The Maple Leafs have already spent the offseason reshaping things around Morgan Rielly, and the next move may be the one that finally clears the path for him to leave Toronto.
Rielly is 32, carries a $7.5 million annual cap hit, and is signed through the 2029-30 season. With the additions Toronto has already made, the club still appears to need one more major move to create cap space and add flexibility. Rielly’s name has been floating in trade talk all summer, and the sense around him is that it’s a matter of when, not if.
Last season, Rielly put up 11 goals and 25 assists for 36 points in 78 games with the Maple Leafs. Over his career, he has totaled 98 goals and 451 assists for 549 points in 951 games.
His game has always come with a clear split: the puck-moving and offense are real, but the defending has never been the selling point. That offensive touch could still make him useful to a team looking for help in its top four.
Among the teams that could make sense, the Anaheim Ducks stand out as one possibility. They have bigger issues to sort through, including an offer sheet to Leo Carlsson, but their blue line is thin and could use a veteran boost.
If they do not match the offer sheet and Carlsson ends up with the Philadelphia Flyers, Anaheim could have cap space available to chase Rielly. The Ducks would also be trying to move closer to the playoffs next season, and adding someone with Rielly’s experience could help replace what they lost with Radko Gudas and Jacob Trouba no longer on the roster.
The Boston Bruins are another fit worth watching. They were among the teams Darnell Nurse was willing to waive his trade protection for, and while they explored a deal, nothing got done.
Rielly could be the next veteran option they turn to. Boston is also aiming for a deeper playoff push and needs more help on defense.
They would probably want Toronto to keep part of Rielly’s salary, but if the price is manageable, his offense would give their back end another dimension.
The Philadelphia Flyers also belong in the conversation. They were involved on Nurse before he went to the San Jose Sharks, and their attention may first be on the offer sheet for Carlsson.
Still, they could shift toward Rielly soon enough. Even if Carlsson joins them, the Flyers should have enough cap room to make a deal work.
Like the Bruins and Ducks, they are looking to take a step forward in the playoffs, and blue-line help remains part of that equation.
All three teams fit for similar reasons. They need defensive depth, they want to push further in the postseason, and they may be waiting on what happens with Carlsson before moving on to other targets.
At this point, it would be a surprise if Rielly is still with Toronto when the 2026-27 season opens, and any of these three clubs could be where he lands.
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For a team trying to build around its youth, this was never just about one contract. The Ducks had to weigh the value of keeping a high-end center in place against the broader ripple effects of an offer sheet, including how it would shape their future flexibility and the message it sent about protecting their own talent. One important wrinkle in the agreement also stands out, with a no-movement clause attached for the final year, a detail that underscores how much leverage comes with a player Anaheim clearly views as central to what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
Pat Verbeek May Have Backed The Ducks Into A Brutal Corner
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For Pat Verbeek, the problem is bigger than one contract. Anaheim still has other young players due for new deals, and the clubs cap room is already under pressure after a series of delays and a defense that looks thinner than it should for a team trying to climb back into relevance. The Ducks can survive one expensive correction, but the next round of negotiations may be where the real squeeze begins. [Read more 🡒]
