Anthony Stolarz Taken To Hospital
At the very least, it suggests that the NHL DoPS isn’t feeling any outside pressure to change the way they assess supplementary discipline. After Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas was suspended for five games for delivering a knee-to-knee hit on Toronto Maple Leafs forward Auston Matthews, who suffered a season-ending injury due to the incident, there was an outcry from fans and media for the DoPS to impose stricter discipline to prevent such situations in the future.
- Netminder Anthony Stolarz did not make his scheduled start tonight because of an injury suffered in warm-ups. Before the game, the Maple Leafs announced that Stolarz was struck in the neck by a puck during warm-ups and was subsequently taken to a local hospital for further testing. Toronto has not provided any additional updates regarding Stolarz since.
Morgan Rielly Out With Lower-Body Injury
- Staying in Ontario, the Toronto Maple Leafs announced that defenseman Morgan Rielly would miss today’s game due to a lower-body injury. It is believed that Rielly did not suffer the injury due to any direct play in Toronto’s recent game against the Carolina Hurricanes, but rather re-aggravated an issue from earlier in the season. The 13-year veteran has scored nine goals and 33 points in 67 games for the Maple Leafs this season, averaging 21:15 of ice time.
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Stecher Hopes To Re-Sign With Toronto
It has been a rough stretch lately for the Maple Leafs, who have gone from a bubble team within striking distance of a Wild Card spot to one that is jockeying for seeding in the draft lottery. However, while some veterans may be hoping to move on after the season, blueliner Troy Stecher isn’t one of them. Speaking to Terry Koshan of the Toronto Sun, the pending UFA made it clear that he’s hoping to re-sign with Toronto for next season. Claimed off waivers from Edmonton back in November, Stecher is averaging just shy of 20 minutes per game since then, providing the Maple Leafs with a nice return on a deal that sits just above the minimum salary. Given how he has played in Toronto, Stecher could be in line to double his current AAV of $787.5K on the open market this summer should he get there.
Maple Leafs Recall Michael Pezzetta
The Maple Leafs have added enforcer Michael Pezzetta back to the NHL roster ahead of tonight’s game against the Hurricanes, the team announced. He was sent down to the AHL on Tuesday to get some minor-league playing time after serving as a healthy scratch for Toronto the previous weekend, but now figures to get another look in the lineup.
The 28-year-old Pezzetta signed a two-year deal with the Leafs in the offseason, joining his hometown team. A sixth-round pick by the Canadiens way back in 2016, he’d spent his entire career in Montreal up to that point with a 15-23–38 scoring line, a -9 rating, 241 penalty minutes, and 710 hits in 200 games.
Pezzetta couldn’t find a way onto Toronto’s opening night roster amid a logjam of forwards, though, leading to his first AHL action in four years. He’s spent virtually the entire campaign in the minors after clearing waivers until getting recalled last week following the Leafs’ deadline sell-off. He suited up in games against the Ducks and Sabres on March 12 and 14, racking up nine PIMs while averaging just 5:06 per game.
Pezzetta primarily fills an enforcer/checking role in the AHL as well, but has demonstrated a tad more offensive utility than he has in the past. He’s notched four goals and 10 points in 38 games for the Marlies with 52 penalty minutes and a -7 rating.
It doesn’t appear the Leafs have any injury concerns among their 12 healthy forwards already rostered, so Pezzetta’s recall likely doesn’t qualify as an emergency. That means he counts as the third of five regular recalls that Toronto can make after the trade deadline.
Tim Erixon Announces Retirement
- Former NHL depth piece Tim Erixon has retired, he told Nathalie Vinroth of Swedish newspaper Sundsvalls Tidning this week. The 23rd overall pick by the Flames in the 2009 draft, he went on to play 93 games in parts of four years with the Rangers, Blue Jackets, Blackhawks, and Maple Leafs. He last saw NHL ice in 2015 and last played in the minors in 2019 before returning home to bookend his career in the Swedish Hockey League. The 35-year-old won an SHL championship with the Växjö Lakers in 2021 and has been with Timrå IK ever since, although he’s played just six games since the beginning of 2024-25 due to ongoing back issues aggravated by a foot fracture.
Auston Matthews Undergoes MCL Surgery, Out For Season
March 19: Matthews underwent successful surgery to repair his MCL tear today in New York City, the team announced. The procedure carries a 12-week recovery timeline, meaning he shouldn’t have any issue hitting the ground running for training camp in the fall.
March 13: After sustaining a knee-on-knee hit from Anaheim’s Radko Gudas on Thursday night, the Maple Leafs won’t have their captain down the stretch. The team announced (Twitter link) that center Auston Matthews will miss the remainder of the season due to a Grade Three MCL tear. He will be reevaluated in two weeks and a further update will be provided at that time.
The injury brings a premature end to what has been a tough season for the 28-year-old. After lingering injuries slowed Matthews down off and on at times last season, the hope was that he’d come into this year fully healthy and get back to the level that saw him win three Rocket Richard trophies for the most goals in four years. With Mitch Marner now in Vegas, they were counting on him to be able to shoulder more of the load offensively.
However, that hasn’t happened. In between dealing with a pair of short-term lower-body injuries, Matthews saw his production drop even further this season. After putting up 78 points in 63 games in 2024-25, he was limited to just 27 goals and 26 assists in 60 outings this season. His goal earlier in Friday’s game snapped a 12-game goalless drought, allowing him to avoid tying his career-long stretch in that regard, set back in his rookie season back in 2016-17. Instead of leading the way offensively, Matthews finds himself fourth in team scoring and will likely stay there with Oliver Ekman-Larsson (who’s fifth) being 18 points behind.
Matthews has two years remaining on his current contract, one that carries a $13.25MM AAV that was briefly the richest in NHL history. It’s fair to say that Toronto hasn’t received fair value on that agreement so far given his reduction in production over the past two years. They’ll have to hope that the extended time off before next season will help spur his offense forward in the second half of the agreement.
His absence could also have an impact in the draft lottery. Toronto will retain its first-round pick if they land in the top five of the draft after the lottery. (If they pick outside that range, the selection goes to Boston.) The Maple Leafs are tied for eighth-last in the league right now, five points ahead of St. Louis, which is currently 28th. However, without their number one center in the lineup down the stretch, they could be primed to fall a little further in the standings.
Meanwhile, Gudas had a phone hearing with the Department of Player Safety earlier today as part of the supplemental discipline process. That will cap a potential suspension at no more than five games. With Anaheim in action both Saturday and Sunday, a decision on that front should come before too long.
Maple Leafs Sign Brandon Buhr To Entry-Level Deal
The Maple Leafs have signed college free agent forward Brandon Buhr to a one-year, entry-level deal for next season, per a team announcement. He will finish out the current year with AHL Toronto on a tryout agreement.
Buhr, 23, just wrapped up his senior season at Union College, where he spent the final three seasons of his NCAA tenure. He transferred there in 2023 after playing 10 games with Clarkson as a freshman. While he was sparsely used as a first-year player, he emerged as a high-end threat for virtually his entire time at Union. He finishes his run at the school with a 49-39–88 scoring line in 106 games.
The 6’2″, 205-lb righty continually upped his production year over year, culminating with a 19-goal, 36-point effort in only 35 outings for the Garnet Chargers. A sniper with pro-ready size, he’s the second UDFA Toronto has plucked out of college in as many days, but is perhaps the polar opposite threat physically compared to the undersized but skilled defender Vincent Borgesi.
Because of his age, Buhr will get just one year with the Leafs before he becomes a restricted free agent, giving Toronto an out if they choose to non-tender him at that time. If they choose to keep him around, by virtue of his challenging for an NHL job or proving valuable in a minor-league support role, they now control his rights until 2030.
Maple Leafs Sign Vincent Borgesi To Entry-Level Deal
The Maple Leafs usually dip their toes into the college free agent market. That isn’t changing this year. The club announced they’ve signed Northeastern captain Vincent Borgesi to a two-year entry-level contract beginning next season. He will report to AHL Toronto for the remainder of this season, making his pro debut in the process.
The contract carries a cap hit of $987.5K, according to PuckPedia. Borgesi will earn an $877.5K salary if he’s in the NHL next season, along with a $97.5K signing bonus. Those numbers jump to $900K and $100K, respectively, for 2027-28. He will take home a minor-league salary of $85K each season.
Borgesi, 22, was an absolutely torrid puck-moving defenseman at lower levels of the game. He once had 100 points in just 61 games at the under-15 level, and 38 points and a +33 rating in 57 games for the USHL’s Tri-City Storm back in his draft year, 2021-22. As a result, he’s always had some interest from NHL clubs, but everyone has been scared off by his size. He checks in at just 5’8″ and 174 lbs.
Over four years in college, Borgesi didn’t earn overwhelming national recognition but was still a consistent piece on the back end for the Huskies. His collegiate career came to an end last weekend against UMass in the Hockey East tournament, drawing to a close a 16-64–80 scoring line in 134 career outings with a +15 rating. Borgesi also served as the captain of the U.S. Collegiate Selects team that reached the Spengler Cup Final against top-level European pros this season, ultimately losing to hosts HC Davos.
Borgesi will now look to overcome his stature and make an impact at the pro level for Toronto. The organization is light on offensive help from the blue line from head to toe. The aging Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Morgan Rielly are the only names at the NHL level who have made a big impact from the point this season, and they don’t have a defender who’s topped 25 points in the minors this year.
Maple Leafs Reassign Michael Pezzetta, Henry Thrun
The Maple Leafs announced today that they’ve reassigned winger Michael Pezzetta and defenseman Henry Thrun to AHL Toronto. Their active roster is now at 22 players, but they don’t have any healthy extras with Auston Matthews’ season over (he’s yet to be placed on injured reserve) and Oliver Ekman-Larsson away from the team on paternity leave. As such, they can be called back up under emergency conditions if there’s a risk Toronto might be down anyone else for tonight’s game against the Islanders.
They might still be available, at least as healthy scratches. The Marlies have an afternoon game today at home, which would leave them enough time to report back to the NHL roster for tonight’s 6:00 p.m. CT home game.
Pezzetta, 28, received his first recall of the season last Thursday. He racked up nine penalty minutes and a -1 rating in back-to-back appearances before sitting as a healthy scratch for Sunday’s win over the Wild. The career enforcer averaged just 5:06 of ice time across the two contests and did not record a point, although he did have a shot on goal and six hits. He now sits at 202 career NHL appearances as he closes out the first half of the two-year, league minimum contract he signed with the Leafs in free agency last summer.
Thrun, 25, got an emergency summons on Sunday when Ekman-Larsson left the team’s road trip to return home for the birth of his child. He didn’t play. Acquired last offseason from the Sharks in the Ryan Reaves deal, Thrun has only suited up in four NHL contests for the Leafs after appearing in a career-high 60 contests with San Jose in 2024-25. The puck-moving lefty has a 4-16–20 scoring line and a -4 rating in 42 AHL outings this season.
Maple Leafs Discussed Trading Matthew Knies
The Toronto Maple Leafs considered dealing Matthew Knies at the trade deadline, mentioned by David Pagnotta of The Fourth Period in his post-deadline recap article. Chris Johnston of The Athletic said on TSN’s March 12 episode of OverDrive that Toronto 100% discussed it, but he did pump the brakes a bit, saying it didn’t seem to get to final stages.
Either way, for GM Brad Treliving to give it any thought leaves a fascinating “what if”. It’s unclear what a return could have looked like, but Toronto would need a tremendous haul for their second leading scorer (18 goals, 39 assists, 65 games) who is just 23 years old. Even then, it could send shudders down the spines of the Toronto faithful based on who is pulling the strings.
Trading Knies seems to be exactly what the Maple Leafs should not be doing, as years of neglecting their future has left them with the mess they’re in now. Set to miss the playoffs for the first time in a decade, the club cannot even benefit from the lost season, as barring a lottery miracle jump into the top five, their first round pick will go to Boston.
If that’s the case, Toronto will cross their fingers as the Bruins make their selection that it won’t be a repeat of 2020, when the Carolina Hurricanes netted star Seth Jarvis at 13th overall from a previously more modest trade.
Back to the present, adding insult to injury the Leafs also relinquished 21-year-old Fraser Minten, whose strong play has become a constant talking point this season. It can be argued that this trade was the final nail in the coffin from an era which will be defined by its disappointment.
Needless to say, Treliving’s guard should be up from past mistakes. In a period where they seldom kept first round selections, the Leafs were fortunate enough to hit on the uber-talented 6’3” winger in the second round back in 2021, leaving Treliving with a huge asset to inherit. It’s curious as to why shipping Knies out could even be on the table at this point. Any return would have to bring back a young defenseman of equal promise along with more assets, without weakening the team in its current form. Even if the Maple Leafs eventually embarked on a full scale tear down, which is extremely unlikely, Knies is still young enough, with the right term (six years, $7.75MM), that he’d be well suited to stick around as a foundational piece.
Pure speculation at this point, but if Montreal was in the mix as it has been rumored, perhaps 24-year-old Kaiden Guhle could have been a headliner in the return, but even then, it feels like not enough for a player of Knies’ caliber. There’s already many things over the past few years the Maple Leafs organization wishes they could have a do-over on, and it’s probably best they don’t roll the dice on another.
Treliving still faces the tall task of infusing the blue line with more talent this summer with limited assets to work with. However, there simply has to be another way, even if it’s an older player, or more of an under the radar reclamation project. Dangling Knies would fetch a defensemen they’ve been craving for about as long as can be remembered. Yet at the same time, suddenly there’d be a massive gap in their top six, leaving great pressure on the raw 20-year-old Easton Cowan with virtually nobody else in the cupboard having remotely as much upside.
It may come back to discussion this offseason, however, Pagnotta chimed in that he’s not convinced it will be explored in the coming summer. Perhaps that’s for the best, as the Leafs will try to shake things up and run it back next year. If another contention window will open for the franchise, it will need Knies’ continued growth into one of the game’s best power forwards. That’s best done in the blue and white, as opposed to a rival.
Image Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

