Toronto Maple Leafs: 2014-15 NHL season preview

Numbers-savvier front office offers hope

Image | kessel-620

Caption: Sniper Phil Kessel matched a career high with 37 goals last season. (Abelimages/Getty Images)

This is part of our series of quick season previews for the seven Canadian-based NHL teams. We've also covered the Vancouver Canucks, Calgary Flames, Edmonton Oilers and Winnipeg Jets.

Toronto Maple Leafs(external link)

Last season's record: 38-36-8 (84 points), 6th out of 8 in Atlantic Division, missed playoffs.
Last season's story: Toronto found itself at the unhappy intersection of old- and new-school hockey analysis after the quants said their hot start was unsustainable given their horrid possession rate. The Corsi Hockey League(external link) isn't a real thing, but the puck is, and the Leafs had it less than pretty much anyone. To the Eye Test guys' chagrin, a 10-4-0 October proved to be a mirage, and the Leafs lost 12 of their last 14 to miss the playoffs for the eighth time in nine years. Right near the end, NHL discipline sheriff Brendan Shanahan was brought in as president. He elected to keep GM Dave Nonis and coach Randy Carlyle (for now) but gutted the rest of the staff and hired numbers-savvy Kyle Dubas, 28, as an assistant GM who will reportedly oversee the newly created analytics department.
Key off-season additions: F Leo Komarov(external link), F Mike Santorelli(external link), F David Booth(external link), F Daniel Winnik(external link), F Matt Frattin(external link), F Petri Kontiola(external link), D Stephane Robidas(external link), D Roman Polak(external link).
Key off-season subtractions: F Dave Bolland(external link), F Mason Raymond(external link), F Nikolai Kulemin(external link), F Jay McClement(external link), F Jerry D'Amigo(external link), D Carl Gunnarsson(external link), D Paul Ranger(external link), D Tim Gleason(external link).
Best-case scenario: The numbers guys can't erase the worst digits (6 years, $31.5 million US left on David Clarkson's contract) but they're able to cap the spending on misvalued players while identifying some bargain moves. Goalie Jonathan Bernier(external link) stays healthy; captain Dion Phaneuf (external link)plays like a $7-million-a-year defenceman; sniper Phil Kessel(external link) scores 40 goals for the first time; flashy young forwards James van Riemsdyk(external link) (still only 25 somehow) and Nazem Kadri(external link) (23) deliver two-way efforts; and Toronto fans don't have to cling to the Raptors again come springtime.
Worst-case scenario: There's too much baggage for Carlyle to overcome and he's fired as the Leafs get off to a slow start. Nonis clashes with the younger front-office hires, and the infighting prevents anyone from doing an effective job. Bernier gets hurt again, and backup James Reimer(external link) (yeah, still here) can't pick up the slack while Kessel suffers through a prolonged scoring slump. The Leafs miss the playoffs again, and Shanahan lets Nonis go as fans howl that the president wasted a year with his half-measure moves in the summer of '14