There’s a growing belief that the Toronto Maple Leafs are heading toward a tougher stretch than people want to admit. Two voices who follow the team closely — Steve Simmons and Justin Bourne — have both floated the idea recently that a quick rebound in 2026-27 might not be easy. Honestly, they might be right (from ‘Sidney Crosby’s decision to play at Worlds surprised Team Canada leaders,’ Toronto Sun, May 17, 2026).
But I keep coming back to something that’s uncomfortable for me to say, and I want to be very clear here before going any further: I’m fully aware I don’t sit in an NHL coach’s room, I don’t draw up systems for professional players, and I’m conscious of how easy it is to second-guess from the outside.
Judging Hockey Coaches Is Beyond My Pay Grade
Judging hockey coaches from the outside is a tricky business. You don’t see the internal conversations, you don’t see the daily structure, and you don’t always know what’s being asked of players behind the scenes. So I try to keep that humility in mind when I look at something like this.
That said, after watching this team for a long time — and watching this particular season unfold — I keep landing on the same thought. What if the Maple Leafs weren’t actually as flawed as the conversation suggests? What if the bigger issue wasn’t just the roster, but how the roster was being used?
That brings me to Craig Berube.
Berube, Identity, and the Original Plan
Again, I want to be careful. This isn’t about questioning his career, his reputation, or what he’s accomplished. By all accounts, he’s respected in NHL rooms, he’s won at the highest level, and players respond to him. That part is not in doubt. But coaching isn’t just about respect or structure. It’s about fit, and I’m not convinced the fit in Toronto ever fully clicked.
Berube was brought in to change the identity. His job was to make the Maple Leafs harder, heavier, more direct, more “playoff ready.” That idea made sense on paper. After years of criticism about perimeter play and inconsistency in big games, it’s understandable why management wanted a shift toward structure and simplicity.

The problem is that Toronto’s core was never built for simplicity. This team is built around high-end offensive instincts. Auston Matthews, William Nylander, and Matthew Knies are at their best when the game is fast, fluid, and reactive. Their elite skill comes from reading plays in motion rather than grinding through static board battles.
When Structure Starts to Change the Game
Under Berube, the game tilted toward the latter. There were stretches where the Maple Leafs looked like a team trying to win battles before they ever got to use their skill. Dump-ins, retrievals, cycle-heavy shifts. All of that can work in moderation — fourth lines are often built and rewarded for exactly that style of play. But when it becomes the foundation, something subtle starts to shift.
When offence becomes harder to access, hesitation creeps in. Skilled players stop taking risks. Entries become simpler. Plays become safer. Instead of dictating, the team starts reacting.
I want to be careful not to oversimplify this again. Coaching in the NHL is about compromise, matchups, structure, fatigue management — all of it. It’s rarely as clean as “system good” or “system bad.” But at times, this group looked slow and unable to operate at its full creative speed. It felt more constrained than this team has looked in years.
Did We Ever See the Real Version of the Maple Leafs?
That’s where the question starts to form. Because if you take a roster built around elite offensive talent and consistently reduce the environments where that talent can fully express itself, you don’t necessarily get a tougher team. Sometimes you just get a far less dangerous one.

Which leads to the part I keep circling back to: Did we actually ever see the best version and potential of this Maple Leafs roster? Or did we see a version of it trying to adapt to a system that didn’t fully match its strengths?
If that’s even partially true, then the conversation about “this core can’t get it done” becomes a lot less certain. Because maybe the gap wasn’t only talent. Maybe it was usage. Maybe it was fit. Maybe the next coach isn’t being asked to reinvent this group, only to let it breathe a little more naturally.
My Honest Uncertainty About the Maple Leafs Skill Level
When I step back and try to be honest about what I saw game after game, the team looked slow and out of sync. The players looked reactive rather than proactive. My take is not whether Berube is a good coach in general, but whether this was ever the right version of his style for this specific team, at this specific moment in its cycle.
In a recent interview, former Maple Leafs general manager Brad Treliving said that there wasn’t buy-in from the team. But no one ever said this team didn’t play hard. From what I saw, they did. They just weren’t successful. They weren’t lazy. They didn’t dial it in. They just couldn’t get it done.
Treliving blamed it on their lack of buy-in. He could be right, but I don’t think so. If he isn’t, then the Maple Leafs might not be as bad or as far away from being a decent team as the current narrative suggests.
They might just be waiting for a better fit.
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