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John Tortorella facing possible NHL fine after expletive Mitch Marner rant

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Skyler Walker
May 11, 2026  (5:47)
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May 1, 2026; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Vegas Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella addresses the media after game six of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Utah Mammoth at Delta Center.
Photo credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Mitch Marner got a loud defense from John Tortorella, and the coach's choice of words may now become the bigger story.

Tortorella didn't just push back on the old playoff label around Marner.

He went straight at Toronto critics and called that narrative «a bunch of bulls***» in a media scrum that quickly made the rounds.

That kind of line always lands hard in the postseason. It also puts a coach on the edge of the kind of league attention nobody wants during a series.

Marner's production gave Tortorella every reason to step in.

Through 9 playoff games, he had 6 goals and 7 assists for 13 points, which is why the coach clearly felt the outside noise had gone far enough.

The bigger issue now is tone. Coaches can defend their players all day, but once the language turns into a headline by itself, the league office starts hovering over the conversation.

That's what happened here.

Tortorella wanted to bury the Toronto chatter around Marner's playoff reputation, but his message came with the kind of wording that can cost money if the NHL decides it crossed the line.

"You guys don't see the stuff he does," said Tortorella. "All the people here, all the people in Toronto, all the people that talk about this guy, they don't see any of the things that he brings to a game even if he doesn't score. I've known that coaching against him."

Tortorella made Marner the point, then made himself the story

There was a hockey point buried inside the rant, and it was a fair one.

Tortorella said people fixate on goals and miss the details. Marner brings even on nights he doesn't score.

That tracks with how Marner has always been judged.

"That narrative is a bunch of bulls***," said Torella. "Like I said last night Mitch doesn't care. Mitch is a pro, he is a terrific player one of the top players in this league and he players for us."

In Toronto, every quiet night turned into a referendum. In this run, every shift is getting read through a different lens because the points are there.

Tortorella knows that. He also knows the fastest way to shield a star is to take the fire himself.

That may be exactly what happened.

Instead of another round of Marner debate, the focus shifted to whether Tortorella went too far at the podium.

And in a playoff market, that can be useful.

A coach wearing the noise for his top player is nothing new.

Still, the NHL does not love profanity becoming part of the daily story cycle.

Tortorella backed his guy, but he may have done it in a way that leaves him staring at a fine before puck drop.