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Fans Triggered: Why Montreal’s GM Took a Shot at the Maple Leafs

At Monday’s season-ending press conference for the Montreal Canadiens, their general manager was asked about the team’s playoff run, plans for the summer, and the lack of production from the team’s top stars in the series versus the Carolina Hurricanes. Kent Hughes responded by seemingly throwing the Toronto Maple Leafs under the bus, a move that has stirred the ire of Leafs fans.

Hughes likely doesn’t care that he’s frustrated Leafs fans after referencing Toronto’s core — specifically former star Mitch Marner — while defending his own young stars. However, it’s not entirely clear why he felt the need to go there, with many Leafs supporters accusing Hughes of bringing up Toronto for absolutely no reason.

Were Hughes’ Comments Taken Out of Context?

The back-and-forth started when Leafs Morning Take host Nick Alberga wrote, “Kent Hughes, fresh off being destroyed by Carolina in the ECF, bringing up the Toronto Maple Leafs for absolutely no reason whatsoever.” Some fans hopped on that bandwagon, while others took potshots at Toronto and their failure to achieve any real playoff success.

Even TSN’s Pierre LeBrun got involved, writing, “It is crazy to think, though, that the Canadiens have already achieved this early in their program what Toronto couldn’t do in 9 years as far as getting past the second round. Mind-boggling, really.”

Juraj Slafkovsky Montreal Canadiens
Montreal Canadiens left wing Juraj Slafkovsky (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

And with that, the reactions began.

Understandably, Hughes was trying to stand up for his stars, including Montreal’s top line (Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, and Juraj Slafkovsky) after their Eastern Conference Final loss to Carolina. He pushed back against the narrative that one poor playoff showing should define young players. To make his point, he referenced how Marner has faced years of scrutiny in Toronto, only to lead the 2026 playoffs in scoring while playing strong two-way hockey.

To be clear, Hughes wasn’t wrong. In fact, he was bang on. Marner was practically run out of town for not being the playoff performer Toronto fans needed and wanted. Even though he was productive, Maple Leafs fans had decided he was the issue, something he’s proven is not the case, given his incredible performance in these playoffs as part of the Golden Knights roster.

Hughes wasn’t taking a cheap shot — he was using the most visible Canadian example to illustrate his larger message: patience with high-end talent is necessary, and one playoff series doesn’t tell the full story. Like Marner’s done by growing and maturing, the elite stars on the Canadiens need to do the same. That will come with experience.

Still, Maple Leafs fans instantly got their guard up, including Alberga. He himself took a shot at the Canadiens by saying they were destroyed by Carolina, as though they should be more ashamed than any Maple Leafs fan should feel about the way their Leafs have performed.

The Canadiens Understand What These Playoffs Actually Were

What’s interesting about this tit-for-tat back-and-forth is that many fans, not just Canadiens ones, pointed out that Toronto could and should learn a lesson here. One fan wrote, “He made a valid point that isn’t even a shot at the Leafs.” Several Habs supporters told triggered Leafs fans to “calm down” and accused them of having “hurt feelings.”

At the end of the day, Hughes understands his team needs to improve. He was aware that the club got outplayed by a superior Carolina team, and he’s getting to work immediately to improve the roster so they can take another run. He wasn’t making excuses. He simply wasn’t allowing any narrative to build that the club might be upset or consider moving core pieces because they were overwhelmed early in their playoff careers.

Whether necessary or not as an example of how Hughes sees his stars, the comment about Marner was little more than a hockey observation, not a personal attack. He was simply pointing out that star players — even those under intense media pressure like Marner in Toronto — can bounce back and elevate their game.

One GM trying to protect his young players by citing the league’s highest-profile market immediately becomes “Habs obsessing over Leafs” in the eyes of Toronto supporters. It’s not true, but it sure makes their rivalry a little more fun now.

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Jim Parsons

Jim Parsons

Jim Parsons is a senior THW freelance writer, part-time journalist and audio/video host who lives, eats, sleeps and breathes NHL news and rumors, while also writing features on the Edmonton Oilers and Toronto Maple Leafs. He’s been a trusted source for six-plus years at The Hockey Writers, but more than that, he’s on a mission to keep readers up to date with the latest NHL rumors and trade talk. Jim is a daily must for readers who want to be “in the know.”

Other content contributions include: NHLtradetalk.com, The Sportster and hosting weekly video casts, THW News and Rumors Rundown, plus Oilers Overtime.

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