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Maple Leafs boss stays silent on Auston Matthews talks (Getty Images)
The mood around the Toronto Maple Leafs has shifted quickly, and not in the way the organization had hoped when the season began. This was supposed to mark a clean break, with Auston Matthews leading a new-look core after Mitch Marner’s departure.
Instead, the year unraveled. Marner’s transition to the Vegas Golden Knights has been uneven, while Matthews’ campaign ended abruptly following a heavy hit from Radko Gudas. By March 30, the fallout reached the front office, with general manager Brad Treliving dismissed, leaving more uncertainty than clarity heading into the offseason.
Uncertainty grows around Auston Matthews as Leafs leadership stays guarded
Speculation tends to follow elite players when results fall short, and Matthews’ situation is no different.
With the Leafs out of contention, questions about his long-term future have grown louder. Team president Keith Pelley did little to quiet that noise, choosing instead to keep things measured and private.“Auston and I texted back and forth this morning, but I like to leave the conversations that happen with the players to the hockey operations people,” Pelley said, offering little beyond confirmation that contact had been made.
It is a delicate balance. Matthews remains under contract through the 2027–28 season with a full no-movement clause and a significant cap hit, limiting any straightforward path to change even if either side were to consider it. That reality has not stopped the speculation, though insiders have urged caution. Elliotte Friedman noted in his latest column, “I wouldn’t rush to assume anything about Auston Matthews’ intentions.
There is much to play out before we get a true understanding of how he feels.”For now, Matthews’ focus is recovery. The star center underwent surgery on March 19 to address a serious knee injury along with a quad issue, and early expectations suggest he should be ready for training camp. Health, at least, offers a clearer timeline than the franchise’s broader direction.Pelley pushed back strongly on any suggestion of a reset built on losing.
“We will not tank,” he said, a firm stance that reflects the organization’s belief it still has enough to compete. That belief rests on a core that includes Matthews, William Nylander, and Matthew Knies, with John Tavares expected to remain part of the picture as stability is restored.The more immediate questions lie behind the bench and in the front office. With Treliving gone, attention turns to the search for a new general manager.
Jim Nill, long admired in league circles, is no longer an option after recommitting to the Dallas Stars. That leaves Toronto weighing internal candidates against a wider search.Coaching is another layer still unresolved. Craig Berube remains in place for now, but the availability of Bruce Cassidy adds intrigue to what is shaping up to be a defining offseason.Nothing about this moment feels settled. Not the roster, not the leadership, and certainly not the expectations.



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