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A huge potential move could completely transform the Toronto Maple Leafs as we know them

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Jonathan Ouimet
June 8, 2026  (11:39 PM)
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John Chayka
Photo credit: Screenshot

The Leafs' biggest offseason question isn't the draft or the coach. It's whether John Tavares can still be the answer at second-line center.

A popular fan take from Leafs Updates says he can. The argument: a 2C move would be nice, but it's not a must-fix, because Tavares produces just fine in the role.

The account also liked the look of a Tavares, Easton Cowan and William Nylander trio down the stretch, and wants Toronto to prioritize a two-way third line instead.

It's a reasonable plan. It's also where the numbers start arguing back.

Because the production case for Tavares and the defensive case point in opposite directions.

The full post lays out the build-from-depth philosophy, with Barrett Hayton floated as the slide-up center to anchor a new third line.

Barrett Hayton fits the cheap, two-way role Toronto needs

Start with the part the account gets right. Tavares still scores. He put up 71 points and 31 goals at age 35, on a team-friendly $4.4 million deal that's one of the best value contracts in the league.

Nylander did his part too, with 79 points despite playing just 65 games. The talent up the middle and on the wing is real.

Here's the trouble, and it's a big one. Tavares finished a minus-28. For a second-line center expected to handle hard matchups, that's a number you can't wave away.

Points say keep him in the role. The defensive math says Toronto leans on him at its own risk, especially under a coach who reportedly wants a puck-possession identity.

That's why I'd call 2C closer to a need than the fan take allows. Scoring was never the problem in Toronto. Keeping the puck out was.

The Hayton idea, though? That part is smart. The 25-year-old is a cheap, two-way center on a $2.65 million hit who finished plus-3 in Utah.

A player like that gives a coach options. He can anchor a checking third line or slide up when the top six sputters. Cost-controlled flexibility wins in a cap world.

The real answer probably involves both moves, not one. Add a Hayton type for depth, and keep hunting for a center who can take pressure off Tavares.

Whoever takes the Toronto job inherits this exact puzzle. The lineup looks fine on paper. The minus signs tell a different story.