worth $1.1 million.

Kampf, a defence-first centre who was once a pivotal part of the Toronto Maple Leafs‘ bottom-six and penalty kill, fell out of favour with head coach Craig Berube in the second half of the 2024-25 season, finishing the season with only 59 games played in comparison to 78 the year prior. He tallied five goals and 13 points in those games and was limited to only one playoff game, which came in the second round against the Florida Panthers.

The Canucks are currently the worst penalty-killing team in the NHL, which Canucks general manager Patrik Allvin noted in the press release as an area Kampf can help improve.

“David is a very reliable two-way centre who will improve our strength and depth down the middle immediately,” Allvin said. “He is good in the faceoff dot and is a solid penalty killer, two areas of need we currently have on our team. His hockey IQ is also a big asset and we believe he will fit in nicely with our group.”

Kampf’s relationship with the Maple Leafs soured rapidly in 2025-26 after he didn’t make the opening night roster. The team placed him on waivers and he went to the Toronto Marlies, where he played in four games and tallied one assist. Eventually, he refused to report to the Marlies which led to having his contract mutually terminated on Thursday. He officially became a free agent on Friday and had reportedly narrowed down his interest to three teams, with the Canucks eventually prevailing.

The Maple Leafs will see Kampf in a Canucks uniform for the first time on January 10th, 2026.

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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/david-kampf-signs-one-year-contract-vancouver-canucks
 
Craig Berube believes Maple Leafs lack confidence amid November slump

Through mid-November, the Toronto Maple Leafs are four points out of a playoff spot, and bad habits are beginning to form. After surrendering a third-period lead in a 3-2 loss to the Chicago Blackhawks, the Maple Leafs are mired in a five-game losing streak and it’s beginning to become worrisome, as the gap between the contenders and pretenders widens.

Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube believes his group is lacking confidence through the losing streak, which seems to make all too much sense.

“Right now, we’re just a little bit unconfident. Gotta get through that because we had an opportunity to close this game out and win it,” Berube said post-game.

Nick Robertson and Morgan Rielly scored for the Maple Leafs, with Rielly’s second-period marker providing a 2-1 lead entering the third period. Ryan Greene opened the scoring in the first, then Teuvo Teravainen and Colton Dach scored for the Blackhawks in the third period, as the Maple Leafs couldn’t secure the win.

“I have to motivate them the best way I can. Maybe it’s a kick in the ass, but maybe it is positive reinforcement, too,” Berube said.

“We did a lot of good things. I think we had 11 or 12 grade-A chances tonight, and we only got two goals out of it. We’d score more than that, for the most part. You’re going to have games like that.”

Toronto is tied for third with 67 goals scored, but have surrendered 72 goals, the second-worst total in the NHL. The disparity between the team’s potent 5-on-5 offence and porous defence is an effective summary of the season to date, while the Maple Leafs have also received sub-par goaltending for large stretches of the year.

Winning begets further confidence, and the Maple Leafs are tasked with correcting the course during Tuesday’s game against the St. Louis Blues.

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TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/craig-berube-toronto-maple-leafs-lack-confidence-november-slump
 
Morgan Rielly reinforces the positives and the need to believe after Leafs’ loss to Blackhawks

Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Morgan Rielly says the team has not wavered in their belief despite the losing streak extending to five games on Saturday against the Chicago Blackhawks.

The contest was an overall better showing for the team, which appeared to finally be showing signs of what they were capable of last season en route to a division title. They were able to get extended offensive zone time, they had plenty of stretches where the chances surrendered were low-quality, and Joseph Woll made the stops when called upon.

Ultimately, it was not enough as two back-breaking goals allowed in the third period sunk them in regulation and put the Leafs below .500 at 8-9-2.

“I think it always comes down to execution. I know for a fact that the compete level, the desire, is there,” Rielly said to reporters after the game. “At times it might be too much, so you start squeezing the stick, you start overthinking things because you just want to do the thing and win the game.  But I think at the end of the day, it comes down to execution. If we can execute better, you limit the chances against and one thing leads to another.”

The lack of confidence in their game was evident in the third period, when the Leafs were in a position to close things out and end the slump. There were plenty of extended shifts hemmed in their own end, and Woll could only do so much to stop the bleeding.

Rielly had his moments in this contest with his goal in the second period giving the Leafs the lead, but was also on the ice for the tying goal from Teuvo Teravainen where he didn’t do enough to deny the scoring chance.

“Whenever you’re in something that’s challenging, it’s all-consuming and it can feel that way,” he said when asked if this is the toughest test he has faced as a Leaf in this era. “But there’s a lot of belief with our team, and that’s powerful.  So it’s a tough one to answer.”

Keeping the faith when times are tough is certainly commendable, especially since there have been enough signs of the type of team the Leafs are capable of being shown in flashes. But the moral victories can only take them so far because they ultimately did not do enough to get the victory and once again extend their sluggish start to the season.

“I think there’s just little things right now.  We’re having a hard time obviously closing games out,” Rielly said. “When you’re going through a stretch like that, it’s almost self-fulfilling.  It’s just little mistakes that are costing us. I think overall, the game tonight, the way we played, we had some good things going on and we put ourselves in a position to be in a close game and to have the lead. So that’s good, but we have to kind of get over the hump here and start closing games out.”

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TABLE Fare + Social is a vibrant food hall in the heart of Toronto’s financial district,
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arena—perfect for pregame meals before tip-off. Open weekdays from 11am to 10pm,
TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/mor...e-toronto-maple-leafs-loss-chicago-blackhawks
 
David Kampf bids farewell to Maple Leafs in Instagram post after signing with Canucks

Despite the rocky way his tenure as a Leaf ended, David Kampf was nothing but grateful to the Toronto Maple Leafs organization and their fans after signing a one-year contract with the Vancouver Canucks.

Kampf bid farewell to the team and fans on Sunday after he parted ways with the Leafs and signed a deal to take his talents out west.


Kampf referred to his time in Toronto as a ‘pleasure’ while acknowledging that the time had come to start fresh somewhere else.

“A great chapter of my life but the time has come to move on,” Kampf said in the post. “I gave everything I had to this organization and city and I’ll always be thankful for the opportunity I got here. Thank you to all my teammates I got to spend those years with I wish you guys all the best. Also, special thank you to each and every one of the Leafs staff for taking care of me and my family through the years. Toronto will always have a special place in our hearts. Excited for the future with Canucks!”

Kampf was originally signed by the Maple Leafs prior to the 2021-22 season, and for a few years he was one of the team’s more underappreciated forwards, but between the extension he signed following the 2022-23 season and Craig Berube taking over as head coach from Sheldon Keefe, his time in Toronto spiraled pretty quickly. He went from being one of the team’s top penalty killers and shutdown forwards to falling out of favour with Berube and only appearing in one Stanley Cup Playoffs game this past season.

Kampf didn’t crack the Maple Leafs’ roster out of training camp and appeared in four games with the Toronto Marlies, recording one assist, before he refused to report to the team which prompted the contract termination and subsequent signing with the Canucks.

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Darren Dreger says the Leafs are looking to make player for player type moves: Leafs Morning Take

They looked better on Saturday night in Chicago, but ultimately, they didn’t get the job done.

Once again, it was a few of costly defensive mistakes that did the Maple Leafs in.

Toronto’s winless skid is up to five games (0-4-1) with the St. Louis Blues set to invade Scotiabank Arena on Tuesday night.

We kicked off the Monday edition of Leafs Morning Take by dissecting the Brandon Carlo news. The blueliner was placed on IR, Jacob Quillan, who’s had a hot start for the Marlies, was recalled. On Carlo, just get right. If that means missing some time, so be it. He’s had a rough start, so perhaps some time away for a reset could do wonders for his overall game. The blue line depth is being tested severely, but honestly, this could prove to be a blessing in disguise. It’s not like anyone on the backend’s playing particularly well right now anyway.

At any rate, we broke down the 3-2 loss to Chicago on Saturday night a bit, too. Joseph Woll looked solid in his season debut making 29 stops. Easton Cowan looked good, so did Nick Robertson, who’s now notched nine points in his past nine games. Meantime, it was a few blunders that cost the Leafs. It wasn’t their worst outing of the season, but a loss is a loss. Additionally, we talked some William Nylander as well. He extended his personal point streak to 13 games. Incredibly, though, Nylander has failed to register a shot on a goal in back-to-back games for the first time since December 2019.

After that, TSN Hockey Insider Darren Dreger stopped by to pain a picture of what’s happening around the struggling Maple Leafs right now. We hit on everything from Berube’s status to the trade front to the growing list of injured players. Also, Dregs weighed in on the Rasmus Andersson/Calgary noise. In full, the Leafs are open for business. Having said all that, he made it abundantly clear that they realize that they don’t have much to deal right now.

At any rate, make a note to join u for the Tuesday edition of Leafs Morning Take. We’ll offer up a Leafs/Blues preview. Also, TSN’s Jamie McLennan will stop by the show, too.

You can subscribe to TheLeafsNation (TLN) YouTube channel HERE. Additionally, we’re available in podcast form, too —wherever you get your podcasts. While you’re at it, be sure to leave us a 5-star review!

Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/dar...ayer-for-player-type-moves-leafs-morning-take
 
Why Troy Stecher’s impact on Maple Leafs could be bigger than it seems

The Toronto Maple Leafs are going through a heavy slump at the moment, and while scooping a bottom-pair defenceman off of waivers is a far cry from what the team truly needs to get back into a rhythm, the claim of Troy Stecher could help bandage one of the wounds.

Stecher, 31, is an undersized right-handed defenceman who plays mobile and has strong defensive instincts. You look at this player on paper and there doesn’t seem to be an immediate fix, considering he’s on his seventh team in ten years and has never put up more than 24 points in a season, but for a team that’s currently down two of their three right-handed defencemen, Stecher could slow down the bleeding while the team is battling the injury bug, and round out their defensive corps nicely once everyone is back to full health.

“Obviously excited for a fresh start, seeing the team and how competitive they are and where they are in the standings,” Stecher told reporters after practice on Monday. “It kind of goes hand in hand with the way I play, a lot of motivation. “I have a chip on my shoulder and I think the team does as well.”

A player who is motivated and will leave it all out on the ice every shift is music to the ears of Leafs fans, even if he won’t be able to single-handedly win them games. Considering the team never lost more than three games in a row last season, with their current losing streak at five games, the bar is on the floor at the moment. Claiming Stecher puts them in a position where they won’t have to rely on players like Philippe Myers and Dakota Mermis for immediate relief when injuries inevitably happen. Plus, even if he’s not racking up goals and assists left and right, he’s a strong skater and has a good breakout pass, which is an area the Leafs have struggled mightily in this season.

With all due respect to Simon Benoit, who impressed with the Maple Leafs despite all the odds against him in 2023-24 after he was cut by the Anaheim Ducks, the Leafs probably don’t want him in their top-six at full health. He’s had his moments with the team, between his willingness to drop the gloves and his unprecedented overtime-winning goal in Game 3 against the Ottawa Senators, but overall, the experiment of having him on the bottom pair with Oliver Ekman-Larsson and requiring one of them to play on their off-side produced net-negative results.

But, if you slide Stecher in there, who spent much of the 2024-25 season skating with Darnell Nurse and letting him flourish offensively, there could be a natural fix. Ekman-Larsson gets to play his strong side with a defence-first, fearless partner who will do the dirty work and throw himself into corner battles and in front of shots. That leaves you with the versatility to experiment with different pairs in the top four. You could go with last season’s shutdown pair of Chris Tanev and Jake McCabe and hope Morgan Rielly and Brandon Carlo can find a groove, and if that doesn’t work, there are other combinations to be tested. At the end of the day, the Maple Leafs’ defensive corps at full health features two left-handed offence-first players, one left-handed two-way player, and three right-handed defence-first players. Having each player on their strong side alone could help them win a few extra games.

While the Maple Leafs as a whole are under the biggest microscope in sports at the moment, Stecher has nothing to lose. He spoke about where he gets his motivation from and kept things blunt about where his mindset was as he gets ready to debut for the Leafs.

“Where do you want me to start, my pro career or before that?” Stecher said to a room of laughs when asked when he developed a chip on his shoulder. “Being told ‘no’ my whole life, being a smaller guy, I’ve reached the NHL now and it’s my tenth year and seventh team. So, I’m just trying to kind of prove people wrong, and more than anything try to prove myself right.”

It’s easy to claim that the sky is falling during a five-game losing streak, especially for a team like Toronto that has been under more pressure than anyone to succeed. But the reality is that when you’re struggling like this, all it takes is one bounce to inject the team with some confidence and get the wheels turning in the right direction. Stecher isn’t going to save the season, nor should he be expected to, but he’ll be bringing a 110% effort to the team from the moment he suits up for a game, and the investment could pay off for them down the line.

“I just think it’s kind of the nature of the way things are going right now. We’re on a bit of a skid, but all it takes is one bounce to get back into the win column.”

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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/why-troy-stecher-impact-toronto-maple-leafs-bigger-seems
 
Instant Reaction: William Nylander scores goal of the season to end Maple Leafs’ losing streak

The Toronto Maple Leafs, finally, for the first time in what felt like forever, picked up two points with a win at home against the St. Louis Blues. And in terms of the way the win unfolded, it surely had to inspire the group after what’s been a horrendous stretch of games.

William Nylander batting the puck into his own net less than two minutes into the first period was about the most fitting and comedic way you could have asked for a game like this, but he would go on to make up for it later. A Jake McCabe changeup from the point and a filthy pass from Sammy Blais to set up Steven Lorentz gave the Leafs two goals in regulation, and despite the Blues tying it up in the second period and taking every possible measure on earth to keep the puck away from the Maple Leafs in overtime, Nylander was having none of it.

In overtime, John Tavares pinned the puck against the boards and drew all three Blues skaters over to him, which allowed him to kick the puck free to Morgan Rielly, who dished it to Nylander as he entered the zone. By then, the Blues defender had enough time to get across the ice and take on Nylander 1-on-1, to which he answered with a potential goal of the year candidate. Yeah, we’ll forget about that own goal early on, Willy.

Joseph Woll picked up his first win of the season and looked good doing it, stopping 27 of 29 shots for the .931 save percentage against his former team. He made a number of crucial saves including a dive across the crease to rob Jordan Kyrou of what could have been the game winning goal. In addition to Woll’s stellar play, Troy Stecher had himself a solid debut and gave Maple Leafs fans a much-needed breath of fresh air on the back end after enough defensive gaffes to last a lifetime throughout the losing streak.

The Leafs will host the Columbus Blue Jackets on Thursday and look to grab another win before they head out for a six-game road trip.

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Craig Berube says Matthew Knies missed game vs. Blues due to a ‘lingering issue’

It seemed like the Toronto Maple Leafs were about to hit rock bottom when the team announced an hour before their game against the St. Louis Blues that forward Matthew Knies would be out of the lineup with a lower-body injury. The team had lost five games in a row and had an injury list that was growing by the second, with seven players and most if not all of them in key roles on the shelf, but as it typically goes in Toronto, the Leafs came out and played a solid game, winning in overtime to snap the losing streak at five games.

Head coach Craig Berube said that Knies, 23, had been battling something and that he wasn’t sure about his status at morning skate.

“This morning, I wasn’t sure if he was going to be ready to play, so I told Sammy [Blais] to be on standby,” Berube told reporters after the Maple Leafs’ 3-2 win. “He [Knies] came in tonight and couldn’t go…he’s had a lingering issue for a while and it got worse today.”

Despite being down Knies, Auston Matthews, and five other players, the Maple Leafs managed to take a step in the right direction with a win over the Blues. The eventual game-winning play in overtime was started by John Tavares, who pinned the puck against the boards and drew all three Blues players over to him. The distraction allowed him to kick the puck free to Morgan Rielly, who set up William Nylander for what could be a goal of the year candidate.

"WHAT A PLAY! HOLY MACKINAW!"

NYLANDER OT WINNER vs Blues

🔊 @Bonsie1951 @Jim_Ralph pic.twitter.com/62SOmp4rnM

— Maple Leafs Hotstove (@LeafsNews) November 19, 2025

Berube, who has long been an appreciator of hard work along the boards and players doing the little things to create plays, unsurprisingly raved about Tavares’ effort on that goal following the game.

“I mentioned it to the team because that’s what he’s all about,” Berube told reporters. “That play there symbolizes John Tavares. 3-on-1, keeps the puck alive, Morgan gets in there quickly and makes a play, and Willy does what he does.”

The Leafs likely slept well on Tuesday night knowing their losing streak was over, but they’re going to need a lot more than one win to get back to a place they’re used to being at. That said, Berube talked about his team’s ability to overcome the injury bug and take the two points with hard work.

“It’s always nice to end the skid,” Berube said. “But when I look at the team and everything going on with injuries and everything, it could have been easy for our guys to be like ‘well, we’re all banged up, we got nobody’ but I didn’t get that at all tonight. And our guys competed really hard tonight. I’m proud of the way they competed and stuck together out there for the game.”

The Maple Leafs will be back in action on Thursday when they host the Columbus Blue Jackets.

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TABLE Fare + Social is a vibrant food hall in the heart of Toronto’s financial district,
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arena—perfect for pregame meals before tip-off. Open weekdays from 11am to 10pm,
TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
private terrace overlooking Toronto’s elevated park, guests enjoy stunning views
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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/craig-berube-says-matthew-knies-missed-game-blues-lingering-issue
 
Maple Leafs’ Joseph Woll grateful for ‘special’ first win of the season

It was a special night for Joseph Woll on Tuesday, as not only did he pick up his first win of the season, he beat his hometown St. Louis Blues for the first time in his NHL career.

Woll stopped 28 of 29 shots in front of the home crowd at Scotiabank Arena, and hundreds of family and friends watching back in Missouri. Woll admitted postgame to reporters that it felt extra special for it to come on his first win of the season.

“Yeah, pretty sweet,” Woll said. “Pretty cool games these first two games playing at United Center, and then playing against St. Louis. So, it’s special one.”

Woll takes nothing for granted in his young career. It’s been an interesting start for his 2025-26 season, and he’s quickly gone from a conditioning stint to get his legs back under him after a long layoff, to holding down the starter’s crease with Anthony Stolarz on the shelf. Regardless, Woll’s up for the challenge, he showed it against the Blues, and as soon as the horn sounded in victory, he jumped right into reflection mode.

“Pretty sweet. Pretty nice to win at home with the fans like that. I always try to look around and take it in, really, when we win like that, especially in overtime.”

Woll kept the Maple Leafs in the game and was a big reason the contest made it to overtime. That’s when John Tavares and William Nylander took over, as both veterans put on a show during the final shift of the game. Tavares held off three Blues’ defenders in the corner and bought himself time, and then made an exceptional area pass with his skates to find Morgan Rielly, who then slid it over to Nylander, and the rest is history.

“He’s a beast, John in the corner, and I was just kind of mesmerized watching Will. Fired me up, so it was pretty cool.”

It wasn’t all pretty for Nylander on Tuesday night, as he opened the game by batting the puck past Woll, to give the Blues a 1-0 lead on his own goal. It was a head-scratcher, as many were left wondering why Nylander tried to play the puck back towards his goal, so close in tight. Woll heard from him shortly after during a TV timeout.

“Not much, he made up for it, so we’re all square. One for one.”

Woll’s posted a .934 save percentage early on, which is a great sign for a Leafs’ team who could use some consistency in net. Woll’s expected to carry a heavy workload with Stolarz unavailable, so don’t be surprised to see him start on Thursday, when the Maple Leafs host the Columbus Blue Jackets.

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TABLE Fare + Social is a vibrant food hall in the heart of Toronto’s financial district,
offering a unique dining and social experience just steps from transit and the
arena—perfect for pregame meals before tip-off. Open weekdays from 11am to 10pm,
TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
private terrace overlooking Toronto’s elevated park, guests enjoy stunning views
alongside year-round programming that includes food tastings, cooking classes, live
music, and pop-up events designed to spark connection and creativity.
Follow along @Tablefood hall or tablefoodhall.com

Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-joseph-woll-grateful-first-win-season
 
Scott Laughton feeling energized ahead of return to Maple Leafs lineup

The Toronto Maple Leafs‘ injury list has started to look more like a grocery list over the past week or so, but they’ll have a little bit of relief when they host the Columbus Blue Jackets on Thursday. Forward Scott Laughton is expected to return to the lineup after suffering an injury in a home game against the Boston Bruins a couple of weeks ago.

Speaking to the media ahead of his return, Laughton talked about his energy and how he’s looking to feed off of linemates Easton Cowan and Steven Lorentz.

“We’ve chatted about it already a little bit this morning, I’m just going to find that again and continue to talk,” Laughton said when asked about his chemistry with Lorentz and Cowan from preseason. “I’ve been playing with Stevie [Lorentz] since I got here, Cowboy [Easton Cowan] has been playing with a lot of energy, and we’ve got to continue that.”

Laughton was at his best when playing alongside Lorentz down the stretch of last season and into the playoffs, and those two paired with Cowan provided some intrigue after a solid preseason. Obviously, they didn’t get to play with eachother after Laughton went down with an injury, but he said that he understands the job his line has to do.

“Read off each other and play with energy,” Laughton continued. “Play with speed, be good on the forecheck, kind of change momentum in games and keeping teams in the O-zone, things like that.”

Laughton missed the first month of the season after blocking a shot with his foot in preseason, and he was injured in just his second game back after taking a hit from Boston Bruins defenceman Nikita Zadorov. When asked about his reaction to the hit, he brushed it off and said he took more issue with some of the hits in the second game between the two teams.

“I honestly thought he was backing up when I took a peek,” Laughton explained. “He stepped up, I lost the puck a little bit and he’s 6-foot-7, so there’s going to be some contact there and he got the best of me. I had more of an issue with a couple of his other hits in Boston, but yeah, I thought it was a clean hit.”

Laughton was then asked if Zadorov had reached out to him at all following the hit.

“No, I wouldn’t really want him to, either.”

Laughton is no stranger to adversity in Toronto, first battling it with himself, and now he returns to the lineup at a time where the Leafs are expected to string some wins together after recently snapping a five-game winless streak on Tuesday night. Despite this, he’s feeling good and excited to return and contribute.

“I feel good about my game,” he said. “I feel good about where my energy is, my comfortability and everything like that. So, just need to get in here and get going a little bit, help these guys out.”

The Maple Leafs have one more game at home before they hit the road for a six-game trip away from Scotiabank Arena, and Laughton is ready to jump in and help swing the pendulum back in their favour.

“Those kinds of wins kind of bring you together throughout the season and can change the momentum and things like that, so it was a big win for us. We’ve got to keep it rolling here.”

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TABLE Fare + Social is a vibrant food hall in the heart of Toronto’s financial district,
offering a unique dining and social experience just steps from transit and the
arena—perfect for pregame meals before tip-off. Open weekdays from 11am to 10pm,
TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
private terrace overlooking Toronto’s elevated park, guests enjoy stunning views
alongside year-round programming that includes food tastings, cooking classes, live
music, and pop-up events designed to spark connection and creativity.
Follow along @Tablefood hall or tablefoodhall.com

Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/sco...gized-ahead-return-toronto-maple-leafs-lineup
 
Instant Reaction: Overtime blunder clouds over otherwise solid effort from Maple Leafs

Are we counting moral victories still? The Toronto Maple Leafs lost again, but for the second game in a row, they didn’t look bad. In fact, I’d go as far as to say they had a good game tonight and probably deserved better than the single point they got for an overtime loss. But alas.

I can pinpoint several players who had a great game for the Maple Leafs tonight. John Tavares looked vintage, assisting on Dakota Mermis’ first goal of the season and as a Maple Leaf and then tying the game in the third period. Easton Cowan looked as comfortable as a 20-year-old NHLer could, routinely getting shots on the top line with Tavares and William Nylander and setting up the former’s tying goal. And Scott Laughton showed how much the team was missing his presence both in the bottom six and on the penalty kill, generating some decent scoring chances and laying his body on the line for some crucial shot blocks near the end of the game.

All of this was undone by a simple giveaway in overtime by Max Domi. He was looking for Oliver Ekman-Larsson at the front of the net but it ended up right on Zach Werenski’s stick, who then found Adam Fantilli streaking down the boards to eventually ice the game. Fantilli, a noted Toronto boy who grew up cheering for Boston, gave twice the effort he usually does to beat ice his hometown team with two goals and an assist by the end of the night. Joseph Woll was good for a second straight game, too, stopping 27 of 30 shots and doing everything he could to keep the Leafs in the game.

The Blue Jackets have become a quiet thorn in the side of the Maple Leafs in the past few years, winning five of their last six games against Toronto. They don’t see each other all that often given that they’re in separate divisions, and nights like this render Toronto lucky that they don’t see each other more often.

Still, this is a game the Leafs can use to build positive momentum from despite the loss, which isn’t something that we’ve been able to say much this season.

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Craig Berube feeling encouraged about direction of Maple Leafs’ play despite overtime loss to Blue Jackets

The Toronto Maple Leafs have lost six of their past seven games, but one thing that they haven’t been able to say until the most recent game is that they deserved to win any of those games. It’s a moral victory, sure, but it’s also an indication that things might start to turn around soon.

Days after snapping their 5-game losing streak against the St. Louis Blues, the Leafs hosted the Columbus Blue Jackets and lost 3-2 in overtime despite creating chances all game and generally controlling pace of play for most of it. It was their last game ahead of a six-game road trip, and head coach Craig Berube believes the team built some positive momentum despite not getting the two points.

“I thought we played a pretty solid game all around,” Berube told reporters postgame on Thursday. “I thought guys worked and competed, you know, did a lot of good things. Overtime, you know. It’s the way it goes.”

While anybody in the room would have traded a solid individual performance for a win, there were several players who impressed. One of them was Easton Cowan, who set up John Tavares for the tying goal and earned several looks on the top line with Tavares and William Nylander when the team needed a boost offensively. Berube commented on Cowan’s progress and noted his improvement day by day.

“He’s taken some good steps from day one, and for me, it’s like a dog on a bone out there,” Berube said of Cowan. “Like, he just works and skates and sees the ice extremely well. He’s being a lot heavier on pucks and making good decisions with the puck. I thought he played a really good game tonight.”

Another player who didn’t appear on the scoresheet but re-established his importance to the team in his return to the lineup was Scott Laughton. The Maple Leafs’ deadline acquisition from last season missed the start of the year due to an injury after blocking a shot in preseason and then got injured on a high hit only two games into his return. He looked like he hadn’t skipped a beat on Thursday night, fearlessly throwing himself in front of shots and giving the penalty kill a huge boost, which Berube noted as well.

“I thought he was really good tonight,” Berube said. “Lot of energy, skated well, killed penalties, created some offence. He brings that tenacity every shift.”

The Maple Leafs will kick off their road trip with their first visit to the Bell Centre as they take on the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday night. They’re quickly moving out of the territory where they can count moral victories and are starting to feel the pressure to stack some points up, but Berube believes that the team is on the right track if they keep playing the way they did on Thursday.

“We’re defending a lot better. Tonight we needed to finish better. That’s really the story. But, you know, I think things are getting better and they’re going in a good direction now. We;ve just got to keep working on it, keep building, and get some healthy bodies back.”

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Maple Leafs’ 1st-quarter grades: John Tavares emerges as team MVP

Through 21 games, the Toronto Maple Leafs are in a drastically different position than they were a year ago. Toronto has assembled a 9-9-3 record through 21 games, sitting second-last in the Atlantic Division. At the same point last year, despite myriad injuries, the Maple Leafs were off to a 13-6-2 start, en route to capturing the first seed in the division. What a difference a year can make.

Here are the Maple Leafs’ first-quarter grades, and with that comes a quarterly reminder: grades are relative to preseason expectations and consider other factories such as injuries.

Simon Benoit: Benoit’s game seemingly reached an inflection point around March, but last year’s ascendant spring hasn’t carried over into the first quarter of the year. There are times where Benoit has been asked to operate as the team’s No. 4 defenceman due to injuries and he’s miscast in that role. It hasn’t been an altogether terrible season, but he’s ideally suited against bottom-six forwards and is doing his best to tread water at the moment. C

Sammy Blais
: A favourite of Craig Berube, Blais was brought into inject some toughness and some secondary scoring. Blais has recorded a goal and three points in seven games, but he hasn’t forced his way into a lineup facing several injuries either. It’ll be curious to see what his role turns into, as the Leafs eventually return to full strength. C

Brandon Carlo:
Carlo’s role is being litigated on an almost daily basis, and it’s been a tough start to the season for the veteran defenceman. You’ve heard ad nauseam that Carlo was traded for Fraser Minten and a 2026 first-round pick with top-five protection. We can’t evaluate him retroactively based on the trade package, that’s entirely unfair, but it’s become a talking point among the fan base. Carlo has allowed opponents to get to the net-front with relative ease, and has struggled to defend against the rush, while the Leafs control 45 percent of the expected goals when he’s on the ice at 5-on-5. There’s an expectation that he will pick up his game through the year. D

Easton Cowan:
Cowan has been one of the few bright spots this quarter. He’s not only earned his spot on the team, but he’s emerged as one of the Leafs’ 12-best forwards. Toronto sent Cowan to the AHL after 10 games, after he recorded a goal and four points, which seemed like a mistake, and it doesn’t appear that he’ll be heading back anytime soon. Cowan’s tenacity, hockey intelligence and competitiveness have been lauded by his teammates, he’s getting some first-line minutes, some reps on the power play and should stick in the NHL for the duration of the year. A-

Max Domi:
The baseline scouting report on Domi hasn’t changed: he’s a skilled playmaker, but his point production isn’t nearly good enough to outweigh his defensive lapses. Domi sports a -10 goal differential at 5-on-5 and some of his blunders have cost the team points, as evidenced by his overtime giveaway in Thursday’s loss to the Columbus Blue Jackets. D

Oliver Ekman-Larsson:
There’s a strong case to consider Ekman-Larsson as Toronto’s best defenceman. His rush defence has improved, he plays with physicality, he’s one of the few Leafs who regularly carry the puck out of the defensive zone, and he has the best underlying numbers of any Leafs’ defender, to go along with a plus-five goal differential at 5-on-5. Ekman-Larsson needs to cut down his turnovers, as does everyone on the Maple Leafs writ large. It hasn’t been an outstanding quarter, but he’s quietly been a bright spot. B

Dennis Hildeby:
Hildeby acquitted himself well in spot duty for the Maple Leafs, making four appearances, including two mid-game insertions. He’s not quite ready for the NHL on a regular basis, but Hildeby is showing improvement, even if he is a true AHL goalie at this time, but these designations don’t matter too much when you’re getting into games. C+

Calle Jarnkrok:
Jarnkrok started the year on fire, with goals in each of the first three games. He was listed as a healthy scratch shortly thereafter and hasn’t regained the excellent form he displayed throughout training camp. Berube placed Jarnkrok on the first line Thursday and his versatility remains an asset, but the grade here accounts for a dip in play and the scratches. C+

Dakota Joshua:
Joshua’s physicality is notable, but the point production hasn’t been good enough relative to expectations. He’s been deployed in third and fourth-line roles throughout the year, but there hasn’t been a standout game throughout the first quarter. Joshua appeared to be a clever add during the offseason, but he’s one of the new guys that haven’t delivered thus far. C-

Matthew Knies:
Knies is one of the NHL’s best players at 5-on-5 and should be in serious consideration for the United States’ Olympic team. He’s the definition of a modern power forward, with five goals and 22 points through 19 games. Knies has battled an injury throughout the past week, but he’s an emerging leader on the Maple Leafs, an essential part of the revamped core, and continues to improve in all facets of the game. A-

Scott Laughton:
Laughton’s leadership, toughness, shot-blocking and penalty-killing acumen are highly valued by the Maple Leafs, even when he’s not producing offensively. The 31-year-old has been sidelines with two separate injuries this season, and since he’s only played in three games, we have to render an incomplete grade, although he’s trending towards a B- overall. Incomplete

Steven Lorentz:
Lorentz brings speed and physicality to the bottom-six, but the Maple Leafs are losing the majority of his minutes on the ice. Through the first quarter, the eye test has been kinder to Lorentz than the stats page. He’s emerged as one of Berube’s favourites, and his positional versatility keeps him in the lineup, and now it’s incumbent upon him to establish the zone with regularity. C

Matias Maccelli:
Maccelli hasn’t met expectations thus far, even though he’s been given ample opportunity. At his best, Maccelli is a skilled playmaker who can augment a line with a star centre attached. At his worst, Maccelli is prone to turnovers, doesn’t track back well enough, and isn’t providing offence on a consistent basis. Pacing towards a 32-point season, this is no one’s idea of a bounce-back season. C

Auston Matthews:
Matthews started the year as one of the NHL’s premier shot creators and was producing at a star level, perhaps not at the stratospheric heights we’ve come to expect. It appeared that Matthews was finding his velocity and shot location with increased regularity, until he suffered a lower-body injury on November 11 that has kept him out of the lineup since. How Matthews responds to this injury will dictate his next grade, and perhaps the Maple Leafs’ season overall. B

Jake McCabe:
McCabe is Toronto’s best point-of-attack defender, and he earns points here for his toughness, leadership, physicality and willingness to stick up for his teammates. He’s also been exposed off the rush more than a few times, and has committed some awful turnovers that have been immediately punished throughout November. He’s making an active effort to contribute offence as well, while emerging as the team’s top defencemen amid a wave of injuries. It’s a tough grade to assign. C+

Bobby McMann:
McMann is prone to inconsistency, which makes him a difficult player to evaluate. At his best, McMann’s blazing speed compliments star players and he can get to the net with some underrated physicality. The problem is, McMann will go weeks without scoring, then will register points in five of six games, as he did from November 3-November 13. Consistency is the key for McMann, who occasionally shows flashes of greater potential. C

Dakota Mermis:
Mermis is doing what’s asked of him, playing a simple game that requires little flash. The journeyman scored his first NHL goal since February 2024 during Thursday’s loss, and it’ll be compelling to see how he develops with Troy Stecher as his partner through the next quarter. C+

Philippe Myers:
Myers is off to a disastrous start to the season, which necessitated the acquisition of Troy Stecher. He’s turning the puck over routinely in the defensive zone, isn’t pushing players away from the net-front, and hasn’t been able to build off a solid 2024-25 campaign where he earned Berube’s trust over the course of the year. Toronto sports a minus-seven differential at 5-on-5 when Myers is on the ice, and there aren’t any stats that outweigh the eye test, which reveals Myers as one of the NHL’s worst active defencemen. There is nowhere to go but up. F

William Nylander:
Nylander is one of the NHL’s best players, a dynamic scorer who can take over games in the span of a shift. There have been criticisms lobbied at Nylander’s efforts and consistency, but it often feels unfair for a player who is ranked 9th in NHL scoring prior to Friday’s slate. Nylander was in consideration for team MVP this quarter and it wouldn’t be a surprise if he wins that superlative next time. A-

Jacob Quillan:
Quillan’s speed was on full display during Tuesday’s win, but he slipped into the background on Thursday. We’re looking forward to seeing what Quillan does with increased opportunities over this quarter. Incomplete

Cayden Primeau
: Primeau played so poorly during his three games with the Maple Leafs that he was placed on waivers, even as the team were struggling to find two healthy goaltenders. F

Morgan Rielly:
Rielly was outstanding in the season-opening win against the Montreal Canadiens, and carried this form through the opening week of the season. It wore off, and Rielly’s struggles to defend the rush have often characterized the team’s descent into one of the NHL’s worst defensive teams. Rielly is getting into the rush, he’s producing points, he’s on the top power play unit, and is often the spokesperson for the defence corps when things go awry. He’s also winning a lot of his minutes, more than his critics would admit. C+

Nick Robertson
: Robertson cemented his place in the lineup and is playing the best hockey of his career. His tenacity and all-out aggression is paying off, he’s getting to his spots with frequency and has augmented Toronto’s potent attack. Although he’s a popular trade candidate, Robertson is finally living up to the promise he’s showed throughout his Leafs’ tenure, with five goals and 11 points in 20 games. B+

Nicolas Roy:
Acquired in the Mitch Marner trade, Roy was expected to contribute secondary scoring and some plus-defence, along with championship pedigree. Roy has underperformed as a scorer, with one goal and four points in 19 games. Toronto are losing possession with Roy on the ice, controlling 43 percent of the expected goals at 5-on-5. Roy is currently injured, but he’s not meeting expectations and needs a better second quarter. D

Troy Stecher:
Stecher is playing with a chip on his shoulder after being claimed off waivers from the Edmonton Oilers. He was arguably Toronto’s best player in Tuesday’s win against the St. Louis Blues, and his mobility offers a different look for the Maple Leafs’ blue line. Through two games, Stecher is trending in the right direction, but it’s not enough of a sample to offer an accurate grade. Incomplete

Anthony Stolarz:
We don’t want to add insult to injury, but Stolarz’s form completely fell off during the first quarter, before suffering a lingering injury that is worse than initially believed. Stolarz posted a 6-5-1 record in 13 appearances with an .884 save percentage. He was forced into a heavy workload to start the year, and now his health will be a major factor in how the next quarter goes. C-

Chris Tanev:
Tanev is a fearless player and one of the NHL’s premier shot-blockers. Last year, Tanev was Toronto’s best defenceman but the 35-year-old was quietly off to an underwhelming start, before suffering an upper-body injury on November 2. All that matters at this point is a speedy recovery. C+

John Tavares:
Tavares is the Maple Leafs’ MVP through the first quarter. William Nylander warranted some light discussion, but Tavares won this superlative handily, with 12 goals and 27 points in 21 games. Tavares’ exceptional hockey intelligence and scoring ability are being paired with his relentless drive to win. He ranks second in 5-on-5 points in the NHL, trailing only Nathan MacKinnon prior to Friday’s games, and should be in consideration for Canada’s Olympic team. It’s been a tremendous start for Tavares, one of the all-time great Leafs. A+

Joseph Woll:
Woll rejoined the Maple Leafs from a personal leave of absence on October 24. He’s played three games, posting a .923 save percentage with a 1-1-1 record. We’re not going to hold Woll’s absence against him in our grade, and he’s trending positively for a Leafs team that desperately needs stellar goaltending to right the ship. B

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arena—perfect for pregame meals before tip-off. Open weekdays from 11am to 10pm,
TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
private terrace overlooking Toronto’s elevated park, guests enjoy stunning views
alongside year-round programming that includes food tastings, cooking classes, live
music, and pop-up events designed to spark connection and creativity.
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Why Brad Lambert is a smart long-term option for Maple Leafs to consider

As long as the Toronto Maple Leafs are struggling and the trade markets are limited, a case will need to be made for and against every interesting player that hits the trade market. Brad Lambert is one of those players. Lambert was a late first-round pick by the Winnipeg Jets in 2022, after sliding a bit in the rankings due to a tough 2021-22 season.

Lambert had a strong AHL rookie campaign, but it seems like frustration set in last year when that initial success didn’t lead to a spot on the Jets. His numbers declined and now in his third year in North America and not being an NHL regular, Lambert is pleading for a change of scenery and depending on the price tag, the Leafs should consider being that landing spot. Just ten games into his NHL career, Lambert has a goal and two assists to his name, not an unexpected total for someone who has only just dipped his toes into the NHL.

The drop of in production in his second AHL season comes with an important caveat as well. Brad Lambert was still the second highest point producer on the Manitoba Moose. His 35 points put him just behind Mason Shaw’s 37 points, and while you’d hope that Brad Lambert could have prevent some of the decline, the Moose had the second worst record in the AHL last season and the lowest goals for total. Asking a 20-year-old to fix that might have been asking too much.

For the Leafs getting younger is a big positive and for a club that has been short on draft picks and dealt a number of their prospects, having someone with higher end potential like Lambert seems like a plus. He’s a strong skater and a capable puck carrier, both areas the Leafs could stand to improve in. Lambert might end up being another Nick Robertson-type situation for the Maple Leafs, but that is meant as a positive thing. Much like Robertson, if Lambert is given opportunities to play his game, there is the potential for him to be an affordable asset for the club to comes in at a fairly friendly price point.

And like Robertson, and Easton Cowan, a bit of a grace period for Lambert to acclimate himself to the NHL needs to be considered and that might be the biggest deterrent for the Maple Leafs who are very much trying to sell a win now mentality and have a Coach and GM that might feel their job security at risk if they don’t attempt to win now. The motivation to be shortsighted might prevent the Leafs from doing the right thing.

At the same time, a mystery box player might be the best player that comes available. Lambert, like other youthful targets like Othmann and Chinakhov has potential going for them and upside that comes through development. When you already know you aren’t going to get much more than underwhelming results from other potential bottom six forwards in the trade market, there should be some appeal in looking at a young player who might deliver similar results now and push for a top six role in twelve months.

There is also some appeal in dealing with Winnipeg, a team that is far more likely to consider roster players as return for youth than other clubs around the league. They are still very much trying to be competitive now and have the geographic disadvantage of not always being able to attract NHL talent via free agency.

The Leafs have an opportunity to explore a youth movement while not losing much of a step when it comes to their current competitiveness, and while it will ultimately come down to what the Winnipeg Jets are looking for as a return here, this seems like something that Brad “in on everything” Treliving needs to commit some extra time to exploring.

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Instant Reaction: Maple Leafs embarrass themselves in loss to Canadiens

Two division rivals, two of the most historic franchises in the NHL, two teams coming into a Hockey Night in Canada matchup having battled serious struggles lately. The Leafs were 1-4-2 in their last seven games heading into the game and the Canadiens had lost five in a row. The result? An energized Canadiens team that showed up in front of their home crowd and a feeble Toronto Maple Leafs team that crumpled as soon as they allowed the first goal of the game, with the Canadiens cruising to a 5-2 win over the Leafs.

The Leafs are an injured hockey team right now, and nobody will deny that. They had shown signs of life in their last couple of games despite not always having the result reflect it, but going down 4-0 by midway through the second period is inexcusable when you’re in the position of the Maple Leafs, as Martin St. Louis would likely say about the Habs had it happened the other way.

Joseph Woll was pulled after allowing four goals on 25 shots, but it was far from his fault. He may want a couple of the goals he allowed back, but the team seemingly stopped skating after the Canadiens scored their first goal. The second period was even worse, as it’s typically been this season, to the point where the Leafs had a pathetically low 9% expected goals rating (xG). Whether you’re an analytics fan or not, you can acknowledge that hovering around a 0% chance to score any goals is pretty less than ideal.

The Leafs are at a point now where they’re going to have to decide if they’re willing to go the distance to prove that they’re still a playoff team, let alone a Cup contender. The Atlantic Division, and quite frankly, the Eastern Conference are as wide open as they’ve ever been, and to expect the other teams to falter and gift wrap them a spot in the Top 3 might as well be a tanking strategy.

The injuries haven’t helped at all, but they didn’t perform well enough while they were healthy to give themselves the benefit of the doubt. The ball is in their court, and with pressure mounting higher each game and five straight road games ahead of them, they’re running out of time to figure out what kind of team they are.

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Maple Leafs and the challenges of a ‘roster for roster’ trade

During his quarterly media availability on Tuesday, Brad Treliving alluded to the types of trades the Toronto Maple Leafs would be looking at. This notion was previously floated by NHL insiders Elliotte Friedman and Darren Dreger as well, and is focused around the Maple Leafs making “hockey trades” of players on their roster for a player on another team’s roster. Pure hockey trades is a bit of rarity in the NHL but at least in theory, with the rising salary cap taking the challenge out of re-signing free agents, there is the potential to see more of this. For now the read on ‘roster-for-roster trades’ is simply scraps for scraps.

The Leafs have a lot of those players, but finding other players who could use a fresh start that could benefit the tea is the challenge.

From the Leafs perspective, the fresh start seekers start with:

  • Max Domi, a streaky offensive option that could fit on a team short on centre depth and in the need of a playmaker a middle six option. He’d work well with an offence first coach who believes that the team can outscore defensive gaps
  • Brandon Carlo, a strong stay-at-home complimentary option to a star left shot defenceman. Rielly is too much of a defensive liability for Carlo to cover off the level of talent the duo is expected to face, but with a two-way defensive partner, Carlo would potentially look better and be an important penalty killer as well.

Beyond that duo, Bobby McMann, Calle Jarnkrok, Nicolas Roy, Scott Laughton, Dakota Joshua, Simon Benoit, and Oliver Ekman-Larsson are players the Maple Leafs should be testing the waters on. Given the Maple Leafs’ struggles, giving up on youthful players on their roster like Maccelli and Robertson seems ill-advised, and the rest of the Leafs group either carries a no movement clause or the Maple Leafs should be reluctant to move on from them.

When it comes to what the Leafs need to be looking for at this point, there is a lot they can be open to and a big part of what is needed at this point is addition by subtraction. Freeing the Leafs of multiyear commitments to Domi, Joshua, and Ekman-Larsson would be ways to shed future roster challenges.

Finding youth and speed in the trade market, at any position should be the priority and youth (especially on defence) will probably be the biggest challenge for the Leafs to find. Beyond that, players that can quickly move the puck, two-way forwards, as well as significant defensive upgrades are the priority.

Players like Brennan Othmann and Yegor Chinakhov, who are on The Athletic’s trade board, would make interesting youthful targets for the Maple Leafs, while Alex Tuch, Mario Ferraro, and Jordan Kyrou are seemingly more expensive options but are capable of addressing both an immediate and future need.

In addition to Othmann and Chinakhov, Brad Lambert of the Winnipeg Jets is seeking a new opportunity and both his price and skill set shouldn’t be lost on the Maple Leafs.

The curious option on that trade list might be Steven Stamkos, who depending on how motivated the Predators are to move his salary could be a buy low target that doesn’t so much address the need for speed, two-way play, or youth, but has an interesting high risk/high reward element to him. The catch here being that the Predators, like a lot of the teams with players listed on the trade board are a lot more motivated to acquire futures than roster players.

The trade market seems as limited as ever and the reality of the Leafs results so far clearly make it so that giving up futures would be a bad idea as well as being a team that isn’t just one player away from being a contender. At the same time, the past summer demonstrated that improving the team via trades and free agency in the offseason isn’t as easy as it used to be.

Looking for potential right fits and casting off the bad fits needs to be more of an around the year endeavor and if roster player for roster player deals aren’t viable, dealing a roster player for futures and using those futures to acquire a roster player make sense. The Rangers did this well last season and should be the blueprint for Brad Treliving this year. Toronto has depth at their disposal, maybe not top of the roster depth, but depth. Using it in the interim while considering multiple transactions seems like the smarter play rather than seeking a perfect player for player fit.

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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/toronto-maple-leafs-challenges-roster-for-roster-trade
 
John Tavares brushes off Maple Leafs’ injury woes after loss vs. Canadiens: ‘There’s no excuses’

The Toronto Maple Leafs seem to be operating on a pattern of one step forward, several steps back. After snapping a five-game winless streak with a 3-2 overtime win against the St. Louis Blues on Tuesday night, the Leafs dropped their next game on Thursday night against the Columbus Blue Jackets and followed it up with a worse effort against their rival Montreal Canadiens.

While the Blue Jackets loss was painful, the Leafs dominated possession for a good chunk of that game and it was the first game in a while where you could make the argument that they didn’t deserve to lose. Against Montreal, however, it was a different story. The moment the Leafs allowed a goal against, they seemingly folded and let the Canadiens take full control of the game.

John Tavares was asked following the game how much of an impact the team’s injuries has had on the team and said that it doesn’t excuse the way the team has been playing.

“There’s no excuses,” Tavares said. “I think we believe we have a very deep team, obviously missing some really good key players, but I think that’s when you want to rely on your game and the identity you build, and we’re still having that come together consistently. So, we gotta continue to stay with it and work through it.”

The Leafs are currently down Auston Matthews, Chris Tanev, Matthew Knies, Anthony Stolarz, Brandon Carlo, and Nicolas Roy. It’s no secret that if you take away two, arguably three of the team’s best players, two solid complementary players and their starting goalie, the results will be ugly now and then, which Tavares acknowledged but said that the rest of the team needs to do a better job of keeping things moving until they reach full health.

“As we get guys back, obviously it will be good for our group, but whatever the case is, we have the capability of being more consistent and doing what we need to do to earn results.”

The Leafs pulled goaltender Joseph Woll after he allowed four goals on 25 shots, but everybody agreed following the game that it was more of a message to the team rather than an indictment of Woll’s play.

“As a group, that’s the ultimate one on us when you leave your goalie out to dry,” Tavares said of Woll. “He’s giving you everything he’s got, keeping you in the game, and you’re not executing well enough to turn the game around and get us back in it to give him a break and provide some run support.”

The Maple Leafs will have a much-needed three-day break from games before they return to action on Wednesday against the Columbus Blue Jackets, where they’ll look to avoid a season sweep at their hands.

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offering a unique dining and social experience just steps from transit and the
arena—perfect for pregame meals before tip-off. Open weekdays from 11am to 10pm,
TABLE serves up morning treats, creative eats, and lively after-work events. With a
private terrace overlooking Toronto’s elevated park, guests enjoy stunning views
alongside year-round programming that includes food tastings, cooking classes, live
music, and pop-up events designed to spark connection and creativity.
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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/john-tavares-brushes-toronto-maple-leafs-injury-woes-loss-canadiens
 
Leafs practice notes: Roy fully participates, Matthews, Knies join skills session, ‘high-minute players’ off the ice

It’s been a turbulent time for the Toronto Maple Leafs, who are sitting dead last in the Eastern Conference as of Monday. Toronto resumed practicing at the Ford Performance Centre on Monday, with two days between its next contest against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Wednesday.

Toronto’s ‘high-minute’ players did not participate in the formal session, taking part in an off-ice workout Monday morning. Jake McCabe was among the players who did not participate in Monday’s practice. McCabe suffered an upper-body injury during Saturday’s loss to the Montreal Canadiens and did not return to the contest.

Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube said that McCabe is ‘fine’ and could be an option for Wednesday’s game, via David Alter of The Hockey News.

Nicolas Roy was a full participant for the first time since sustaining an upper-body injury. It was Roy’s first action since playing in a November 15 loss against the Chicago Blackhawks. Roy has missed the Leafs’ past three games as a result of the injury. The 28-year-old recorded a goal and four points in 19 games this season.

Auston Matthews and Matthew Knies took part in a skills and development session. Matthews skated throughout last week, but hasn’t played since sustaining a lower-body injury against the Boston Bruins on November 11. Knies also skated last week, but hasn’t played since November 15 due to a lingering lower-body injury.

Matthews, Knies and Roy’s status are to be determined for Wednesday’s game.

Chris Tanev and Marshall Rifai both skated ahead of practice. Tanev hasn’t played since suffering an upper-body injury against the Philadelphia Flyers on November 2 and is out indefinitely. The veteran defenceman resumed skating on November 8. Rifai underwent wrist surgery in September, after suffering an injury during the preseason against the Montreal Canadiens.

It’s been a brutal stretch for the Maple Leafs, sporting a 9-10-3 record ahead of Wednesday’s game. Berube has struggled to find the ideal line combinations amid several injuries. Maple Leafs general manager Brad Treliving provided Berube with a vote of confidence at the quarterly press conference on November 18, but this assurance may be temporary as the losses continue to pile up.

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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/tor...kills-session-high-minute-players-off-the-ice
 
Mike Johnson calls for a system shake-up as Leafs spiral: Leafs Morning Take

Grim times in Leafs Nation.

Thanks to Buffalo’s victory over Carolina on Sunday, the Toronto Maple Leafs find themselves in dead last in the Eastern Conference.

Yeah, it’s ugly.

Obviously, that’s where the conversation started on the Monday edition of Leafs Morning Take. Right off the bat, Jay Rosehill delivered another of his infamous rants where he questioned the team’s compete level, pride, and competitiveness. Simply put, that wasn’t good enough in Montreal. Lose with dignity —at least. They had NOTHING.

Funny enough, Toronto played looked really good for the first seven or eight minutes to start the game, but after that, it was all Habs. It’s like the Leafs just quit on the game. They had no pushback or resolve, and quite frankly, they got bullied by their rivals. Not good. Frankly, Joseph Woll wasn’t the reason they lost. That was a mercy pull. The team in front of him was not playing. Again, these are issues that have been plaguing this organization for the better part of the past decade. Toronto’s now dropped seven of their last eight outings (1-5-2). On top of that, they fell to 1-6-0 away from Scotiabank Arena. Lucky for them, the next five games will take place on the road. Good luck with that.

After that, TSN’s Mike Johnson dropped by the show to offer up some perspective. He doesn’t feel this is rock bottom. In fact, he brought up a good point: Wasn’t the Carolina game supposed to be rock bottom? At any rate, Johnny gave his thoughts on Saturday night’s debacle, the lack of response, and ultimately, where he thinks the Leafs go from here. Additionally, he talked about all the injuries and whether it’s simple to use those as excuses. Over and above all that, the conversation concluded with some Berube talk. At this point, if this persists, it really feels like the Leafs are trending towards getting another coach canned.

Lastly, we talked about news from practice. It sounds like Matthews, Knies, and Roy are getting closer to returning, so that’s good. The Leafs will be in Columbus on Wednesday night before their back-to-back in Washington and Pittsburgh, respectively, on Friday and Saturday. This is IN ONE, folks.

You won’t want to miss the Tuesday edition of Leafs Morning Take. In addition to starting to look ahead to Wednesday night’s tilt in Columbus, we’re expected to be joined by projected lottery pick Keaton Verhoeff.

You can subscribe to TheLeafsNation (TLN) YouTube channel HERE. Additionally, we’re available in podcast form, too —wherever you get your podcasts. While you’re at it, be sure to leave us a 5-star review!

Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/mik...m-shake-up-as-leafs-spiral-leafs-morning-take
 
John Tavares eager for opportunity to change Maple Leafs’ season during road trip

Toronto Maple Leafs forward John Tavares believes there is a good chance the team can get their season back on track as they head out on their five-game road trip.

While the trip technically commenced on Saturday, the team returned to Toronto to spend a few days resting and practicing before heading out of town for the next few weeks, facing off against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Wednesday. It won’t be easy given that the team currently sits in last place in the Eastern Conference, but head coach Craig Berube tried to preach positivity at the end of practice by telling the players that the glass is half-full amidst their struggles.

“ There’s a lot of hockey to be played, and just kind of gotta stay with it,” Tavares said to reporters after practice. “It’s a great opportunity on this road trip to do some good things, earn some results, and put ourselves in a good spot. So  I’m just looking forward to the challenge tomorrow. You’re obviously aware of the length of this trip and what it entails, but just staying focused on tomorrow and playing a good hockey game and doing what we can to get a win.”

When asked about the mood inside the dressing room while the team is in the midst of a stretch of losing seven of their last eight games, Tavares believes that the team’s spirits remain high. One way that it can become a reality is getting more quality starts from Joseph Woll, who has not missed a step after returning from a leave of absence.

“He’s been phenomenal,” Tavares said of Woll. “ He takes such good care of himself, extremely fit. Attention to detail and his approach and the work that he puts in on himself in a lot of areas, and how he sees the game and prepares as he does.  He’s been massive for us and through the games here has really given us a chance where we haven’t really been able to sustain the momentum that we would like or grab the game back at times.”

If the Leafs wish to get things clicking again, it will start by playing a stronger overall game and handling the momentum swings better than they have before. That means paying attention to the finer details, having collective buy-in for the forwards to support the defencemen, and having a high alert in their own zone to put out fires. Tavares and William Nylander had an extended conversation with Berube before the start of practice

“ We’re just talking about some of our details defensively,” Tavares said. “ Things that we’re working on, we’re continuing to try to sharpen up, and wanna just wanna make sure that you understand as clearly as you can through our meetings and through video and all those sorts of things.  So just making sure we’re ready to go as we work on things today.”

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Source: https://theleafsnation.com/news/joh...y-change-toronto-maple-leafs-season-road-trip
 
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