Hockey

Maple Leafs open training camp eager to move past playoff failures

The Toronto Maple Leafs, coming off a devastating playoff loss to their rival Montreal Canadiens, are already parroting each other with party lines like "the past is the past." But how does a team move forward with the weight of so much baggage?

'We don't carry the burden of 54 years with us,' GM Dubas says of Stanley Cup drought

Toronto's Auston Matthews, left, Mitch Marner, right, and Jack Campbell, centre, (36) skate off in dejection after being eliminated in the 2021 playoffs. The trio is crucial to the Maple Leafs' hopes of reversing their fortunes in the coming season. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

Kyle Dubas heard the outside noise clamouring for off-season change.

The Maple Leafs general manager even took phone calls from counterparts across the NHL testing the waters to see if Toronto was looking at drastically altering course following another crushing playoff setback.

Dubas, however, has had unwavering faith in this group, hitching his and the team's cart to a talented, expensive core of forwards led by Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, John Tavares and William Nylander.

Heading into to a season with pressure unlike any he's ever faced, the Leafs GM — "for better or worse" as he put it back in July — isn't about to change tune.

"You always have to, in this job, consider anything that's going to make your team better," Dubas said Wednesday as training camps opened across the league. "There was nothing that came along from the end of our series to today that I felt was even to be considered in terms of making our team better.

"We would have been different, and maybe that would provide some cover and appease the masses a little bit, but we wouldn't be better. That's why my belief in that group is so large. I feel that when these big moments come again ... they are going to be at their best, and they are going to have success."

Success, as any Leaf fan will tell you, has been difficult to come by in Toronto for multiple generations.

Another crushing defeat

A crushing first-round playoff defeat in May to the Montreal Canadiens despite leading the best-of-seven matchup 3-1 now tops a pile that includes five straight series losses since 2017, a failure to advance to the second round in the salary cap era, and a Stanley Cup drought dating back to 1967.

The Leafs are already parroting each other with party lines like "the past is the past," but how does a team move forward with the weight of so much baggage?

"We don't carry the burden of 54 years with us," said Dubas, Toronto's GM since May 2018. "A lot of the people in that [locker] room when I walk in there, weren't alive then, or most of them weren't, or all of them weren't. I don't think that resonates with them.

"What I've learned about this group in the last 3-½ months is that they care tremendously... rather than proving all of that stuff wrong, they care about proving themselves and what they're about right."

WATCH | Maple Leafs blow 3-1 lead against Canadiens:

Habs advance to 2nd round with Game 7 victory over Leafs

3 years ago
Duration 1:08
Montreal eliminates Toronto with 3-1 win, faces Winnipeg in the 2nd round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe, who like his boss could be on the hot seat in 2021-22 if things don't got according to plan, knew what he signed up for 20 months ago.

"I recognize and accept the pressure and responsibility that comes with this position," said Keefe, who will begin his first full-length season in charge after replacing Mike Babcock in November 2019. "There hasn't been a day where I've thought about [job security], but there also hasn't been a day where I don't recognize the responsibility that I have towards our fans and our ownership and our management."

Drawing positives from previous season

Toronto captain John Tavares said the core getting another vote of confidence from Dubas in the summer was crucial for a team that, despite the bitter end, did a lot of good things in a trying 2020-21 season shortened by the COVID-19 pandemic.

"We're putting everything into this every single day trying to find our way through these challenges and these hurdles and the things that have been tough on us," said Tavares, who's fully healed after suffering a scary injury in Game 1 against Montreal.

"We just want to keep banging on that door until we knock it down."

Toronto thought that moment was coming last spring. And when it didn't, the pill was tough to swallow.

"That's as bad a loss as I've experienced," said defenceman Morgan Rielly, who's entering the final year of his contract and can become an unrestricted free agent next summer. "It took some time to come to terms with it. As a leadership group, we tried to carve out some time to talk about what happened, why it happened, and what we can do to move forward.

"We feel comfortable with the plan that we have. We're going to press forward."

WATCH | Projecting Canada's men's Olympic roster:

What could Canada’s Olympic men’s hockey team look like in Beijing?

3 years ago
Duration 10:06
CBC’s Rob Pizzo is joined by Justin Bourne and Dom Luszczyszyn to discuss their mortal locks, bubble players, and dark horses for Team Canada’s 2022 roster.

Fellow blue-liner Jake Muzzin — a Stanley Cup champion with the Los Angeles Kings and, at times, the Leafs' public conscience — said the pain felt in Toronto's locker room was a healthy sign.

"What was encouraging is it hurt," he said. "Guys were really sour about it.

"We should be. We failed."

Stay in the moment

The Leafs are looking to stay in the moment, even as all that's come before continues to cast a long shadow.

"I don't think we can hide from it and run from it," Dubas said. "I just think that we have to do everything we can as an organization to be ready when those moments come again, that we're as prepared as possible."

And if that does happen this season with Dubas at the helm, it will be with a group led by the four high-priced stars — Matthews, Marner, Tavares and Nylander account for almost half the team's salary cap — he's continued to steadfastly support.

"I believe in them as players," he said. "But also as people and what they're about. I know that they take this stuff personally.

"They'll be ready to roll."

If they aren't, jobs could be on the line.

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