
The Toronto Maple Leafs may be out of the playoffs, but the organization itself suddenly feels busier than ever. That’s usually what happens after another disappointing spring in Toronto. Attention quickly shifts from what went wrong to what comes next, and there are a lot of moving parts around the team.
The coaching search is underway, trade speculation is already beginning, and down on the farm, the American Hockey League (AHL) Toronto Marlies are putting together a pretty impressive playoff run of their own.
For about 35 minutes Thursday night, this looked like it might be the Cleveland Monsters’ game. The Marlies were flat early, down 2-0 on the road, and the Monsters had their own building going. Then, almost out of nowhere, Toronto found another gear and never looked back. Five unanswered goals later, the Marlies skated away with a huge 5-2 win to open the North Division Final.
The comeback really started with Easton Cowan, who continues to look like a player who rises when the games get bigger. His late second-period power-play goal gave Toronto life, and then Marshall Rifai scored with just 6.3 seconds left in the period to completely change the mood of the game. Early in the third, Alex Nylander buried the go-ahead goal, and from there the Marlies looked confident, fast, and suddenly in total control.
There were a lot of strong performances for the Marlies. Ryan Tverberg added another playoff goal, Artur Akhtyamov made 32 saves and looked calm under pressure, and Bo Groulx put together a three-point night. The interesting thing about this Marlies group is that they don’t seem to panic. They’re young in some spots, but there’s a resilience to them that good playoff teams usually have.
Cleveland will push back in Game 2, but Toronto already grabbed the hardest thing to get in a playoff series — a road win to steal home-ice advantage.
There’s starting to be a very real connection between Manny Malhotra and the Toronto Maple Leafs coaching vacancy. Elliotte Friedman mentioned on Sportsnet’s The FAN Hockey Show that the Maple Leafs are interested in talking to Malhotra, which makes sense when you look at the direction the organization seems to be heading.
Malhotra already knows Toronto well. He spent four seasons as an assistant coach under Sheldon Keefe before heading to Abbotsford, where he quickly built a strong reputation as a head coach and won a Calder Cup. Around the league, he’s viewed as one of the more interesting young coaching names because players seem to genuinely connect with him. He also brings nearly 1,000 NHL games of experience, and players listen differently to coaches who’ve actually lived it.
What makes this interesting is that it feels like the kind of move John Chayka might want to make. Malhotra represents a younger, more modern coaching approach while still understanding the pressure cooker that is Toronto hockey. He’s familiar with the organization, but he’s not completely tied to the old regime either. That balance probably matters right now. The Maple Leafs don’t need a total teardown behind the bench. They need a coach who can modernize things without making the entire room feel like it’s starting from zero again.
One of the more interesting names now being connected to Toronto is veteran center Vincent Trocheck. According to TSN’s Darren Dreger, the Maple Leafs are among the teams showing interest in the New York Rangers forward as the Rangers reportedly explore ways to move his contract. That makes this worth paying attention to, because Trocheck feels like the kind of player teams suddenly value more once the playoffs expose what they’re missing.
It would be easy to see why Toronto might be intrigued. Trocheck is one of those players coaches tend to trust. He plays hard, wins puck battles, kills penalties, chips in offence, and annoys the other team for 200 feet. The Maple Leafs have chased skill and finesse, but the conversation circles back to the same thing: they need more players who are difficult to play against. Trocheck has built an entire career around being that guy.
The contract is the complicated part. Trocheck is 32 years old and still has three years left on his deal at a $5.625 million cap hit. That should be doable for a Maple Leafs team trying to manage every dollar carefully. He put up 53 points in 67 games this season and finished near the top of the Rangers in scoring, so this isn’t some washed-up veteran hanging on for dear life. If New York is truly motivated to move him, and there are rumours that they are, Toronto could see this as a chance to add some edge and playoff-style grit the roster has lacked.
There are clearly going to be changes this summer, but the more interesting part is figuring out what kind of change Toronto actually wants. Do the Maple Leafs double down on skill and hope a different coach unlocks another level? Or do they finally lean harder into becoming a heavier, more difficult team to play against over an 82-game season and four playoff rounds?
Right now, it feels like the organization is trying to thread the needle between those two ideas. The Marlies are developing a few younger players, and a coach like Malhotra would represent a more modern but demanding approach. Could a player like Trocheck signal that Toronto understands playoff hockey still requires sandpaper, structure, and emotional durability?
The direction of the conversation around the Maple Leafs suddenly feels different from what it did when the season ended. And, after another frustrating ending, different isn’t the worst thing in the world.
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