Toronto Maple Leafs superstar Auston Matthews is still feeling the effects of the upper-body injury that sidelined him for nine games earlier this season, head coach Craig Berube told Sportsnet’s Luke Fox. Berube shared that Matthews is fighting through the ailment and that the team is managing his load while he returns to full health. No injury specifics were provided, and Berube didn’t seem to suggest Matthews would need to miss any additional time.
Matthews may not look as fluid as normal, but he’s certainly appearing on the scoresheet all the same. He’s recorded points in all but two games since returning on November 30th – totaling five goals and 11 points, good for second on the team in both categories. The hot return slots Matthews in at fourth on the Leafs in scoring on the year, and third on the team in points-per-game, with 22 points in 23 games this season. Digging even deeper, Matthews’ goal in Toronto’s December 14th win over Detroit was his 50th of calendar year 2024. He’s now totaled at least 50 goals in each of the last four calendar years – making him the ninth player in league history to achieve such a feat. The record for that category is split between Wayne Gretzky and Mike Bossy, who each managed the feat in seven straight years, per Rotowire.
In additional Maple Leafs news, former captain John Tavares is hoping to sign an extension with the club, per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman on the latest 32 Thoughts podcast. Friedman pointed out how Tavares’ has adjusted to new head coach Berube as a big contributor to the veteran wanting to stay. Tavares’ last contract negotiations with Toronto were legendarily contentious. He signed a seven-year, $77MM deal with the club on July 1st, 2018.
It was one of the league’s priciest contracts at the time, and more notably pulled Tavares away from the New York Islanders, where he spent the prior nine seasons. Tavares was a star with the Islanders, posting 621 points across 779 games with the club and even earning their captaincy. The Ontario native has since become vilified by Long Island hockey fans, though he’s continued to score at an incredible rate with the Leafs. Tavares has 448 points in 471 games in Toronto, including a career-high 88 points scored in 2018-19 – his first year with the club. A new deal will likely come with a significant decrease in pay – especially with Mitch Marner’s extension looming – but Tavares is still likely to be paid handsomely for his production out of a middle-six role. He ranks third on the 2024-25 Leafs in scoring, with 29 points in 31 games, despite averaging the least ice time of any of the top six scoring leaders.
Continuing updates for Toronto captains, the AHL’s Toronto Marlies have signed forward Logan Shaw to a two-year contract extension. Shaw has been the Marlies’ captain for the last three seasons, after serving two years as the Belleville Senators ’C’. He’s been fantastically productive with the Marlies, totaling 144 points in 160 games with the club. That includes Shaw’s 17 points in 23 games this season, which ranks third on the minor-Toronto in scoring. The new deal will take Shaw through his age-34 season, and his 14th professional season.
FeeltheThunder
Does Toronto’s management not realize they’re the third oldest team in the league & they keep signing on guys who are nearing or in their mid 30s lol. They’re retooling tactics is having them head in the direction of Pittsburgh & Nashville not that I care at all. There is was of retooling a team but Toronto is approaching it wrong. But the less about Toronto the better.
I guess Toronto wants to keep playing with the same old deck of cards that has failed time & time again especially in a division that has Tampa & Florida who are ranked as the 2 best run organizations in the league according to many experts within the NHL inner circles.
Mtog
Well next season I’m sure Kampf and Jarnkrok will be replaced by Minten and Grebyonkin. That should help lower the age. Plus Reaves will likely be bought out/traded, Hakanpaa will be gone and Rifai or Webber will be the 7th dman.
KL
Yeah, those old guys make up much of their supporting cast.
Their best players– Matthews, Marner, Nylander, Rielly– are significantly younger than Crosby, Malkin, Karlsson, and Letang.
It’s not a comparable situation at all.
FeeltheThunder
Actually it is comparable in different ways. You’re just looking at age.
Players like Matthews & Nylander took the biggest deals they could get which isn’t doing the organization any favors. Toronto isn’t getting discounts from their core guys which has a significant domino effect down the lineup. Toronto is relying on their core 4 to pick up a ton of slack because more than 1/3 of their cap is going to merely 4 guys for many years to come lol.
Then they sign talents like Tanev & Larrsen to a deals that will carrying them into their 40s (or close to it). Those contracts won’t age well. This is the same team that signed a talentless bully in Ryan Reeves to a 3 year deal that’s aged quite poorly.
Also, I didn’t just say Pittsburgh, I mentioned Nashville as well. Toronto is like a mix of both those teams in various ways.
KL
You just don’t the Leafs. It’s silly.
The teams are not comparable at all. Pittsburgh’s supporting cast is much younger because they’re retooling and they’re capped out, Toronto’s supporting cast is older, seasoned, and more expensive because they expect to contend. Having actual NHL players tends to make your team older. This isn’t rocket science. Pittsburgh (and Nashville’s) top players are old and on the downhill of their careers. Obviously their supporting cast is going to be younger and more cap compliant. Who cares.
The Leafs core is significantly younger than both Nashville/Pittsburgh’s core, and the % of salary cap argument has two sides, the % will decrease over time.