Flyers Playoff Rooting Guide: The Enemy of My Enemy is My Friend?

Now that the Philadelphia Flyers are out of the Stanley Cup playoffs and don't have any draft picks hinging on other teams' positioning in the standings, there is a lot less for Flyers fans to pay attention to until the offseason starts.

That is, unless you want to cheer on some old friends on their path to the Stanley Cup.

Around the NHL, many former Flyers, some recent and others not so recent, are representing the organization for new clubs.

We can safely assume that no Flyers fan really wants to see Cutter Gauthier succeed with the Anaheim Ducks, but center Ryan Poehling was a pleasant surprise as a depth forward during his two seasons in Philadelphia.

Those Ducks are down 3-2 in the series to the Vegas Golden Knights, who are led by ex-Flyers head coach John Tortorella and a surging Carter Hart.

Also out there in the West is former Flyers forward Bobby Brink, who traded to the Minnesota Wild in exchange for David Jiricek at the NHL trade deadline.

Flyers Captains Go To Bat For Matvei MichkovFlyers Captains Go To Bat For Matvei MichkovSean Couturier, Travis Konecny, and Travis Sanheim all went out of their way to stand up for Philadelphia Flyers teammate Matvei Michkov after a difficult season for the youngster.

He, alongside Cal Petersen and Nicolas Aube-Kubel, are on the ride as depth pieces for the Wild; Brink hasn't played for Minnesota since the first round, recording one assist in four games.

They aren't looking so hot right now, trailing the Colorado Avalanche three games to one in that series.

Of course, closer to Philadelphia in the East, the Hurricanes have Nick Deslauriers, who was traded by the Flyers heading into the NHL trade deadline, former Flyers defenders Shayne Gostisbehere and Sean Walker, South Jersey native Eric Robinson, as well as former Flyers great Rod Brind'Amour as head coach.

They await the winner of the Buffalo Sabres and Montreal Canadiens matchup, which features goalie Alex Lyon, local product Mattias Samuelsson, and former Flyers defender Luke Schenn.

Flyers, Owen Tippett Share Gruesome Injury Update; Surgery Not Needed YetFlyers, Owen Tippett Share Gruesome Injury Update; Surgery Not Needed YetOwen Tippett reveals the devastating injuries he suffered playing for the Philadelphia Flyers in the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Those two are tied at 2-2, so it will be some time still before Deslauriers, Brind'Amour, and the band of ex-Flyers get back on the ice for a playoff game.

The caveat, obviously, is that the Hurricanes knocked the Flyers out. It is in the eye of the beholder that they deserve to either succeed or fail.

Is the enemy of the enemy Hurricanes your friend this year?

Will The Senators Circle Back On Flyers Defenseman Rasmus Ristolainen?

In the summer of 2024, in his first offseason as GM of the Senators, Steve Staios put a large stamp on his hockey club.

Staios pulled off a deal to solve goaltending, getting Linus Ullmark, the goalie who had won the Vezina Trophy the season before. He also added winning experience, signing three veteran forwards – Michael Amadio, Nick Cousins, and David Perron – who all brought Stanley Cup-winning pedigree into the room.

But one of his other goals that summer was to rebalance the blue line. With Jake Sanderson, Thomas Chabot, and Jakob Chychrun, the Sens were top-heavy on the left side with a few too many offensive defensemen and not enough physical, defense-first defenders. 

Steve Warne and Gregg Kennedy discuss the Sens need for a solid backup goalie.

So Staios traded Chychrun to Washington for Jensen and a third-round pick. Jensen wasn't overly physical, but he did play the shutdown role well, and for a good chunk of last season, he and Chabot were perfect for each other. He was the yin to Chabot's yang.

But Jensen's time in Ottawa has been unravelled by last May's hip resurfacing surgery, and in a contract year, his post-surgery performance didn't leave management with an overwhelming desire to re-sign him. It's quite likely that he'll be allowed to walk into free agency this summer.

Now, with Jordan Spence becoming a full-timer, and Carter Yakemchuk getting close, the blue line scale is more out of balance than ever. 

Sanderson-Zub
Chabot-Spence
Kleven-Yakemchuk/Matinpalo

To varying degrees, each player brings some good things to the table. But the group still clearly needs another shutdown D who, ideally, embraces the physical side of the game even more than Jensen did.

Enter Rasmus Ristolainen. Could he be that missing piece?

TSN insider Darren Dreger reported on his podcast two weeks ago that the Senators and Philadelphia Flyers were engaged in serious trade discussions involving Ristolainen ahead of the March trade deadline.

“I know that Steve Staios was fairly far down the road in negotiations in acquiring Ristolainen at the trade deadline,” Dreger said. “But you know, Philadelphia knew what they had. I don't think they believed or were convinced that they were going to be as good as they were late in the season.

“So that's a pretty clear indication of what Staios and Ottawa were trying to acquire, like a proven defenseman.”

Ristolainen is exactly the kind of big, physical defenseman, willing to play that heavy game that Staios likes, and suddenly, the Senators' D-pairings would start to make a lot more sense.

Sanderson-Ristolainen
Chabot-Zub
Kleven-Spence
Matinpalo

However, while Ristolainen would rebalance things, it's fair to wonder how much tread is left on those tires.

Like Jensen, the defender whose role he would effectively be taking over for, staying healthy is a concern. Once he became a regular in the league, the former first-rounder played seven years of mostly injury-free hockey for the Buffalo Sabres.

However, in the past three seasons in Philly, the 31-year-old has been injury-prone with seasonal totals of 31, 63 and 44 games played. Ristolainen's biggest issue was a pair of triceps tendon ruptures.

The good news is he feels like that's all behind him and looks forward to a full summer ot training.

"Yes, thank God," Ristolainen told the media this week in his year-end availability. "It's the first normal, somewhat normal, off-season in four years, so I'm kind of excited about that, not needing to worry about rehabbing."

Even if he's healthy, he won't come cheap. He's in the final year of his contract at $5.1 million per season, and will soon be looking for more in unrestricted free agency in 2027. 

And of course, the cost to the Senators goes beyond money. There's the little matter of compensation for the Flyers. He played heavy top four minutes this spring in the first playoff experience of his career, so the Flyers will want something meaningful in compensation.

GM Daniel Briere admitted that the "media circus" resulted in a lot of calls about Ristolainen, and while he listened respectfully to everyone, no one offered enough to make it worth his while.

"We weren't looking to dump him," Briere said at his deadline day availability. "Where do you find six-foot-four, physical, top-four right-shot defensemen? There's not a lot. And we saw it on the market. And yes, when that (media reports) came out, I did get a lot of calls. And we took them seriously.

"But at the end of the day, it just did not make sense, value-wise."

And keep in mind that was Briere's take on things on March 6th, when the Flyers were six points and four teams out of the final wild card spot. The GM of a team with that standing couldn't be faulted for thinking that his team isn't close and may need to think about shipping out veterans.

Now, after Ristolainen helped the club go on a furious run to make the playoffs and get to the second round, Briere is probably feeling differently about the player's availability.

That probably won't stop Staios from calling this summer. But with the Flyers now relevant again after missing the playoffs for five years in a row, the price tag probably hasn't come down, and will probably now include a demand for assets that can help the Flyers now.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News

This article was first published at The Hockey News Ottawa. Check out more great Sens features from The Hockey News at the links below:  

Our One-On-One With Senators Winger Drake BathersonSenators Defenseman Goes From 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs To Signing In SwitzerlandThree Senators Prospects Take Centre Stage In 2026 OHL FinalWhat’s The Plan For Senators UFA Lars Eller?Archive: The Year Erik Karlsson Became Ottawa's First Norris Trophy Winner At 22

Controversial new Maple Leafs GM John Chayka fires head coach Craig Berube

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Craig Berube was fired as Maple Leafs coach on Wednesday, Image 2 shows New Maple Leafs general manager John Chayka

TORONTO — The Toronto Maple Leafs fired coach Craig Berube on Wednesday after he guided the team to a last-place finish in the Atlantic Division this season.

The move ended Berube’s two-year run with the Maple Leafs. He helped the club to a 108-point campaign in his first season as coach, but Toronto struggled mightily in 2025-26.

“Craig is a tremendous coach and an even better person,” general manager John Chayka said in a statement. “This decision is more reflective of an organizational shift and an opportunity for a fresh start than it is an evaluation of Craig.”

Chayka, who resigned as Coyotes GM right before the bubble playoffs in 2020 and was suspended in 2021 for pursuing opportunities with other clubs, was hired earlier this month.

Craig Berube was fired as Maple Leafs coach on Wednesday. Getty Images

He succeeded Brad Treliving, who was fired in March.

Toronto won the NHL draft lottery last week. The Maple Leafs are expected to pick either Gavin McKenna or Ivar Stenberg with the first overall pick on June 26 at the NHL draft in Buffalo.

Berube went 84-62-18 with Toronto, but the Maple Leafs were just 32-36-14 this season. The drop in points — from 108 to 78 — was the team’s largest year-over-year points decline.

The Maple Leafs headed into the season with high hopes despite the loss of star winger Mitch Marner.

Toronto added a trio of forwards — Matias Maccelli, Dakota Joshua and Nicolas Roy — in hopes of replacing those minutes by committee on a team thought to be still poised for Stanley Cup contention.

The Maple Leafs, however, never really got out of second gear. Along with a string of key injuries and absences, the club largely looked out of sorts from puck drop.

Despite a roster still anchored by star forwards Auston Matthews and William Nylander, the Maple Leafs’ power play was a huge issue.

Defensive deficiencies also caused glaring problems for a club that finished with the second-worst goals-against mark and was outshot a league-worst 66 times.

New Maple Leafs general manager John Chayka. Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

“They played with more passion than we did,” Berube told reporters in December after a 4-0 road loss to the Washington Capitals. “That’s what it boils down to. It looked to me like they had way more urgency in their game, more passion in their game. That’s the difference.”

Asked to explain how that could be the case, he replied: “Ask those guys, not me.”

The exchange was just one example of clear disconnect.

A three-time Maurice (Rocket) Richard Trophy winner as the NHL’s top goal-scorer, Matthews found the back of the net just 27 times before suffering a season-ending knee injury on a hit from Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas in March.

Toronto’s players didn’t do much in the immediate aftermath, which led to stinging rebukes from Berube — a former NHL enforcer with the seventh-most penalty minutes in league history — media members and fans as the locker room culture was called into question.

Berube, 60, was hired in May 2024 after Treliving let Sheldon Keefe go following 4 1/2 seasons in charge.

Toronto won a playoff round for just the second time in the NHL’s salary-cap era during his first campaign. The Maple Leafs beat the Ottawa Senators before falling to Florida in a series accented by 6-1 losses on home ice in Games 5 and 7. The Panthers would go on to win their second straight Stanley Cup.

The Maple Leafs had embraced Berube’s straightforward, no-nonsense, north-south approach in 2024-25 after Keefe was unable to get the same talented group over its playoff hump but didn’t come close to duplicating that success a second time.

Berube’s coaching journey began with the Philadelphia Flyers organization after retiring as a player. He worked his way up the ladder, moving from the AHL to the NHL as an assistant in 2006-07.

He took over as Flyers head coach early in 2013-14 and lasted another season before getting fired.

Berube then led the St. Louis Blues’ AHL affiliate after a year on the sidelines. He became an NHL associate coach in 2017-18 and was promoted to the top job with St. Louis in November 2018.

Berube rallied the group, which at one point sat last in the overall standings, to make the playoffs before it went on a magical run that culminated with the franchise’s only Cup victory.

Berube lost in the first round each of the next three seasons and missed out entirely in 2022-23. The Blues fired him just 28 games into the subsequent campaign.

Berube lasted two seasons with the team. AP

When Berube was hired by the Maple Leafs, Treliving said he had plenty of conversations with people who worked with, worked under and played alongside the former tough guy.

“They talked about how they would go through a wall for him,” Treliving said. “There was the connection he had with his players, the accountability he had with his players, and the bond he was able to build with staff.”

Maple Leafs fire coach Craig Berube after two seasons, last-place finish in Atlantic Division

NHL: Anaheim Ducks at Toronto Maple Leafs

Mar 12, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube during a media conference after a win over the Anaheim Ducks at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

TORONTO (AP) — The Toronto Maple Leafs fired coach Craig Berube on Wednesday after he guided the team to a last-place finish in the Atlantic Division this season.

The move ended Berube’s two-year run with the Maple Leafs. He helped the club to a 108-point campaign in his first season as coach, but Toronto struggled mightily in 2025-26.

“Craig is a tremendous coach and an even better person,” general manager John Chayka said in a statement. “This decision is more reflective of an organizational shift and an opportunity for a fresh start than it is an evaluation of Craig.”

Chayka was hired earlier this month. He succeeded Brad Treliving, who was fired in March.

Toronto won the NHL draft lottery last week. The Maple Leafs are expected to pick either Gavin McKenna or Ivar Stenberg with the first overall pick on June 26 at the NHL draft in Buffalo.

Berube went 84-62-18 with Toronto, but the Maple Leafs were just 32-36-14 this season. The drop in points — from 108 to 78 — was the team’s largest year-over-year points decline.

The Maple Leafs headed into the season with high hopes despite the loss of star winger Mitch Marner.

Toronto added a trio of forwards — Matias Maccelli, Dakota Joshua and Nicolas Roy — in hopes of replacing those minutes by committee on a team thought to be still poised for Stanley Cup contention.

The Maple Leafs, however, never really got out of second gear. Along with a string of key injuries and absences, the club largely looked out of sorts from puck drop.

Despite a roster still anchored by star forwards Auston Matthews and William Nylander, the Maple Leafs’ power play was a huge issue.

Defensive deficiencies also caused glaring problems for a club that finished with the second-worst goals-against mark and was outshot a league-worst 66 times.

“They played with more passion than we did,” Berube told reporters in December after a 4-0 road loss to the Washington Capitals. “That’s what it boils down to. It looked to me like they had way more urgency in their game, more passion in their game. That’s the difference.”

Asked to explain how that could be the case, he replied: “Ask those guys, not me.”

The exchange was just one example of clear disconnect.

A three-time Maurice (Rocket) Richard Trophy winner as the NHL’s top goal-scorer, Matthews found the back of the net just 27 times before suffering a season-ending knee injury on a hit from Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas in March.

Toronto’s players didn’t do much in the immediate aftermath, which led to stinging rebukes from Berube — a former NHL enforcer with the seventh-most penalty minutes in league history — media members and fans as the locker room culture was called into question.

Berube, 60, was hired in May 2024 after Treliving let Sheldon Keefe go following 4 1/2 seasons in charge.

Toronto won a playoff round for just the second time in the NHL’s salary-cap era during his first campaign. The Maple Leafs beat the Ottawa Senators before falling to Florida in a series accented by 6-1 losses on home ice in Games 5 and 7. The Panthers would go on to win their second straight Stanley Cup.

The Maple Leafs had embraced Berube’s straightforward, no-nonsense, north-south approach in 2024-25 after Keefe was unable to get the same talented group over its playoff hump but didn’t come close to duplicating that success a second time.

Berube’s coaching journey began with the Philadelphia Flyers organization after retiring as a player. He worked his way up the ladder, moving from the AHL to the NHL as an assistant in 2006-07.

He took over as Flyers head coach early in 2013-14 and lasted another season before getting fired.

Berube then led the St. Louis Blues’ AHL affiliate after a year on the sidelines. He became an NHL associate coach in 2017-18 and was promoted to the top job with St. Louis in November 2018.

Berube rallied the group, which at one point sat last in the overall standings, to make the playoffs before it went on a magical run that culminated with the franchise’s only Cup victory.

Berube lost in the first round each of the next three seasons and missed out entirely in 2022-23. The Blues fired him just 28 games into the subsequent campaign.

When Berube was hired by the Maple Leafs, Treliving said he had plenty of conversations with people who worked with, worked under and played alongside the former tough guy.

“They talked about how they would go through a wall for him,” Treliving said. “There was the connection he had with his players, the accountability he had with his players, and the bond he was able to build with staff.”

PWHL continues rapid expansion, adds Las Vegas and Ontario teams for 2026

The PWHL is doubling down on expansion, adding more teams in 2026.

On Wednesday, the league unveiled plans to add teams in Las Vegas and Hamilton, Ontario. Both teams will take the ice beginning with the 2026-2027 season. The PWHL Las Vegas team is slated to play its home games at T-Mobile Arena. The PWHL's Hamilton franchise will play in TD Coliseum.

“Hamilton and its surrounding communities have long been central to the growth of girls’ and women’s hockey, producing generations of talented players and passionate fans,” Jayna Hefford, PWHL executive vice president of hockey operations, said in a release. “This is a region with deep hockey roots, and the response we saw during our Takeover Tour game at TD Coliseum made it clear that fans in the region are ready to rally around a team of their own."

“From the staggering growth of youth hockey participation to the passionate support for the Golden Knights and Aces, the Las Vegas community has enthusiastically embraced both hockey and women’s sports. While professional women’s hockey may be new to the market, we know Las Vegas is ready to welcome and champion a PWHL team of its own,” Amy Scheer, PWHL executive vice president of business operations, said.

The news of Las Vegas and Hamilton joining the PHWL comes on the heels of significant growth for the league. Detroit also recently landed a PWHL expansion franchise, bringing the league's current eight teams to 11 by the time next season arrives.

The PWHL is expected to reveal more details regarding expansion, including the roster-building process and how expansion teams will be integrated into the 2026 PWHL Draft in the coming weeks.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Las Vegas, Ontario land PWHL expansion teams as women's hockey booms

Toronto Maple Leafs Next Head Coach Odds: Who Picks Up the Pieces After Berube's Ousting?

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

The Toronto Maple Leafs are on the hunt for a new head coach yet again. The club fired Craig Berube on Wednesday after just two years at the helm.

With a new front office regime spearheaded by John Chayka and Mats Sundin, this was perhaps inevitable after the team missed the playoffs with a disappointing 32-36-14 record (second-worst in the East).

We'll look at the Maple Leafs next head coach odds and see who may be the best and most likely fit ahead of the 2026-27 NHL season with our NHL picks.

Next Toronto Maple Leafs head coach odds

Coaching candidateBet99
Bruce Cassidy+200
Bruce Bourdreau+300
John Gruden+500
Gerard Gallant+600
Manny Malhotra+600
Dean Evason+700
Jim Hiller+1000
Doug Gilmour+5000
Tie Domi+5000

Odds courtesy of Bet99 on Wednesday, May 13.

The Toronto Maple Leafs are an organization in flux. The Auston Matthews era has been rife with disappointment and drama. Mitch Marner was largely used as a scapegoat prior to his departure after last season (he's still playing in the postseason, by the way), and more changes were destined when things actually got much worse in 2025-26.

The Leafs finished with the second-worst record in the Eastern Conference, and rumors have swirled surrounding Matthews' future with the team.

With John Chayka taking over as general manager, one of his first acts was to fire head coach Craig Berube on Wednesday. While no odds are yet on the table for who will take over behind the bench, names are already being floated as speculative possibilities.

The Usual Suspects

Bruce Cassidy (+200)

The Vegas Golden Knights shocked the hockey world by dismissing Bruce Cassidy just before the playoffs, replacing him with the forever-angry taskmaster, John Tortorella.

It's become a common, and justified, criticism that the same 10 names are regurgitated whenever coaching positions become available. Berube himself was fired by the St. Louis Blues and hired by the Leafs in relative short order.

But Cassidy may be worth the retread. In his first three seasons coaching Vegas, he reached the playoffs each time, winning the Stanley Cup in 2022-23. He would have been in the postseason again this year, too, but here we are.

It's not surprising that Cassidy is at the top of the board. He's already interviewed for the Los Angeles Kings job, and would have been a candidate in Edmonton, but the Golden Knights reportedly denied permission for that interview to happen.

Patrick Roy (OTB)

Patrick Roy was canned by the New York Islanders in April. He's probably the most high-profile candidate available after Cassidy. 

Personally, I doubt this happens. The Hall-of-Fame goaltender has had a shaky tenure as an NHL head coach between stints with the Islanders and Colorado Avalanche. He's coached in the postseason twice, once with each team, and didn't escape the opening round either time.

With the first-overall draft pick coming to town and a possibly contentious relationship to mend with star forward Matthews to deal with, I expect someone with a more established pedigree to get the gig.

Bruce Boudreau (+300)

The 71-year-old Bruce Boudreau also feels unlikely, but he was born in Toronto, played junior hockey in the 70s with the Toronto Marlboros, and eventually played with the Maple Leafs as a pro.

He hasn't coached in the NHL since a brief stint with the Vancouver Canucks, but he had a long history of success as the coach of the Washington Capitals, Anaheim Ducks, and Minnesota Wild before that. 

Granted, that track record also featured a lot of first-round playoff exits, but that should make him fit in nicely in Toronto.

Peter Laviolette (OTB)

Peter Laviolette has an extensive resume at the NHL level, winning the Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes back in 2006, and reaching the Stanley Cup Final with both the Philadelphia Flyers (2010) and Nashville Predators (2017).

Like a lot of these big names, though, his tenures seem to be getting shorter. He lasted just three years with the Washington Capitals from 2020-23, and only two seasons with the New York Rangers immediately thereafter.

Gerard Gallant (+600)

Gerard Gallant took the Golden Knights to the Stanley Cup Final in the team's inaugural season, and was unceremoniously fired during his third year with the club. He also got kicked to the curb after two playoff appearances as the New York Rangers' head coach in 2023. 

Gallant never seems to last long, so maybe this is a new (maple) leaf for him and Toronto.

Less established options

If Chayka & Co. miss out on Cassidy or simply want to buck the trend of recycled NHL bench bosses on their fourth or fifth run, there are some options worth exploring.

Manny Malhotra (+600) is knocking on the door, and it's only a matter of time before he's an NHL head coach. Currently leading the AHL's Abbotsford Canucks, he won the Calder Cup in his first season at the helm.

Malhotra was also an assistant coach for these Maple Leafs before returning to the Canucks organization.

I would also expect Todd Nelson to get a look. He served as the Edmonton Oilers' coach on an interim basis when he replaced Dallas Eakins in 2014-15, but has otherwise made a name for himself in minor hockey and as an assistant with the Pittsburgh Penguins, where he's been since last June.

He has the benefit of experience without being a regurgitated option at the top level. He is a fresh face but isn't wet behind the ears.

If the Leafs decide to promote from within, assistant coach Derek Lalonde may be an option. Yes, he's a former NHL head coach (Red Wings from 2022-25, but mostly cut his teeth coaching in the NCAA and minors before serving as an assistant coach with the Tampa Bay Lightning, winning two Cups).

If not Lalonde, Toronto Marlies head coach John Gruden (+500) is an internal option who may be more viable.

There are sure to be other names bandied about, but this looks like a solid crop of options, depending on which direction Chayka wants to go. My guess is they'll make a hard push for Cassidy because, well, why wouldn't they? Failing that, someone from the "less established" category might be wise, whether that's Malhotra, Nelson, or an internal hire of Lalonde or Gruden. 

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Blues' Stanley Cup-Winning Coach Fired By Maple Leafs

The inevitable almost seemed like a foregone conclusion once the Toronto Maple Leafs made the change to new management that Craig Berube's time with the organization was numbered.

The ax came down on Wednesday morning when the Leafs announced that Berube has been fired as coach.

Berube, who won the Stanley Cup with the St. Louis Blues in 201`9 and spent nine seasons in the Blues organization, was let go after the Leafs hired John Chayka as their new general manager and Mats Sundin as senior executive of hockey operations.

Berube, 60, spent two seasons as Leafs coach and according to multiple reports, still has two years remaining on his contract at $4.5 million per season.

After the Blues fired Berube 28 games into the 2023-24 season when the team was 13-14-1, he took the rest of the season off before being hired by then Toronto GM Brad Treliving. The Leafs would win the Atlantic Division title at 52-26-4 before losing to eventual Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers in the second round of the playoffs.

The Leafs would miss the playoffs this past season at 32-36-14, a 30-point dropoff but won the NHL Draft lottery and have the No. 1 overall pick but Berube won't be around to see it.

“Craig is a tremendous coach and an even better person,” Chayka said in a statement released by the Maple Leafs. “This decision is more reflective of an organizational shift and an opportunity for a fresh start than it is an evaluation of Craig. We are grateful for his leadership, professionalism and commitment to the Maple Leafs organization and wish Craig and his family nothing but the best moving forward.”

Berube began his Blues career as the coach of the Chicago Wolves in 2016-17 after coaching the Philadelphia Flyers for two seasons (2013-15); he would join Mike Yeo's staff as associate coach in 2017-18 before replacing Yeo in November of 2018, ultimately leading the Blues from the basement of the league to the Cup on June 12, 2019 when the Blues defeated the Boston Bruins in seven games to win it all.

Craig Berube (top, middle) was 84-62-18 in two seasons as coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs before being fired on Wednesday. (John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images)
Craig Berube (top, middle) was 84-62-18 in two seasons as coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs before being fired on Wednesday. (John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images)

The Blues would reach the playoffs in each of the next three seasons before missing out at 37-38-7 in 2022-23, and ultimately leading to his firing 28 games into the 23-24 season.

Current Blues coach Jim Montgomery was Berube's assistant coach in St. Louis for two seasons (2020-22) before leaving the Blues to be hired as the coach of the Bruins for the 22-23 season. It's a crazy notion, but Montgomery and Berube are close friends, and if Berube wanted to continue to coach, would the Blues entertain bringing 'Chief' back under Montgomery's staff?

The Blues are looking for two, perhaps three, new assistant coaches and Montgomery will have a say in who the team brings in. Alexander Steen, who will take over as GM for Doug Armstrong on July 1, played for Berube for two seasons (2018-20), so just put the puzzle pieces together there. 

Berube would likely be looking for another head coaching position rather than an assistant's job, and with the reported $9 million left on his contract, he has options to sit out of he chooses to do so, but with his ties to St. Louis and an ever-lasting affection with Blues fans forever and a previous respect factor and successful job he did with the organization, it's something to consider and not a reach by any means.

Image

For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.

Maple Leafs fire coach Craig Berube after two seasons, last-place finish in Atlantic Division

TORONTO (AP) — The Toronto Maple Leafs fired coach Craig Berube on Wednesday after he guided the team to a last-place finish in the Atlantic Division this season.

The move ended Berube’s two-year run with the Maple Leafs. He helped the club to a 108-point campaign in his first season as coach, but Toronto struggled mightily in 2025-26.

“Craig is a tremendous coach and an even better person,” general manager John Chayka said in a statement. “This decision is more reflective of an organizational shift and an opportunity for a fresh start than it is an evaluation of Craig."

Chayka was hired earlier this month. He succeeded Brad Treliving, who was fired in March.

Toronto won the NHL draft lottery last week. The Maple Leafs are expected to pick either Gavin McKenna or Ivar Stenberg with the first overall pick on June 26 at the NHL draft in Buffalo.

Berube went 84-62-18 with Toronto, but the Maple Leafs were just 32-36-14 this season. The drop in points — from 108 to 78 — was the team’s largest year-over-year points decline.

The Maple Leafs headed into the season with high hopes despite the loss of star winger Mitch Marner.

Toronto added a trio of forwards — Matias Maccelli, Dakota Joshua and Nicolas Roy — in hopes of replacing those minutes by committee on a team thought to be still poised for Stanley Cup contention.

The Maple Leafs, however, never really got out of second gear. Along with a string of key injuries and absences, the club largely looked out of sorts from puck drop.

Despite a roster still anchored by star forwards Auston Matthews and William Nylander, the Maple Leafs’ power play was a huge issue.

Defensive deficiencies also caused glaring problems for a club that finished with the second-worst goals-against mark and was outshot a league-worst 66 times.

“They played with more passion than we did,” Berube told reporters in December after a 4-0 road loss to the Washington Capitals. “That’s what it boils down to. It looked to me like they had way more urgency in their game, more passion in their game. That’s the difference.”

Asked to explain how that could be the case, he replied: “Ask those guys, not me.”

The exchange was just one example of clear disconnect.

A three-time Maurice (Rocket) Richard Trophy winner as the NHL’s top goal-scorer, Matthews found the back of the net just 27 times before suffering a season-ending knee injury on a hit from Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas in March.

Toronto’s players didn’t do much in the immediate aftermath, which led to stinging rebukes from Berube — a former NHL enforcer with the seventh-most penalty minutes in league history — media members and fans as the locker room culture was called into question.

Berube, 60, was hired in May 2024 after Treliving let Sheldon Keefe go following 4 1/2 seasons in charge.

Toronto won a playoff round for just the second time in the NHL’s salary-cap era during his first campaign. The Maple Leafs beat the Ottawa Senators before falling to Florida in a series accented by 6-1 losses on home ice in Games 5 and 7. The Panthers would go on to win their second straight Stanley Cup.

The Maple Leafs had embraced Berube’s straightforward, no-nonsense, north-south approach in 2024-25 after Keefe was unable to get the same talented group over its playoff hump but didn’t come close to duplicating that success a second time.

Berube’s coaching journey began with the Philadelphia Flyers organization after retiring as a player. He worked his way up the ladder, moving from the AHL to the NHL as an assistant in 2006-07.

He took over as Flyers head coach early in 2013-14 and lasted another season before getting fired.

Berube then led the St. Louis Blues’ AHL affiliate after a year on the sidelines. He became an NHL associate coach in 2017-18 and was promoted to the top job with St. Louis in November 2018.

Berube rallied the group, which at one point sat last in the overall standings, to make the playoffs before it went on a magical run that culminated with the franchise’s only Cup victory.

Berube lost in the first round each of the next three seasons and missed out entirely in 2022-23. The Blues fired him just 28 games into the subsequent campaign.

When Berube was hired by the Maple Leafs, Treliving said he had plenty of conversations with people who worked with, worked under and played alongside the former tough guy.

“They talked about how they would go through a wall for him,” Treliving said. “There was the connection he had with his players, the accountability he had with his players, and the bond he was able to build with staff.”

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

PWHL expanding to Las Vegas and Hamilton next season

The PWHL is officially expanding to Las Vegas and Hamilton, Ont., for the 2026-27 season, the league announced Wednesday.

The Las Vegas franchise, which The Athleticreported on Tuesday, will play its home games at T-Mobile Arena, home of the NHL’s Vegas Golden Knights. The rink has a capacity of 17,500 for hockey and boasts one of the best atmospheres in the NHL. Hamilton will play at TD Coliseum, which recently underwent a $300 million renovation.

Vegas and Hamilton follow Detroit as part of the PWHL’s second wave of expansion, which could include a fourth franchise. The three new teams will join the league’s eight current markets in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Vancouver, Boston, Minnesota, New York and Seattle.

The PWHL hosted a successful neutral-site game in Hamilton in January, with 16,012 fans at TD Coliseum — the third-largest “Takeover Tour” crowd of the season. There is a school of thought that a team in Hamilton could siphon support from the league’s Toronto franchise, which plays just 40 miles from TD Coliseum. However, according to the league’s press release, over 70 percent of Hamilton’s “Takeover Tour” ticket buyers purchased their first-time PWHL game ticket, “underscoring the league’s opportunity to reach a distinct audience,” even with two other teams located in Ontario.

There’s a chance Hamilton could draw some Toronto Sceptres fans from the Greater Toronto Area, but the city is also within commuting distance from southern Ontario cities such as St. Catharines, Kitchener, Waterloo and London.

“The response we saw during our Takeover Tour game at TD Coliseum made it clear that fans in the region are ready to rally around a team of their own,” said Jayna Hefford, the PWHL’s executive vice president of hockey operations.

Hamilton’s expansion effort was made in partnership with Oak View Group, which operates TD Coliseum, and the city of Hamilton. The league will continue to operate under its single-entity ownership model, where Mark Walter — the billionaire owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers — and his wife, Kimbra, own the PWHL and all of its teams.

Expanding to Las Vegas is somewhat of a departure from the norm for the PWHL, which launched its first three expansion teams in markets that were part of the “Takeover Tour.” Still, according to Amy Scheer, the league’s executive vice president of business operations, “Las Vegas is ready to welcome and champion a PWHL team of its own.”

Las Vegas has rapidly become a hub for major professional sports. According to the PWHL’s press release, since the Golden Knights’ inaugural season in 2017, youth hockey participation in Nevada has surged, particularly among girls and women, by 600 percent.

“From the staggering growth of youth hockey participation to the passionate support for the Golden Knights and Aces,” said Scheer, “the Las Vegas community has enthusiastically embraced both hockey and women’s sports.”

The PWHL’s expansion to Vegas also widens the league’s footprint to the American Southwest. According to the release, the city’s accessibility, hospitality infrastructure and world-class facilities make Vegas a “strong long-term fit for the PWHL.” The Golden Knights and MGM Resorts International, which is a part owner of T-Mobile Arena, supported the league’s expansion efforts to Vegas.

“The arrival of the PWHL in Vegas is a milestone for women’s hockey and our entire community,” said John Penhollow, the Vegas Golden Knights president of business operations. “We’re proud of how far youth hockey has come locally, and even more excited about the path forward and opportunities ahead for future generations.”

As part of Wednesday’s announcement, the league revealed each team’s official colors and said team names and logos will be announced at a later date. Hamilton’s team colors will be gold, maroon and cream; Vegas will wear green and gold.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Toronto Sceptres, Minnesota Frost, Vancouver Goldeneyes, New York Sirens, Montreal Victoire, Ottawa Charge, Seattle Torrent, Boston Fleet, Sports Business, Women's Hockey, NHL, women's sports

2026 The Athletic Media Company

Maple Leafs fire coach Craig Berube after two seasons

The Toronto Maple Leafs brought Craig Berube in as coach in 2024 because of his championship pedigree.

But he was fired after his second season in Toronto with the Maple Leafs missing the playoffs for the first time since 2016.

"Craig is a tremendous coach and an even better person," new GM John Chayka said in a statement. "This decision is more reflective of an organizational shift and an opportunity for a fresh start than it is an evaluation of Craig. We are grateful for his leadership, professionalism and commitment to the Maple Leafs organization and wish Craig and his family nothing but the best moving forward."

The May 13 move follows the March 30 firing of general manager Brad Treliving and gives whoever's hired a clean slate at coach.

Berube, who won a Stanley Cup with the St. Louis Blues in 2019, got the Maple Leafs to the second round last season before losing to the Panthers in a Game 7 rout at home.

This season was always going to be tough because they lost free agent Mitch Marner in a sign and trade. But the Maple Leafs hovered around .500 before getting to eight games over in mid-January.

The Leafs had eight consecutive losses coming out of the Olympic break. After a 5-2 loss to the Ottawa Senators in which the Leafs were badly outshot on Feb. 28, Berube pointed to his heart and to his head and said of the players, "They've got to bring the heart and the competitiveness that's needed."

Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube looks on from the bench during the third period against the Minnesota Wild at Scotiabank Arena.

The Maple Leafs were sellers ahead of the March 6 trade deadline. Scott Laughton was moved to the Los Angeles Kings, and Bobby McMann went to the Seattle Kraken. Nicolas Roy was moved to the Colorado Avalanche a day earlier.

Captain Auston Matthews was limited to 60 games, including having his season end on a knee-on-knee hit from Anaheim's Radko Gudas.

But the team's biggest problem was defensive play as the Maple Leafs gave up the second most goals in the league.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Craig Berube fired as Maple Leafs coach after not making playoffs

AHL Playoff Update: Bill Zonnon’s electric debut

Yesterday started with Kyle Dubas praising Bill Zonnon as the 2025 first round draft pick was about to turn pro full time. To say Penguin management is impressed with Zonnon’s habits would be an understatement after the player showed he was going above and beyond to watch and learn the system before even joining the team.

Zonnon put that preparation to good use when he scored the go-ahead goal that stood as the game winner in Wilkes-Barre’s 2-0 Game 1 victory over Springfield.

Needless to say the Atlantic Division Finals were not too big of a stage for the 19-year old to make his AHL debut. The Penguins took a 1-0 lead in their best-of-five series against Springfield.

Here was the Pens’ lineup for the night.

Sergei Murashov only needed to stop 24 shots, the quantity not sounding like much but it doesn’t tell the whole tale of how good the goaltending was and needed to be. Murashov was deservedly named the number one star of the game and was the best player on the ice all night long, especially during a critical juncture in the second period when he had to be extremely sharp to keep the puck out of the net. What he lacked in total saves that needed to be made was more than made up for by the quality of stops required.

Harrison Brunicke wasn’t too far behind Murashov as far as top-performing players on the night. It has certainly been an unconventional and path-less-traveled type of season for Brunicke. Rocky at times even, in a year that spanned playing games across different leagues, levels and tournaments fromthe NHL. AHL, WHL to the WJC. Based on his play in the AHL playoffs, Brunicke has come out of the storm just fine. His defensive play looks much more confident and steady. His reads and stopping ability have increased, he uses his stick effectively. Overall he just looks like a stronger player whether it’s been boxing guys out in front of the net, tossing them aside from the goalies after whistles or using his body to shield pucks as he carries them. Maybe it was going back to junior and getting the chance to play huge minutes and grow. Maybe a light just went of and he would have been fine by now no matter what happened. No matter how the particulars, Brunicke looks like a different and better version of himself compared to the one who had an AHL conditioning stint early in the regular season.

Tanner Howe scored a third period insurance goal to boost the lead to 2-0.

In the end, Game 1 will be remembered as the Zonnon debut. Springfield’s goalie, Georgi Romanov has arguably been the early player of the playoffs so far in the AHL. Romanov’s 5-1 record and .954 save% in the first two rounds of the playoffs were a leading reason why the Thunderbirds pulled off upsets over Charlotte and Providence. Romanov had the Pens blanked too until Zonnon made it happen with his goal.

The Pittsburgh organization has to continue to be pleased with how this playoff run is going. Murashov has been stellar, Brunicke is showing out and seemingly growing by the game and now their latest player to join the fray in Zonnon has made an immediate impact to show why they were so excited to get him into their organization. Vibes are strong, all signs pointing in the right direction as Wilkes heads into Game 2 tomorrow night.

New York Islanders Alumni Josh Bailey To Be Inducted Into New York State Hockey Hall of Fame

During the second intermission of the Montreal Canadiens and Buffalo Sabers' Game 4 matchup, it was shared that New York Islanders alumnus Josh Bailey will be enshrined in the New York State Hockey Hall of Fame this summer. 

The announcement came as ESPN announced broadcaster Steve Levy will be a part of this year's class. Sharing the announcement on the air, Bailey was named one of eight inductees in this year's class. 

Bailey, a lifetime Islander, was drafted with the 9th overall pick in the 2008 NHL Draft. The forward became a mainstay after his debut on Nov. 11, 2008, playing in 1,057 games with the franchise. He is one of only three players to reach the milestone with the team. 

He recorded 184 goals and 396 assists for 580 points in 15 seasons on Long Island. He sits in fourth and seventh in Islanders history in assists and points, respectively. 

However, the playoffs were where Bailey truly made his mark. In 71 games, he recorded 16 goals and 34 assists for 50 points, helping New York to a pair of third-round appearances in his career. He also added a pair of overtime winners, both against the Pittsburgh Penguins, including his iconic Game 1 goal in the team's first postseason game back at Nassau Coliseum in 2019. 

His Islanders career came to a close on June 29, 2023, when he was traded to the Chicago Blackhawks with a second-round pick for future considerations. His contract was brought out later that afternoon, and Bailey didn't play another NHL game despite signing a pro tryout with the Ottawa Senators the following preseason. 

Today, Bailey can be found in the broadcast booth, working alongside Alan Fuehring on Islanders broadcasts on the New York Islanders Radio Network. 

He will become the fifth Islanders player to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. Forward John Tonelli was enshrined in 2023, and legends Ken Morrow, Denis Potvin and Ed Westfall joined him one year later. Hall of Fame journalist Stan Fischler was also inducted in 2023. 

The 2026 Induction Ceremony will take place on July 12 at the Hilton Garden Inn in Troy. More information is available here

Flyers Captains Go To Bat For Matvei Michkov

Understandably, Matvei Michkov is going to be the talk of the Philadelphia Flyers world this summer, but the team's captains all took moments to stand up for the sophomore forward after a challenging second season in the NHL.

Flyers captain Sean Couturier, as well as alternate captains Travis Konecny and Travis Sanheim, commendably offered words on Michkov's unique situation while being able to put themselves in his shoes, defending a young player who's been in the spotlight non-stop.

Michkov, 21, ended his 2025-26 season on the bench with the Flyers losing 3-2 in overtime to the Carolina Hurricanes in the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs, and whether we believe it to be right or wrong, it was what the coaching staff and team decided.

The Russian phenom still scored 51 points this season, though, and now knows what is expected of him and his game in the postseason.

This is all while barely being able to communicate with teammates and staff effectively, living in North America for not even two years.

"I remember when I was his age, trying to find my way. It's not easy, and I couldn't imagine with the language barrier. But he's a guy that's always putting in the work," Konecny said of Michkov at his exit interview Tuesday.

NHL Insider Cautions Flyers Against Matvei Michkov Trade: 'You Can't Find Guys Like This'NHL Insider Cautions Flyers Against Matvei Michkov Trade: 'You Can't Find Guys Like This'NHL insider Elliotte Friedman likens the current Philadelphia Flyers saga with Matvei Michkov to the controversial Cutter Gauthier debacle from just a few years ago.

It was just last year that we would come out with stories of Michkov coming home from an afternoon game and going back to the rink, coming out for practice early, staying for practice late, so on and so forth.

He's still the same kid he was.

"He's always in the shooting room, he's always on the ice doing extra stuff. So that part of it's there. It's just trying to find where he's comfortable, at dinner, or wherever it is, to help him get to that next step," Konecny continued. "

I couldn't imagine going over and trying to understand Russian for two years. I'd be pretty lost at times, too. But when he's doing good things and he's scoring goals and he's making good plays, you just make sure you're there to pat him on the back, 'Hey, this is the good stuff. You do this over and over, you'll be a heck of a player.'"

Couturier, who broke in to the NHL himself as a teenager, shared Konecny's sentiment.

"I can't imagine the language barrier at a young age, coming overseas," Couturier said. "It's only his second year in the league, and I'm sure he's going to learn from this past year. Knowing him, knowing his character, I know he's going to be super motivated to prove everyone wrong next year. That's what you want to see."

NHL Mock Draft: Flyers Need to Avoid Repeating This MistakeNHL Mock Draft: Flyers Need to Avoid Repeating This MistakeThe Philadelphia Flyers have no reason to continue reaching in the NHL draft as the latest mock draft suggests they will.

"The pressure that's been put on him is a lot higher than anyone else has had. He's just like anyone else: we've all been through struggles and good times," added Sanheim. "Obviously, it's been difficult with the language barrier the last couple years. I think he's gotten better and understands a lot more. So, you can start to have more conversations with him, and better conversations... ones that feel like you're getting somewhere."

So, that about sums it up for the Flyers and Michkov through two seasons. The common denominators are age and inexperience, as well as the language barrier. This was anticipated well in advance, but it's something everyone has to work towards to collectively benefit the Flyers in the long term.

Michkov's KHL contract would have originally expired this summer, but the timeline for his arrival was instead sped up by two years by his own accord.

Going into 2026-27, Michkov will have two years of the NHL and North American life under his belt to build on and reference, which should only help him as the Flyers and his teammates learn to better work with him, and vice versa.

DitD & Open Post – 5/13/26: Fingerprints Edition

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - MARCH 14: Arseny Gritsyuk #81 of the New Jersey Devils skates off the ice after a NHL game against the Los Angeles Kings at Prudential Center on March 14, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Andrew Mordzynski/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

A new name in the front office:

“It’s hard to view this addition as anything but a big positive. Birch served as the director of hockey operations and salary cap management for the league’s most successful team in recent years. As noted when rumors first surfaced, his fingerprints were all over a lot of crafty contract work with the Florida Panthers.” [Infernal Access]

“After nearly five seasons in the KHL, Arseny Gritsyuk made his way to North America and played his first NHL season with the New Jersey Devils in 2025-26. His counting totals weren’t overly impressive, but a peek underneath the hood shows Gritsyuk was one of the Devils’ best forwards. Since he signed a one-year entry-level contract with the Devils for 2025-26, he will need a new deal as a restricted free agent this offseason. What could the Devils pay Gritsyuk? And does it make sense to go long-term?” [Devils on the Rush]

“With a new regime underway in New Jersey, one run by a progressive-thinking, analytics-fluent individual in Sunny Mehta, we can anticipate quite a few changes to philosophies with the Devils. One such area in which the Devils will need to shift the paradigm to have more success is in drafting.” [Devils’ Advocates]

Hockey Links

A six-game suspension for Charlie McAvoy:

An interesting little tiff:

Charlie Coyle gets a six-year deal:

On the potential Stanley Cup Final matchups we could see: “Let’s look ahead to what June could bring, ranked from the least to the most enticing, based purely on the narratives that people like me will beat into the ground.” [The Athletic ($)]

“Owen Tippett did not play for the Philadelphia Flyers in the Eastern Conference Second Round because of an internal bleeding issue, the forward said Tuesday. Tippett sustained the injury during the Flyers’ six-game series win against the Pittsburgh Penguins in the first round.” [NHL.com]

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

On this date in Penguins history: Pittsburgh blows by Caps in Game 7

WASHINGTON - MAY 13: Alex Ovechkin #8 of the Washington Capitals is stopped by Marc-Andre Fleury #29 of the Pittsburgh Penguins during first period action in Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Semifinal Round of the 2009 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Verizon Center May 13, 2009 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Seventeen years ago today, the Penguins blew past the Washington Capitals in a series-deciding game on the road, sending Pittsburgh to the Eastern Conference Final for a second straight season.

It was 2009. The Penguins and the Capitals were putting on a show for the hockey world with six games of what felt like uncontrolled chaos where no lead was safe.

From dueling hat tricks to overtime thrillers, Pittsburgh and Washington were facing off in a Game 7that would help define the legacy of their team — and the pressure was intense.

Three of the six games in the series had gone to overtime and this night in D.C., it was win or go home.

Alex Ovechkin had scored seven goals in six games, so who better else to have an early breakaway with a chance to ignite the home crowd?

Marc-Andre Fleury thought otherwise.

Fleury’s save may have been a wakeup call for the Penguins, who responded with two hectic periods of hockey as they coasted to victory.

Two goals eight seconds apart from Sidney Crosby and Craig Adams broke the scoreless tie in the first period.

Three goals in quick succession from Bill Guerin, Kris Letang, and Jordan Staal made things 5-0 and put the game on cruise control.