Maple Leafs Announce Several Roster Moves

Earlier this afternoon the Toronto Maple Leafs shared several roster moves: Benoit-Olivier Groulx has been assigned to the AHL’s Toronto Marlies, while a number of players have been recalled from the farm club on an emergency basis. Goaltender Artur Akhtyamov, forwards Luke Haymes and Ryan Tverberg, and defenseman William Villeneuve have all joined the Leafs ahead of their game at the Islanders. 

A number of Maple Leafs are banged up, and with games inconsequential at this point, they have little to lose in giving a look at some younger players. Out of the bunch, Akhtyamov and Haymes are in the lineup, while Tverberg and Villeneuve were not needed tonight after all.

Headed back down, Groulx made a name for himself quickly, as he’s led the Marlies in scoring with 27 tallies in 55 games in 2025-26. A former notable Ducks prospect drafted in the second round, the French center provided a spark with five points in his first six games as a Leaf in early March. He’s since been scoreless in seven straight, despite a decent share of usage. With just three games left on the schedule, Toronto may leave Groulx to stay down as a top AHL contributor. 

Akhtyamov, 24, made his NHL debut in December where he made five saves in just 10:32 of action. Tonight presents a taller task, as he’ll have to backstop the Leafs against a desperate Islanders club in new head coach Peter DeBoer’s debut. 

Chosen in the fourth round of the 2020 draft, the Russian has gotten a steady dose of action with the Marlies over the past two seasons, posting a save percentage over the .900 mark across 62 regular season games. As part of a thin pool, Akhtyamov has been referenced as a top 10 prospect which would not be the case in some other organizations. Sitting behind fellow 24-year-old Dennis Hildeby, and with Anthony Stolarz and Joseph Woll locked up for the foreseeable future, he faces a long road toward his projected upside as a NHL backup. 

Up front, it’ll be a memorable night for Haymes, as he’s making his NHL debut. Centering the third line, the 22-year-old was undrafted out of Dartmouth College, catching on with Toronto and taking a step forward with 32 points in 64 games with the Marlies this year. 

As a do-it-all forward in the Marlies’ middle six, the 6’1” lefty would hope to follow a Bobby McMann type of development curve, eventually becoming a surprise NHL contributor. Even if a 20-goal output isn’t on the horizon though, Haymes has the skillset to be a depth bottom sixer at the NHL level, having progressed nicely this season. 

Villeneuve, 24, is also a fourth rounder of Toronto’s 2020 draft class. Over the past four years the 6’2” lefty has put up strong offensive numbers with the Marlies, including a 40-point effort in 55 games last season, but he’s still awaiting his NHL debut. A restricted free agent this summer, he’d certainly enjoy an opportunity to showcase his strong skating and offensive instincts, but even if it doesn’t come, Villeneuve is a valuable AHLer. 

Rounding out the bunch, Tverberg shares the distinction of being a 2020 draftee, although his name wasn’t called until the seventh round. The former University of Connecticut standout has put together a solid season in the AHL with 32 points in 61 games, impressive for any player drafted 213th overall. The Ontario native has blistering speed, crucial for any energy forward hopeful, and similar to Villeneuve, an NHL appearance would go a long way before contract expiration shortly. 

After tonight’s action on Long Island, Toronto is off until Saturday as they’ll host Florida. That’s likely enough time for their roster to heal up, leaving the group to return to the Marlies, who have secured a spot in the Calder Cup playoffs and therefore will be needing them back. 

Stolarz, Carlo, And Joshua All Injured Versus Capitals

Tonight’s game was a tough one for the Maple Leafs.  The team announced (Twitter links) that goaltender Anthony Stolarz (lower body), defenseman Brandon Carlo (lower body), and forward Dakota Joshua (upper body) all exited their game against Washington due to injuries.

Stolarz went down just 2:34 into the game after extending to make a save and dropped to the ice in pain.  He was helped off and couldn’t put any weight on his leg while Joseph Woll took over for the rest of the game.  Carlo made it through two periods, playing into the final minute of the second but didn’t come out for the third while Joshua was injured on a hit from Rasmus Sandin in the back half of the middle frame.  The Maple Leafs have a quick turnaround as they’re set to play against the Islanders on Thursday; it wouldn’t be surprising to see several recalls before that contest.  One of those will be netminder Artur Akhtyamov as TSN’s Mark Masters relays (Twitter link) that the youngster will be brought up and make his NHL debut against New York.

Maple Leafs Reassign Luke Haymes, William Villeneuve

The Maple Leafs assigned forward Luke Haymes and defenseman William Villeneuve to AHL Toronto on Wednesday morning, per a team announcement. There’s a good chance these moves will be reversed later today. The Marlies, still fighting to clinch a Calder Cup Playoffs berth, have a morning home game against the Utica Comets today, allowing the duo to get some game time in there before rejoining Toronto’s NHL roster for their home tilt against the Capitals later tonight.

Haymes was recalled just yesterday. An undrafted free agent signing out of Dartmouth last year, he’s broken out for 17 goals, 15 assists, and 32 points in 63 games for the Marlies in his first professional season. He got to take part in his first NHL practice yesterday but wasn’t a part of regular line rushes, per Mark Masters of TSN, so it’s unlikely he’ll get to make his NHL debut later tonight after suiting up for the Marlies earlier in the day. He’ll likely travel with the team to Long Island with the hope of making his NHL debut tomorrow in New York on the second half of a back-to-back with travel.

The same goes for Villeneuve, who skated on the Leafs’ extra defense pairing yesterday. He’s been on the roster since April 4 but was scratched for the Leafs’ only game since then, an overtime loss to the Kings last Saturday. A fourth-round pick in 2020, that was the first time Villeneuve had even been rostered for an NHL contest, as he closes out his fourth season in the Leafs organization.

Toronto would be remiss to not get the 6’2″ righty into at least one game down the stretch. The 24-year-old has been among the AHL club’s most consistent two-way threats since beginning his pro career in earnest in 2022. The product of the QMJHL’s Saint John Sea Dogs has hovered right around half a point per game each season, aside from his 40-point breakout in 55 games last year. His production has regressed this season, but he still owns a 3-25–28 scoring line in 58 games to lead Marlies defensemen.

Maple Leafs Hire PBI Sports & Entertainment To Support GM Search

The Toronto Maple Leafs face a pivotal decision as the off-season approaches. They are in the midst of searching for their first general manager hire since 2023. To help make sure their decision works out, the Maple Leafs have hired Neil Glasberg’s PBI Sports & Entertainment to support their search per Sportsnet’s Luke Fox. The firm represents many coaches and executives in the NHL – including Edmonton Oilers GM Stan Bowman, New Jersey Devils senior advisor Chuck Fletcher, and Florida Panthers assistant GM Sunny Mehta as pointed out by Chris Johnston of The Athletic.

Toronto will move forward targeting mid-May as when they’d like to have a decision made per Johnston. Some have expressed concerns about Glaser’s involvement in the search as he represents potential candidates for the role – but PBI Sports & Entertainment’s involvement does not violate any league rules and the firm has previously been used by the Vancouver Canucks, Philadelphia Flyers, and Seattle Kraken.

Still, Mehta could be a top candidate for the Leafs’ key role. MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley stated that the next Leafs GM will need to be data-centric, with an understanding of the importance of analytics in building a roster. Mehta served as an analytical consultant in the NHL and MLB prior to his role with the Panthers. He even spearheaded the first full-time analytics department in NHL history with the 2014-15 New Jersey Devils. Mehta was hired as the Panthers’ Vice President of Hockey Strategy and Intelligence in 2020 and promoted to the assistant GM chair, in addition to his role as Director of Analytics, in 2023. Florida won back-to-back Stanley Cups on the heels of that promotion. In addition to his track record in hockey and baseball, Mehta was also once a professional poker player and co-authored a top-selling gambling book.

Mehta will be one of many names considered for the Leafs GM chair. Other names who could be involved includes former NHL GMs John Chayka, Peter Chiarelli, and Kevyn Adams per Johnston.

Maple Leafs Recall Luke Haymes

The Maple Leafs announced that they’ve recalled forward Luke Haymes from AHL Toronto on an emergency basis. The 22-year-old could be an option to make his NHL debut tomorrow against the Capitals.

Toronto signed Haymes as an undrafted free agent out of Dartmouth College this time last year. At the time, the Ottawa native was coming off a standout run over his sophomore and junior seasons that saw him accumulate 30 goals and 54 points in 53 games for the Big Green, taking home ECAC First Team All-Star honors in 2023-24.

Haymes joined the AHL club on an amateur tryout to end last season before his entry-level contract kicked in this year. He immediately made an impact with two goals and six points in nine games. That production has carried over in 2025-26, where he’s had a strong enough rookie campaign with a 17-15–32 line in 63 games with a -6 rating.

Haymes sits sixth on the club in scoring and remains under contract through next year at a cap hit of $875K. He’ll be waiver-exempt until 2028-29 unless he plays 70 NHL contests before then. An opening-night job in the fall is unlikely, but he’s tracking toward being a depth contributor with some real mid-season call-up potential. He’ll get an initial look now with five games left in the Leafs’ season, their first without playoff hockey since 2016.

The 6’1″, 203-lb Haymes can play both center and left wing and checks in as the #10 prospect in the Maple Leafs’ system according to Scott Wheeler of The Athletic. Wheeler touts him as a “solid, trustworthy player” who “makes good decisions around the ice, knows how to support play on both sides of the puck, has a pro build and average pro tools, and fits the play-the-right-way focus of the current Leafs brass and coaching staff.”

Blues’ Doug Armstrong Won’t Be Available For Maple Leafs GM Search

The Toronto Maple Leafs are in the midst of a full-scale search for their next general manager after dismissing Brad Treliving last week. Their list of candidates is growing quickly, but isn’t expected to include current St. Louis Blues general manager Doug Armstrong. The Blues have no plans to allow Armstrong to interview for Toronto’s GM vacancy, per David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period. Armstrong is set to become St. Louis’ President of Hockey Operations while Alexander Steen steps into the GM role on July 1st. Pagnotta’s report was echoed by Jeremy Rutherford of The Athletic and Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman in the latest episode of the 32 Thoughts Podcast.

It seems St. Louis has no interest in letting Armstrong walk after 16 years in the Blues’ GM chair. That tenure has spanned some transformative years in Blues franchise history. Armstrong took over a squad with only one playoff appearance in their last five seasons. With quick and crafty moves, such as bringing in a new goalie tandem in Jaroslav Halak and Brian Elliott, Armstrong pushed St. Louis to the Central Division championship in just his second season. That postseason appearance kicked off six consecutive playoff berths for the Blues. They were briefly interrupted with a miss in 2018 but returned in full force with a Cinderella-story Stanley Cup win in 2019.

Along the way, Armstrong made clear his willingness to put the team’s overall performance above any one player. He parted ways with all four captains under his reign, including moving on from Alex Pietrangelo just one season after he became the first Blue to lift the Stanley Cup. The results of those changes have ebbed and flowed, with St. Louis now boasting a strong prospect pool and only one playoff berth in the last three seasons.

In the midst of a rebuild, St. Louis will also turn over their top management position. Steen joined the Blues’ management staff as a team consultant and development coach in 2023. He was promoted to a ‘Special Assistant to the GM’ role in 2024 and is now preparing to take one more step this summer. His path has been largely untraditional, but also well supported by his leadership role during 13 seasons as a Blues player and his close connection with Armstrong. Those factors have helped St. Louis hone Steen into a manager capable of filling their top chair, while Armstrong will still have a say in hockey ops decisions. The tandem between Armstrong and Steen has grown strong, and St. Louis will ensure it sticks even as their roles shift.

Not even a GM opening in Armstrong’s home province will be enough to knock the Blues’ plan off-course. Armstrong has held a management position in the Midwest since 1992 and has taken steps to reduce his workload since managing Team Canada to a Silver Medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Unless St. Louis changes its mind about supporting an upcoming rookie GM, Armstrong will continue with the city where he won his latest Stanley Cup. That will give him a chance to see out many top Blues prospects, including defenseman Adam Jiricek and whoever the club reels in with a top pick in 2026.

Maple Leafs’ Tyler Hopkins, Harry Nansi Sign AHL Tryouts

Maple Leafs forward prospects Tyler Hopkins and Harry Nansi signed amateur tryouts with AHL Toronto on Monday, the team announced. They can’t be directly “assigned” to the AHL after completing their junior seasons, as the Leafs haven’t yet signed them to their entry-level contracts, but this will still allow each of them to make their pro debuts this season after their Ontario Hockey League playoff runs both concluded in sweeps last week.

Hopkins, 19, was Toronto’s third-round pick in 2025 out of Kingston. He was dealt to Guelph midway through this season, with whom he tallied a 13-12–25 scoring line in 27 games down the stretch. He was their only player to score multiple goals in what ended up being an aggressive dispatching by Windsor, which outscored Guelph 21-5 in the four-game series.

The Leafs can wait until June 1, 2027, to sign Hopkins before losing his rights. No matter if they ink him now or this offseason, he’ll be heading back to Guelph in the fall. A 6’1″ pivot with good two-way instincts, he tallied 50 points in 56 games this year across his stints in Kingston and Guelph and grades out as the #11-ranked prospect in one of the weakest pools in the league, Scott Wheeler of The Athletic wrote last month. Some added muscle could allow him to develop into a potential fourth-line piece with good defensive numbers.

Nansi is arguably the more intriguing talent. He went two rounds after Hopkins last year, but the Quebec native was one of the youngest players in the class with a Sep. 10 birthday and took a giant leap forward this season. After the 6’3″ right winger was limited to seven goals and 23 points in 67 games as a second-year junior player in Owen Sound last season, he finished third on the Attack in scoring this year with a 13-43–56 line in 67 games. He ultimately went pointless in four postseason outings as Owen Sound was also stomped out of the playoffs by Flint, losing their four-game series by an aggregate score of 35-3.

Still, that offensive breakout means he’s climbed into being a top-10 prospect for the Leafs, with Wheeler tabbing him at #6. The question is whether he can develop enough physically – he currently checks in at only 179 lbs – while continuing to improve his skating in hopes of being able to hit as a lower-end top-nine piece someday.

Brad Treliving Was Never A Good Fit With The Maple Leafs

Last week, news broke that the Maple Leafs had relieved general manager Brad Treliving of his duties, ending an underwhelming tenure with the team that never made sense from the day he was hired in late May 2023. Treliving had previously been with the Flames for nine seasons before he and the team mutually agreed to part ways just weeks before the Maple Leafs hired him.

At the time of his departure from Calgary, PHR’s Josh Erickson noted that Treliving was well respected in NHL front offices, and it was likely he would find a new role quickly, which proved to be a spot-on prediction. However, that likely won’t be the case this time, at least not for an NHL general manager role, as Treliving may need to step away from the game or rebuild his reputation before another team offers him a prominent position.

Treliving’s career in NHL management is similar to that of former Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Ron Hextall, who was let go by the team around the time Treliving left Calgary. Hextall has not held an NHL role since then, and it’s possible Treliving might also need to take some time away from the game or be forced to do so if he can’t find work as an NHL executive.

Some folks might find it unfair to compare Treliving to Hextall, but their two recent runs as GMs show many similarities, as does their history in previous organizations. And as unflattering as it may be, both Hextall and Treliving inherited teams capable of winning the Stanley Cup, with star players at the top, and both oversaw the dismantling of their contention windows.

Folks in Philadelphia would argue that Hextall did the same thing when he was with the Flyers, just as fans of the Flames might feel the same about Treliving’s tenure there. Hextall and Treliving both operated without much semblance of a plan, so many of their moves appeared to be reactions to a changing market, attempts to undo a previous mistake, or attempts to pick up what they could when they realized they had a glaring hole in their roster.

But were Treliving’s moves in Toronto really that bad? The short answer is yes, and the long answer is much more complicated.

It wasn’t all bad for Treliving in Toronto, as the team did win a division title and pushed the eventual Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers to seven games in the second round last year. However, mistakes made early in Treliving’s tenure eventually compounded, leading to a year where almost nothing went right for him and the Maple Leafs.

In his first summer on the job in 2023, Treliving signed David Kämpf to a regrettable four-year contract worth $9.6MM before free agency. He then entered free agency and made a couple of solid short-term signings in Max Domi and Tyler Bertuzzi.

However, those deals were surrounded by a series of poor bets as Treliving signed Ryan Reaves to a multi-year deal, and agreed to one-year contracts with John Klingberg, Ilya Samsonov, and Martin Jones. Except for the Reaves deal, none of the other moves were particularly bad on their own, but they left the Maple Leafs in a similar spot come playoff time, as they bowed out in the first round to the Bruins. During that season, Treliving also extended Auston Matthews and William Nylander, essentially doubling down on a core four template that had yet to produce a deep playoff run.

Most of Treliving’s early mistakes during his tenure involved trades, where he often traded away depth players for very little and then spent a lot to acquire slightly better players. A clear example is a series of transactions late in the 2024-25 season, when he traded Connor Dewar and Conor Timmins to the Pittsburgh Penguins for a fifth-round pick, and then acquired Scott Laughton, along with a fourth- and sixth-round draft pick, for a conditional 2027 first-rounder and prospect Nikita Grebenkin.

Now, Timmins might not be an NHL defenseman at this point, but it’s hard to argue that Laughton is much of an upgrade on Dewar, especially after the season both players have had. In fact, it’s fair to say that Dewar would be an upgrade on Laughton at this stage of their careers, and he is five years younger than the 31-year-old Laughton. Essentially, those two trades marked a significant loss of talent for Toronto in just a few hours. It made their existing NHL roster worse and removed a key draft asset from their future. These two trades highlight a major issue for Treliving: he lost nearly every trade he made in Toronto, and this was nothing new.

The list of poor trades could fill an entire article on its own, with the most glaring example being the Brandon Carlo trade, which could haunt the Maple Leafs for years depending on how the first-round pick turns out.

But again, many of the moves weren’t necessarily bad; quite a few were unnecessary and revealed that Treliving didn’t have a clear sense of where his team was or what they needed to improve. A good example is the March 2024 trade when Treliving acquired Joel Edmundson from the Washington Capitals in exchange for a 2024 third-round pick and a 2025 fifth-round pick.

This move wasn’t terrible, but Edmundson was only a depth player at that point, and Treliving traded for him when the team desperately needed a top-four defenseman. It felt like a half measure, more like the Maple Leafs’ GM doing something just to say he did it. Critics will note that giving up two mid-round picks isn’t a big deal, but making three such trades a season quickly depletes your draft pool — which is exactly what has happened to Toronto. The prospect pipeline is now empty, and if the Maple Leafs are to have any hope for the future, the next GM will have to make the most of the few draft picks they do have.

Overall, Treliving’s tenure will be remembered as a period when he and the team never quite aligned, leading to a lot of movement but little results. The reality is that Maple Leafs fans and media may claim that Treliving didn’t do enough to push Toronto over the hump and to the next level in the playoffs, but the truth is that Treliving didn’t do enough right, and in fact, he barely got anything right for the Maple Leafs. That’s why they need to conduct another hockey management search at a time when their competitive window is closing quickly.

Maple Leafs Linked To Sunny Mehta For GM Vacancy

The Maple Leafs have Panthers assistant general manager Sunny Mehta on their initial list of desired candidates to succeed Brad Treliving in the GM’s chair, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet said on last night’s “Saturday Headlines.”

Mehta, 47, has long been a prominent face in advanced analytics. The Michigan native has had quite the long and winding road through his professional life – from earning a master’s degree in data science to becoming a professional poker player and bestselling author – before he got into online analytics blogging in the early 2010s. After quickly gaining acclaim in that sphere, he did some consulting work for the Coyotes before being hired as the Devils’ director of analytics in 2014, heading up the league’s first dedicated analytics department.

He remained in that role with New Jersey through 2018. He then did some freelance work with the Capitals and several Major League Baseball teams before getting brought into the Panthers’ front office by then fresh-faced GM Bill Zito in 2021. Mehta served as the team’s director of hockey strategy and intelligence for two years before Zito promoted him to his inner circle as an AGM, a role he’s stayed in since the Cats’ first of three consecutive trips to the Stanley Cup Final in 2023 while also serving as their director of analytics.

Keith Pelley, the president of the Leafs’ parent company, made clear in his media availability at the beginning of last week that his GM hire would be “data-centric.” There’s perhaps no individual more fitting of that description than Mehta. He’s played a key role in Florida’s successful acquisition of under-utilized depth pieces like Evan Rodrigues and Niko Mikkola over the past few years.

Maple Leafs Recall William Villeneuve On Emergency Basis

The Maple Leafs are expected to be without Oliver Ekman-Larsson tonight for his first injury-related absence of the year.  Additionally, David Alter of The Hockey News notes (Twitter link) that there are some other players banged up as well.  As a result, the team has decided to bring up an extra blueliner, announcing (Twitter link) that they’ve recalled William Villeneuve on an emergency basis from AHL Toronto.

It’s the second recall of the season (and of his career) for the 24-year-old although his first stint came during the Olympic break so he’s still waiting to make his NHL debut.  Villeneuve was a fourth-round pick by Toronto back in 2022, going 122nd overall.  He has been fairly productive in the minors over the years but that has yet to materialize into an opportunity at the top level yet.

Villeneuve had 40 points for the Marlies last season but that didn’t seem to help his cause much in contract negotiations as a restricted free agent for the first time.  In exchange for accepting the minimum salary at the NHL level, he received an additional $20K guarantee on his deal, bringing his total salary for this season to $100K overall.  Villeneuve hasn’t been quite as productive this season as he has three goals and 25 assists in 58 games but that’s enough to sit third on the team in assists and first in points among blueliners.

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