logo
The Maple Leafs won't replace Brendan Shanahan. So it's up to Brad Treliving to correct their fatal error

The Maple Leafs won't replace Brendan Shanahan. So it's up to Brad Treliving to correct their fatal error

Toronto Star25-05-2025

It's easy enough to rhyme off the organizational sins that led to Friday's Maple Leafs press conference that explained the firing of team president Brendan Shanahan.
On Shanahan's 11-year watch, the Leafs handed over the franchise to a rookie general manager and a rookie coach; traded the fiery Nazem Kadri for lesser pieces; lost the indispensable Zach Hyman for nothing to free agency; and allowed Shanahan's relationship with GM Kyle Dubas to erode to the point that Dubas pulled a backstabbing power play that required his inconvenient firing in the crucial summer of 2023, this with the team in obvious need of a roster shakeup and Mitch Marner's trade protection about to kick in. Beyond all that, the Leafs never advanced beyond the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.
It's an ugly inventory that overshadows a lot of the good Shanahan did for a franchise that was lost at sea when he arrived.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Keith Pelley doesn't plan on hiring someone to replace Brendan Shanahan after it was announced the Hockey Hall of Famer's contract won't be renewed. Pelley said he has the utmost confidence in general manager Brad Treliving and head coach Craig Berube, adding the team has all the resources it needs to win championships. (May 23, 2025 / The Canadian Press)
But you can make the case Shanahan's biggest error was taking the wrong side of a timeless nature-versus-nurture debate. Are big-game players born or made? Can the lessons of repeated failure create playoff-worthy 'dawgs,' to use the word Kadri recently popularized in a brilliant bit of social-media tsk-tsking at the Colorado Avalanche for trading away a clutch-time dominator named Mikko Rantanen.
Through the years as the Leafs' record of playoff futility got uglier and uglier, Shanahan essentially doubled and tripled and quadrupled down on the idea that his Core Four players could change their essence. Shanahan made a bet that with the help of world-class sports psychology, and the mentorship of veteran teammates and the lessons of losses, the Leafs could eventually train their best players to have the growl of playoff pit bulls.
Alas, when the lights have been brightest, the highest paid Leafs mostly performed more like lapdogs.
What the Leafs should do about that now that Shanahan is gone is anyone's guess. But MLSE CEO Keith Pelley, on the job for a little more than a year, made two things clear on Friday. For one, the franchise's standards are higher than the low bar Shanahan set for more than a decade.
'Make no mistake about it, making the playoffs and winning rounds is not our aspirational goal,' Pelley said. 'Our goal is to win the Stanley Cup.'
For another, the Leafs are GM Brad Treliving's team now. There are no plans to replace Shanahan. There are also no easy solutions to fix the core issue Shanahan allowed to fester: the big-game malaise of an entitled team whose captain has never scored a goal in a winner-take-all loss.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
Pelley didn't claim to have any answers. As much as he said he would work closely with Treliving and coach Craig Berube, he acknowledged the hockey decisions will lie with the hockey men. But Pelley did take a moment to quash the idea that the pressure created by Toronto's fans and media is at the heart of the team's non-performance — a notion put forth most recently by members of the Florida chapter of the NHL players' union.
'Pressure is a privilege,' Pelley said Friday. 'I respect, understand and appreciate (the fans') disappointment in the way their season ended. I thank them for it, the way that they've invested in the team … Winning is the only thing that matters.'
Give Pelley credit for having the market savvy to understand that fans are to be honoured. It's OK for players to label the chatter around the team derisively as outside noise. But considering the Shanaplan era began with Salute-gate, a player-driven eff-you to Leafs fans that marred Dion Phaneuf's captaincy, it's a fine line between staying in your bubble and snubbing the people who inject the passion and the cash into the operation.
Pelley said he'd sat down to dinner with Berube on Thursday and called him an 'incredible asset' — implying Berube might lend insight as Treliving partakes in the task of team building. A coach, of course, is only an asset if his GM respects his counsel. There's no reason to believe that respect doesn't exist. But coach-GM relationships can be tricky if the coach thinks he's co-GM; let's not forget Mike Babcock's adventures in occasionally burying Dubas acquisitions in what amounted to a territorial flex.
Now we'll see how Treliving sees this team. If Shanahan essentially tied Treliving's hands behind his back, famously calling the Core Four to assure them their positions in Leafland were safe in the wake of the Dubas's firing in 2023, Treliving has options — albeit, thanks to Shanahan's stubbornness, not wholly attractive ones. Letting impending free-agents Marner and/or John Tavares leave for their salary-cap space is on the list.
Pelley was complimentary of Treliving's buoying of Toronto's goaltending and defence.
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW
'I think we've made strides,' he said more than once.
And he was deferential to Berube's possession of a Stanley Cup ring.
'Chief changed the culture,' Pelley said.
But neither Treliving's roster building nor Berube's influence changed the end result: the seventh loss in seven winner-take-all-games in the Shanaplan era.
If you don't have dawgs, what do you do? Treliving and Berube are on the clock to find this team some snarl.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NHL free agency frenzy: Salary cap jump fuels an unpredictable market
NHL free agency frenzy: Salary cap jump fuels an unpredictable market

Toronto Star

time2 hours ago

  • Toronto Star

NHL free agency frenzy: Salary cap jump fuels an unpredictable market

NHL teams have a whole lot of money to spend in free agency with the salary cap getting the biggest increase in its existence, and a bunch of players will cash in when the clock strikes noon on Tuesday. The cap is jumping $7.5 million from $88 million to $95.5 million, with that number set to exceed $100 million a year from now. Already back-to-back Stanley Cup-champion Florida re-signed playoff MVP Sam Bennett, and 100-point scorer Mitch Marner also could be locked up long term before hitting the market.

NHL free agency frenzy: Salary cap jump fuels an unpredictable market
NHL free agency frenzy: Salary cap jump fuels an unpredictable market

Winnipeg Free Press

time4 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

NHL free agency frenzy: Salary cap jump fuels an unpredictable market

NHL teams have a whole lot of money to spend in free agency with the salary cap getting the biggest increase in its existence, and a bunch of players will cash in when the clock strikes noon on Tuesday. The cap is jumping $7.5 million from $88 million to $95.5 million, with that number set to exceed $100 million a year from now. Already back-to-back Stanley Cup-champion Florida re-signed playoff MVP Sam Bennett, and 100-point scorer Mitch Marner also could be locked up long term before hitting the market. That sets the stage for an unpredictable free agent period, with a lack of franchise-changing talent available but plenty of competition around the league, from rivals challenging the Panthers' crown and teams trying to just make the playoffs to those looking to make the leap sometime in the coming years. 'I think it'll be busy,' San Jose general manager Mike Grier said. 'You have some teams that are coming out of their rebuild. You got some teams that want to take the next step as far as playoffs-wise, stuff like that. And you have maybe a situation where it's not the strongest free agent class. So, I think you have to kind of combine all these things with the cap going up.' Who's available? Marner would be the headliner, leaving Toronto for a change of scenery after nearly a decade of regular season success mixed with playoff futility. He's coming off setting career highs with 75 assists and 102 points but also has just 13 goals to show for 70 career postseason games, and the Vegas Golden Knights could acquire the 28-year-old's rights from the Maple Leafs and sign him before anyone else gets the chance. Beyond him, Mikael Granlund was the highest-producing player in 2024-25 with 66 points, and Nikolaj Ehlers averaged 0.91 game. Florida could re-sign Brad Marchand and/or Aaron Ekblad to aid in the three-peat bid, with one of them possibly departing, and Detroit GM Steve Yzerman still hopes to bring back Patrick Kane. Ehlers, fellow winger Brock Boeser and defensemen Vladislav Gavrikov and Ivan Provorov could be among the highest earners in a free agent class that was weakened by so many stars re-upping ahead of time. 'Anybody can go look at the list of potential free agents and see there aren't that many and players that you would think will have an impact,' Yzerman said Saturday. 'There are very few this year, for whatever reason.' Who's paying? Do not figure Tampa Bay, with all its core players under contract, will be involved. 'I do expect us to be quiet,' two-time Cup-winning Lightning GM Julien BriseBois said. 'I want to manage expectations. I don't expect anything from us — certainly nothing major.' Same for the Panthers, who have to fill out some spots but have already built a consistent winner around Matthew Tkachuk, Aleksander Barkov and Sam Reinhart. Tons of teams in the Eastern Conference are trying to chase them down, while the West is wide open from Dallas and Colorado to two-time defending conference champion Edmonton looking to improve. Grier's Sharks, the Anaheim Ducks and Columbus Blue Jackets have the most cap space available. Blue Jackets GM Don Waddell said he and his counterparts are well aware of the cap going up, joking that just about every agent he talks to brings it up. 'There's more money in the market, obviously, this year with the cap going up like it is, and it's going to continue over the next multiple years the way the cap is structured right now,' Waddell said. It looked like Utah would be a major factor, and then the Mammoth made their big splash trading for and signing young, high-scoring winger JJ Peterka from Buffalo. They're trying to make the playoffs in their second season in Salt Lake City without hurting the long-term future prospects of competing for a championship. 'We do have to be smart about it,' GM Bill Armstrong said. 'You see those teams last year that they won the summer. They crushed it. They didn't win the winter.' What's the landscape? Connor McDavid, the undisputed best hockey player on the planet, is eligible to sign an extension with the Oilers this summer. What he makes could set the bar for the rest of the league. Until that happens, it's anyone's guess what the prices will be at various roles and ages. 'It feels like you call an agent, he tells you, 'This is where we're at,' and so, OK. That's the number,' Washington GM Chris Patrick said with a chuckle. 'I think we all have to maybe change our gauge on what a second-liner used to make in the old cap. Now it's going to be a different number.' Revenues rising and pushing the cap to new heights is a brave, new world for the NHL after only marginal increases since the pandemic. The league and union agreed to extend the collective bargaining agreement, international play is back on a regular basis and labor peace expected through 2030 has everyone around the sport feeling good. Those in charge of spending to build rosters are trying hard to be careful and not get caught up in the free agent frenzy. 'Every time the cap goes up, sometimes you get antsy because I really want the players, but you have to stay true to your process and knowing what value you attribute to and what cap number you attribute every player and stick to your way because a decision that was good today could hurt you down the road,' New York Islanders GM Mathieu Darche said. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. 'You have to be smart and diligent in the signings. But of course it will be exciting. Players are excited the cap is going up. Trust me, agents are excited right now. But you still have to be disciplined in what you do.' ___ AP Hockey Writer John Wawrow contributed to this report. ___ AP NHL:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store