If Mitch Marner were to sit down with Gavin McKenna before his first real taste of Toronto Maple Leafs hockey, it probably wouldn’t look like a formal “veteran mentoring rookie” moment. It would be more personal, perhaps something whispered, carrying the perspective of someone who has lived through it.
I would expect fewer speeches, more honesty. Perhaps less instruction, and more warning. But one can only guess. Marner has lived the version of Toronto that doesn’t show up in highlight reels or draft-night optimism. And even after moving to a new team and experiencing postseason success he had never known before, he still talked about his feelings and experiences.
He’s lived the version where expectations don’t arrive gradually. They arrived all at once. For him, every shift can become a conversation. Where his game was no longer just evaluated, but interpreted. That’s probably where he would start with McKenna. Forget the systems, the points, or the legacy. But do share what actually changes when you become a name in this market.
The Noise Never Really Turns Off
The first thing Marner might tell him is that nothing really shuts off. The noise doesn’t fade after your first good game or your first bad stretch. It just changes shape. One week you’re a cornerstone. The next week you’re a question. And both can be true at the same time, depending on the night.

So the lesson isn’t how to escape it. It’s how to not absorb it. Because in Toronto, that’s the real danger. It isn’t about the criticism or the praise. It’s about resisting the urge to internalize either one. How do you stop external expectations from slowly changing how you see your own game?
Marner would know that better than most. He’s played long enough in this environment to understand how quickly narratives form. A quiet night becomes a topic of discussion. A turnover becomes a question about your character. A playoff series becomes a referendum that lingers far beyond the series itself. It even travels in your hockey bag to a new city.
You Can’t Win the Conversation
So if he’s talking to McKenna, Marner’s probably telling him something like this: don’t try to win the conversation. You can’t. There are too many voices, too many angles, too much history in the background of every opinion. Instead, try to outlast it.
That might be the most honest piece of advice in the whole conversation. Because the Toronto cycle doesn’t really end, it rotates. One player after another moves through it. Expectations shift from one face to the next. What feels like a crisis in one month becomes forgotten context in another. But when it’s about you, as a player you still have to live through it in real time.

Marner might also tell McKenna that development in Toronto doesn’t feel like development. It feels like judgment. You don’t get the luxury of quiet progression. Every step forward is measured against what people already decided you should be a long time ago. That’s why the most important skill isn’t just hockey skill; it’s emotional discipline. How do you stay anchored in your own evaluation when everything around you is trying to rewrite it after every game?
Don’t Get Trapped in Being “The Answer:” Survive the Cycle
And there would likely be the deeper, more subtle message beneath it all. Don’t let “being the answer” become the job. That’s the stickiest fly paper trap in Toronto. Every promising player eventually gets pulled into that role.
You become the one who is supposed to fix something, change something, unlock something. But no one actually succeeds at carrying all of that at once. Not for long. The only sustainable path is simpler: become the player you are, over and over again, under pressure, until the rest of it settles around you.
Marner would understand that better now than he might have earlier in his career. Not because the pressure went away, but because he did. He’s seen what happens when players try to meet every version of the expectations at once.
Marner’s Final Word to McKenna Might Be
And if there’s one final thing he might say to McKenna, it’s this: in Toronto, you don’t win the conversation. You survive it long enough for it to stop defining you.
It will move on eventually. It always does. It just doesn’t move quickly.
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