All AHL Players Who Have Signed In The KHL This Off-Season

With the NHL training camps and the KHL regular season set to begin in just under one month we wanted to take a look at the massive group of players who have departed the AHL for the KHL during the 2025 free agency period.

As of Aug. 23 30 players who played a significant portion of the 2024-25 season in the AHL have signed in the KHL for the 2025-26 season.

The AHL veteran rule and higher salaries are likely the two main reasons for the exodus of players to the KHL.

The AHL veteran rule concerns players who have played 321 or more professional games in the AHL, NHL, or Europe. Veteran Exempt players are players who have played between 260-320 games.

Teams are allowed a combined six veteran and veteran exempt players per game, at least one must be a veteran exempt player. 

Additionally, the new NHL CBA rules will allow teams to place one 19-year-old CHL player in the AHL beginning in the 2026-27 season. This will continue to make the AHL a young mans league. 

Every player who played in the AHL last season, the team they left, and their current KHL team are listed below. 

Mason Morelli (F) - Henderson Silver Knights - Barys Astana 

Mike Vecchione (F) - Hershey Bears - Traktor Chelyabink - Barys Astana

Tyce Thompson (F) - Bridgeport Islander - Barys Astana

Nate Sucese (F) - Hartford Wolf Pack - Shanghai Dragons

Riley Sutter (F) - Hershey Bears - Shanghai Dragons

Reilly Walsh (D) - Ontario Reign - Barys Astana 

Jake Massie (D) - Hershey Bears -  Barys Astana 

Gage Quinney (F) - Henderson Silver Knights - Shanghai Dragons

Jake Bischoff (D) - Henderson Silver Knights - Shanghai Dragons

Olivier Rodrigue (G) - Bakersfield Condors - Barys Astana

Rocco Grimaldi (F) - Cleveland Monsters - SKA St. petersburg

Joseph Blandisi (F) - Toronto Marlies - SKA St. Petersburg

Alex Limoges (F) - Hershey Bears - Dinamo Minsk

Andrew Poturalski (F) - San Jose Barracuda - Avangard Omsk

Daniel Sprong (F) - Coachella Valley Firebirds - CSKA Moskva

Joseph Cecconi (D)  - Ontario Reign - Avangard Omsk

Maxime Lajoie (D)  - Coachella Valley Firebirds - Avangard Omsk

Chase Priskie (D) - Hershey Bears - Sibir Novosibirsk

Pierrick Dube (F) - Hershey Bears - Traktor Chelyabink

Ty Smith (D) - Chicago Wolves - Dinamo Minsk 

Louis Domingue (G) - Hartford Wolf Pack - Sibir Novosibirsk

Joseph Keane (D) - San Jose Barracuda - Spartak Moskva

Noel Hoefenmayer (D)  - Laval Rocket - HK Sochi

William Dufour (F) - Colorado Eagles - Lada Togliatti 

Rhett Gardner (F) - Lehigh Valley Phantoms - CSKA Moskva

Spencer Martin (G) - Chicago Wolves - CSKA Moskva

Brandon Biro (F) - Coachella Valley Firebirds - Ak Bars Kazan 

Chris Driedger (G) - Manitoba Moose - Traktor Chelyabinsk

Mac Hollowell (D)  - Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins - Lokomotiv Yaroslavl

Vasili Ponomarev (F) - Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins - Avangard Omsk

Reigning AHL MVP Andrew Poturalski, All-Star Rocco Grimaldi, and Calder Cup champions Chase Priskie and Mike Vecchione are among the biggest names on this list. 

Check out our AHL Free Agency signing tracker here.         

Yankees bats remain ice-cold in lackluster 12-1 loss to Red Sox

The Yankees' bats continued to slump, Will Warren struggled, and the Red Sox turned the game into a laugher late, as New York fell 12-1 on Saturday afternoon in The Bronx.

A seven-run ninth inning inflated the score after the Yankees had two on with one out in the previous half inning, but again, they couldn’t get the big hit when it mattered. The home team managed just seven hits and two walks compared to 17 hits and five walks (plus a hit batter) for the visitors.

Garrett Crochet just ate the Yanks’ lunch, save one pitch in the fourth inning, allowing one run on five hits and a walk over seven innings with 11 strikeouts on 103 pitches (72 strikes). 

With the loss, New York's eighth straight to Boston, the Yankees are now 69-60 (37-28 at home) on the year and 1.5 games behind the Red Sox (71-59).

Here are the takeaways...

- Warren allowed a single and a walk with a strikeout through two frames, but got into a spot of bother with one out in the second when back-to-back singles put runners at the corners. After falling behind 2-0 to Alex Bregman, the Yanks’ infield came for a visit to see if Warren could regroup, but he walked the Sox third baseman on a full count, one pitch after another defensive miscue as catcher Austin Wells whiffed on a pop-up behind home plate, battling a high sky. Warren got Jarren Duran swinging at a curveball in the dirt, but hung a sweeper right over the plate to Trevor Story, who lined it down the line in left for a two-RBI double to open the scoring.

Warren was right back in a jam two pitches into the fourth: Ceddanne Rafaela cranked a ground-rule double to center and David Hamilton singled to left to cover the corners. After the Yankee righty hit Carlos Narváez with a 1-2 pitch, a Roman Anthony sac fly to deep center was followed by Bregman’s sac fly to deep left, doubling Boston’s advantage.

Warren's first pitch of the fifth was deposited into the right field seats by Story, as a sinker over the plate was sent out in a hurry (106.2 mph, 373 feet). And that would be the end of his day. His final line: 4.0 innings, seven hits, five runs, three walks, and three strikeouts on 69 pitches (41 strikes). His ERA is now 4.47 on the year.

- Giancarlo Stanton started off the bottom of the fourth by driving a Crochet fastball 370 feet to right-center for his 16th home run of the season. The slugger smoked the ball (103.7 mph off the bat) that just snuck over the wall for a homer that only would have happened in The Bronx

He got his seventh start of the year in right field and caught the first ball hit at him, but looked less than convincing catching the first-inning liner. In the later innings Red Sox clearly made an effort to try and take an extra base on every ball hit to right and did so successfully each time. At the plate, he finished the day 1-for-4 with three strikeouts. 

- Aaron Judge went down swinging on a high, 99 mph fastball his first time up against Crochet, and came within inches of a double down the line in left before going down swinging on a cutter in his second at-bat. Judge just missed a two-run home run in the fifth, taking a 98 mph fastball on the outer portion of the plate to right, but it went for a hard-hit (104.1 mph), 338-foot flyout to the wall. 

He laced a one-out double into the right-center gap in the eighth (115.7 mph) off Red Sox reliever Greg Weissert.He finished 1-for-4 with two strikeouts.

- Cody Bellinger notched a two-out infield single in the first off Crochet but went down looking to end the third and slammed his helmet down after disagreeing with the call on a pitch that caught the corner. He finished 2-for-4 with a strikeout, adding a single off Weissert.

- The Yankees got a runner in scoring position with one out in the second on an errant throw on a fielder’s choice, after not having a runner reach second on Friday night. After Jose Caballero worked a walk, there were two men on and two two-out for Wells, but the catcher got jammed and flared out to the shortstop just behind second.

The Yankees finished the day 1-for-6 with runners in scoring position (the lone hit not netting a run) with eight runners left on base. Stanton and pinch-hitter Jazz Chisholm Jr. had chances for a late rally with the corners covered in the eighth, but both went down swinging.

- Anthony Volpe, who has been struggling mightily at the plate, lined out to shortstop first at-bat and tried to bunt for a hit with a runner on first and one out in the fourth, and was thrown out at first. (The official scorer at The Stadium tried to save the shortstop some indignity, judging it to be a sac bunt.) He finished 0-for-3 with a strikeout looking and committed his 17th error of the year on a bad throw. He is now slashing .208/.274/.400 and again heard boos from the Bronx faithful.

- Amed Rosario added two singles in three at-bats and is now 6-for-11 in seven games in pinstripes before being lifted for a pinch hitter.

- Paul Goldschmidt, who just wears out lefties, was hitless with a strikeout his first two trips before singling up the middle off Crochet. Finished 1-for-3. He was lifted for a pinch-hit to start the eighth, with Ben Rice flying out.

- Trent Grisham went 0-for-4 with a strikeout.

- Caballero finished 0-for-2 with a strikeout and two walks.

- Wells went 0-for-4 with two strikeouts. The catcher is now slashing .209/.264/.420 on the year.

- The bullpen was called upon to get 15 outs. Tim Hill got the first five, allowing two singles with a double play and two strikeouts mixed in. Ex-Met Paul Blackburn, in his Yankee debut, got the next four before allowing a runner on a leadoff walk, but quickly erased it with a 6-4-3 double play. Blackburn saved a run when he smartly backed up third on Hamilton’s two-out triple before stranding him there. 

A lead-off double off the top of the wall in right by Anthony led to two more Red Sox runs with three straight one-out singles. A two-out single plated another run before an infield hit to Volpe led to a throwing error to score another. Blackburn then compounded things by balking in a run and then hanging a sweeper to Narváez, who deposited into the visitor's bullpen for a 414-foot two-run homer. 

Blackburn, in what may end up being his lone appearance for the Yanks, was charged with seven runs (all earned) on eight hits and two walks in 3.1 innings with a strikeout on 71 pitches (44 strikes).

Who's the MVP? Garret Crochet

Boston's starter was simply terrific and had just a 30 percent called-strike whiff rate, but allowed just five hard-hit balls all game.

Highlights

What's next

The Yanks will look to avoid the four-game sweep on Sunday night. First pitch is at 7:10 p.m.

Left-hander Carlos Rodon (3.24 ERA and 1.068 WHIP in 152.2 innings) takes the ball for his 27th start of the season. He has racked up 169 strikeouts (to 60 walks) this year, good for fourth most in the American League. His 6.072 hits per nine innings are tops in the AL. 

Righty Dustin May (4.59 ERA and 1.362 WHIP in 119.2 innings) climbs the hill for the visitors, for his 22nd start of the year and fourth since arriving in Boston in a trade. May has found a bit of form with his new club, allowing five runs on 19 hits in 15.2 innings with 17 strikeouts to four walks.

European football: McTominay and De Bruyne power Napoli to win over Sassuolo

  • Milan slip up in home defeat against Cremonese

  • Aubameyang scores double in Marseille romp; Atlético held

Napoli launched their Serie A season in style with a 2-0 win at Sassuolo, as Scott McTominay powered in a first-half header before Kevin De Bruyne curled home a free-kick after the break.

The former Manchester United midfielder McTominay bulleted a header into the net from Matteo Politano’s curling cross after just 17 minutes to put Napoli ahead. De Bruyne, who moved to Italy after his Manchester City contract expired, doubled the advantage after 57 minutes, bending a free-kick from a tight angle over the crowded box and into the far bottom corner. McTominay told Dazn: “It’s an honour to have De Bruyne in the team. I’m the one who has to learn from him, not the other way around.”

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Canadiens: On A Possible Lane Hutson Extension

On the August 22nd edition of the Bleacher Report podcast, NHL Insider Frank Seravalli touched on a possible extension for Montreal Canadiens blueliner Lane Hutson. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem like a lot of progress has been made.

Seravalli doesn’t think there’s been a lot of movement on that front; he believes they had initial talks and are still looking at that. He thinks the ballpark for a Hutson deal should be around the same amount as what Brock Faber got from the Minnesota Wild—the 23-year-old put pen to paper on an eight-year pact with an $8.5 million AAV.

Canadiens: Big Acquisition Arrives In Town
Canadiens: Laine Wants To Stay
Canadiens: Montembeault’s Spot On Team Canada Isn’t Guaranteed

The insider also wonders if Hutson might prefer a short-term deal to capitalize on the rising salary cap in a couple of years, but he adds that if Hutson signs a long-term contract, it will be on the Canadiens’ terms.

While Seravalli is not wrong that Faber could serve as a worthy comparable for Hutson, I would be shocked if the Canadiens’ rearguard didn’t manage to get a higher cap hit. The Wild signed that deal over a year ago, and the cap has already risen since then. Furthermore, everyone knows that it will rise again shortly, and considering the Canadiens just acquired Noah Dobson, who will be paid $9.5 million AAV, I think the Hutson price tag may be closer to that.

If Kent Hughes were to manage to ink Hutson long-term for $8.5 million per year, I think it would be another big win for the Canadiens’ brass. I’m not saying it’s impossible, but if it happens, it will be because Hughes was able to sell him on the idea that the Canadiens want to become perennial contenders. They will need cap space to bring in new players when the older ones, such as Brendan Gallagher, move on.

Again, there’s no rush to sign Hutson; his contract isn’t even up yet, but it’s evident that Montreal wants to keep him long-term, and locking him up as soon as possible makes complete sense.


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Arsenal 5-0 Leeds: Premier League – as it happened

Viktor Gyökeres and Jurriën Timber both score twice as the Gunners rout Leeds, though injuries to Martin Ødegaard and Bukayo Saka remove some of the gloss

Leeds get the ball rolling. Arsenal soon take it off them.

… and now the players ready for tonight emerge. Arsenal in their traditional red and white, Leeds in second-choice blue. A genuine buzz in the stadium, a heady mix of first-home-fixture-of-the-season excitement and new-signing thrill. We’ll be off soon, but just before kick-off, there’s a moment of applause in memory of former Arsenal director and board member Richard Carr, who died recently.

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Mets recall RHP Huascar Brazoban, place Frankie Montas on IL

The Mets recalled right-hander Huascar Brazoban from Triple-A before Saturday's game against the Braves in Atlanta.

In a corresponding move, New York placed Frankie Montas on the 15-day IL with a right elbow UCL injury. The move is retroactive to Aug. 22. 

The Mets optioned Brazoban at the end of July after a string of ineffective outings. In his last appearance (July 28 against the Pares), Brazoban allowed one run on three hits and one walk in just 0.2 innings. 

"You hate to send a guy down, especially a guy who, since Day 1, he's been huge for us," Carlos Mendozasaid at the time. "But we're going to use this time to continue to build him for a potential role here, because we told him you're going to be back here.

"The plan is for him to have more of a scripted throwing program where it's like throwing 35 pitches, maybe three days off, and at the big league level, you're not going to be able to do that. That's the plan with him."

In 51.2 innings of work this season with the big league club, Brazoban has pitched to a 3.83 ERA and 1.28 WHIP.

Since being optioned to Triple-A Syracuse, Brazoban has made seven appearances. Over that span, he's allowed eight runs on 13 hits and two walks across 10.2 innings. Most of that damage came in his third appearance with Syracuse, where he allowed seven runs in one inning of work. His last appearances (Aug. 20), Brazoban dominated, striking out four batters across two scoreless innings and allowing just one hit.

As for Montas, the injury comes at a time when his role has shifted. After returning to the team in late June after starting the season on the IL with a right lat strain, the right-hander made seven starts and was largely ineffective. He was then moved to the bullpen to facilitate the call-up of Nolan McLean, but Montas' bullpen work was also ineffective.

In nine appearances (seven starts) with the Mets this season, Montas has pitched to a 3-2 record, a 6.28 ERA and a 1.60 WHIP.

Warriors trade talk: Called about LeBron James, Trey Murphy III, shot down Hield sign-and-trades

The Golden State Warriors' offseason remains in a holding pattern while Jonathan Kuminga's restricted free agency plays out. Al Horford, Gary Payton II and others are expected to sign in the Bay Area once Kuminga and the Warriors agree to terms.

None of that has stopped the rumors about the Warriors this offseason, and on Friday NBA insider Jake Fischer dropped a trio of them in The Stein Line substack.

Warriors called multiple times about LeBron

Back at last February's trade deadline, the Warriors tried to pry LeBron James away from the Lakers, but that effort went nowhere, in part because LeBron’s agent Rich Paul quashed it. That rejection did not stop the Warriors, Fischer said.

"I'm told that the Warriors have called the Lakers on multiple occasions over the past 18 months to see whether there is any trade pathway to pairing James with Stephen Curry, who roughly a year ago at this time was teaming with LeBron for the United States senior men's national team on its run to a gold medal at the Paris Olympics."

Golden State won't stop trying because this push comes from owner Joe Lacob — remember, he even called then-Lakers owner Jeanie Buss to pitch this idea at last year's deadline. That said, don't expect it to happen. After LeBron opted into his $52.6 million contract for this season, making this trade work under the cap rules (even with three or four teams involved) becomes nearly impossible. That is true of any LeBron trade. If he is leaving the Lakers, it likely will be next summer as a free agent (or in a sign-and-trade).

Warriors interested in Trey Murphy III

New team president Joe Dumar's long-term vision for the New Orleans Pelicans is... fuzzy. Around the league, nobody is exactly sure where the team is headed, which is why there remains considerable trade interest in several of their players.

One of those is Trey Murphy III and the Warriors and San Antonio Spurs are interested in the two-way wing, Fischer reported.

Murphy averaged 21.2 points and 5.1 rebounds a game for the Pelicans last season, but he played in just 53 games due primarily to a shoulder injury, and staying healthy has been an issue in his career. Murphy is set to make $25 million next season in the first year of a four-year, $112 million contract.

Warriors shooting down Hield, Moody trades

It's a strange thing to say about Golden State considering its recent history, but this team lacks shooting. Which is why when teams called about possible Moses Moody or Buddy Hield trades — both are extension eligible and could be part of a sign-and-trade — the Warriors shot it down, Fischer reports.

"Sources tell The Stein Line, furthermore, that Golden State has refused this summer to even entertain sign-and-trade scenarios that would require it to surrender either Buddy Hield or Moses Moody because of the limited options currently on the roster in terms of proven shooters not named Curry."

Last season, Hield played in all 82 games averaging 11.1 points a game and shooting 37% from beyond the arc. Moody played in 74 games and averaged 9.8 points while shooting 37.4% from 3. Both are expected to have slightly larger roles on the team this season.

Flames' Wolf Or Leafs' Woll: Which Goalie Would You Build A Team Around?

On The Hockey News’ latest edition of "The Big Show", THN editor-in-chief Ryan Kennedy and director of digital media Michael Traikos were joined by former NHL goalie Devan Dubnyk. On the show, Dubnyk was asked, if you were starting an NHL franchise, which goalie would you build around?

The former goaltender had to choose between the Toronto Maple Leafs' Joseph Woll or Calgary Flames' Dustin Wolf.

Dubnyk told Kennedy and Traikos he’d choose Wolf over Woll – and in this writer’s opinion, that’s the right answer. 

This is not to take away from the promise Woll has shown in his last two years in the NHL. Woll posted a save percentage of .907 and a goals-against average of 2.94 in 25 regular-season games in his rookie season, then followed that up with a .909 SP and 2.73 GAA in 42 games. The Maple Leafs are pleased with Woll’s development, especially considering that he’s under contract at a very manageable $3.66-million salary for the next three seasons.

However, compared to Wolf – a finalist for the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s top rookie last season – we’re going to go with him over Woll. Wolf was more of a workhorse than Woll last season, appearing in 53 games for the Flames while registering a .910 SP and 2.64 GAA. Given that Calgary’s D-corps isn’t nearly as deep or strong as Toronto’s was last season, Wolf’s individual numbers look even more impressive.

Dustin Wolf (Sergei Belski-Imagn Images)

Another factor that went into our choice of Wolf over Woll is Woll’s performance in last year’s Stanley Cup playoffs. While Woll wasn’t in Toronto’s net while the Leafs beat the Ottawa Senators in the first round of the post-season, when Woll was called into action in the second round against the eventual Cup-champion Florida Panthers, Woll’s individual numbers weren’t particularly strong. 

Indeed, in seven games against the Panthers, Woll put up a .886 SP and 3.56 GAA. It's not to say that Woll’s play was the reason why the Maple Leafs were eliminated by Florida. However, Leafs brass would like to see better numbers than what Woll produced.

Wolf didn't get a chance to make an appearance in the playoffs, but was a key contributor to Calgary's wild-card push. For the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference, the Flames equalled the St. Louis Blues in points with 96. However, the Blues finished with 44 wins in the regular season to the Flames' 41. Therefore, the tiebreaker went in favor of St. Louis. 

Who knows, perhaps Woll’s play in the 2025-26 season will make him a better pick than Wolf to build a team around. Woll is still only 27 years old, and in some cases, goalies don’t hit their stride for many years after breaking into the league.

But while that may change our answer to that question another day, for now, Wolf is the right choice to build a team around. Wolf had to deal with the spotlight that comes with playing in a Canadian market, and thrived in it last season. Also, Wolf is just 24 years old, so the ceiling in his game could be notably higher than that of Woll’s game.

Ultimately, both Woll and Wolf may grow into the best of the best at their position. But questions like the one Dubnyk, Traikos and Kennedy posed are fun ways to debate and discuss the impact made by NHLers.

And as it stands, Wolf stands out just a bit more than Woll. That may change over time, but for now, Wolf has done more than Woll and deserves to be the choice to build a team around.

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Pollard shines as South Africa bounce back to beat Australia in Rugby Championship

  • South Africa 30-22 Australia

  • Springboks avenge shock loss to Wallabies

Handré Pollard put in a commanding performance at fly-half as a more pragmatic South Africa beat Australia in their second Rugby Championship Test in Cape Town to reignite the defence of their title.

Australia stunned the world champions 38-22 in their competition opener in Johannesburg last Saturday as the hosts tried to play an expansive gameplan with ball in hand and were picked off. This time round they turned it into an aerial contest, marshalled superbly by Pollard, who kicked 15 points to go with tries by the wing Canan Moodie, the No 8 Kwagga Smith and the lock Eben Etzebeth.

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Championship roundup: Coventry celebrate stadium news with 7-1 rout of QPR

  • Sky Blues rampant on momentous day

  • Stoke defeat Southampton with 10 men

Haji Wright, Jack Rudoni and Victor Torp all scored twice as Coventry marked a momentous day in their history with a 7-1 demolition of an abject QPR. Earlier on Saturday, the club, owned by Doug King, announced they had bought the Coventry Building Society Arena for the first time since it opened 20 years ago.

The Sky Blues then completed a day few of their fans will forget as they ruthlessly exploited QPR’s generosity in defence to make it back-to-back wins in the Championship in stunning fashion.

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Vuelta a España: Jasper Philipsen bounces back from Tour pain to win opening stage

  • Belgian claims red jersey after sprint finish

  • Opening stage starts in Italy for the first time

Jasper Philipsen, of Alpecin-Deceuninck, won stage one of the Vuelta a España in a sprint finish on Saturday to take the red jersey in a repeat of his heroics in the first stage of the Tour de France where he registered his last Grand Tour stage win.

Philipsen had also taken the yellow jersey at last month’s Tour before a serious crash, where he fractured his collarbone and needed surgery, ruled him out of the rest of the race two days later.

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Berube's Imprint On Leafs' Roster Could Overshadow Marner's Departure

Toronto Maple Leafs star right winger William Nylander is one of the multiple players taking part in the NHL/NHLPA's European player media tour, which kicked off in Milan earlier this week.

On Friday, he talked about the impact of former teammate Mitch Marner’s departure to the Vegas Golden Knights this summer.

As Nylander told NHL.com, Marner "was the one making sure that we had team events like Halloween parties, dinners, all those kind of events. He would set those things up. Somebody’s going to have to take on that role now because he did an incredible job doing all that stuff." 

Marner’s role as the Maple Leafs’ social convenor has its value, but let’s be honest here – Toronto's fans really couldn’t care less about who replaces Marner in that position. The Leafs have one goal, and that’s on the ice. The Buds have a clearly defined target this coming season – getting further in the Stanley Cup playoffs than they have in the past 25 years – and no Leafs fan could give a whit what they do away from the rink.

The more important element in the coming season for the Leafs – and the one that not enough people are talking about – is the imprint Toronto coach Craig Berube is having on the makeup of the Maple Leafs’ roster.

As Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Keith Pelley said this summer after firing team president Brendan Shanahan, Berube will be more involved in making key decisions for the team.

“I'm a firm believer that the coach has to be involved more than just on the day of the game and in the dressing room,” Pelley said of Berube. “I have my utmost confidence in (Leafs GM) Brad (Treliving) and my utmost confidence in Craig.” 

That statement should resonate with Leafs fans as they look at the changes Toronto has made this off-season. Treliving didn’t go out and get some happy-go-lucky veteran player to make the Leafs’ dressing room a delightful place to be. Rather, the new additions that he brought to Toronto have Berube’s fingerprints all over them.

Indeed, arguably the two biggest additions to the Leafs are rugged players who have earned their reputation as being gritty and determined to make opponents’ lives miserable: center Nicolas Roy (acquired in the Marner sign-and-trade with Vegas) and left winger Dakota Joshua (picked up in a trade with the Vancouver Canucks).

Neither player shies away from a physical game, and that fits in perfectly with the type of team Berube wants to coach. And nothing else really matters in terms of changes to the team.

In the post-Marner era, the Maple Leafs will want to have a different identity than the finesse game Marner plays. Of course, Toronto will miss the offense Marner generated, but with Pelley’s words about Berube being more involved, it’s easy to see the different route the franchise is plotting out. It’s going to be more about snot and snarl for the Leafs next year, and that’s in no small part because Berube wants a tougher lineup.

It’s natural for NHL teams to try to mirror the blueprint for success of the most recent Stanley Cup winner, and that’s what’s been happening courtesy of Treliving and Berube. The back-to-back Cup champions, the Florida Panthers, imposed their will on opponents, Toronto included, by grinding them into the ground. That’s going to be job No. 1 for Roy, Joshua and the rest of the Maple Leafs.

As Nylander indicated, Marner was a fun teammate to have around. But that amounts to a hill of beans when playoff success has been hard to come by, as it’s been for Toronto during Marner’s time as a team leader and franchise cornerstone.

William Nylander and Mitch Marner (John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images)

Halloween parties and team dinners are nice ways to take the pressure off of players for a short spell, but the Maple Leafs don’t need those things nearly as much as they need players who can make opponents regret going into the hard areas of the ice. That’s what Berube wants, and that’s what Leafs fans should want as well. 

There’s no question that Marner will be missed in many regards. But if Toronto goes deeper into the post-season than they have in the modern era, no one will be complaining that the Leafs’ dressing room wasn’t as jovial as it used to be. And Berube’s influence on the changes Treliving has made to the roster will be completely validated.

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