Craig Berube Just Reopened What Leafs Really Lost With Mitch Marner

Craig Berube's revelations shed light on the far-reaching impact of Mitch Marner's departure from the Toronto Maple Leafs, both on their on-ice performance and locker room dynamics.

Craig Berube says the Maple Leafs didn’t just lose Mitch Marner’s offense when they moved him to Vegas. They lost the voice and spark that set the tone every night.

Speaking on the “SimmerPuck” podcast, the former Toronto coach described Marner as the team’s emotional engine, the guy who kept the bench alive and pushed the pace in practice and games.

“Mitch was the energy,” Berube said. “He brought the energy and emotion to the game on a nightly basis and even in practice.

Really vocal guy. Chatted a lot on the bench, chatted a lot at practice.

If he came back to the bench, he'd let guys know to pick it up.”

Marner’s departure came just hours before the 2025 NHL Draft, ending a decade with the Maple Leafs after another playoff disappointment. A year later, Berube is gone from Toronto too, while Marner has already made his way to the Stanley Cup Final with the Golden Knights before losing to the Carolina Hurricanes at the final hurdle.

Berube made it clear that what Toronto missed most wasn’t only the points and playmaking. It was the presence.

“He was great and I really enjoyed coaching him,” Berube added. “When he left, we lost our emotional leader, for sure.”

That absence showed up in the standings. The Leafs stumbled through the 2025-26 season and finished dead last in the Atlantic Division.

Marner’s move has also become a talking point beyond Toronto. Sharks general manager Mike Grier, while discussing Edmonton Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse, pointed to Marner as an example of what can happen when a star escapes the pressure of a huge Canadian market.

“You saw a little bit of that with Mitch Marner getting out of Toronto. Just to be able to breathe, play hockey.”

Grier added that the burden on marquee players in Canada can be relentless.

“That’s just the life of a player in a big, big Canadian market, and if you’re a marquee player there, that always adds extra pressure to it.”

Toronto has had a hard time replacing Marner’s production, but Berube’s comments made the bigger issue sound even tougher to solve: the Leafs haven’t just been chasing his numbers, they’ve been trying to replace the leadership he brought every day.

In Other News...

Why The Leafs Clearly See More In Brandon Duhaime

Brandon Duhaimes arrival gives the Maple Leafs a very specific kind of depth piece, one they clearly believe can do more than just fill out the bottom six. Signed to a three-year deal, the forward brings a reputation for being hard to play against, and Toronto is betting that edge matters as much as any skill he adds to the lineup.

What makes the fit interesting is the way Duhaime is being cast around the roster, not just as a grinder but as a physical presence who can help keep younger players from getting pushed around. His history of dropping the gloves and his willingness to play a rugged game suggest the Leafs see a tougher, more useful version of the old-school deterrent, with enough offensive touch to contribute if everything clicks. [Read more 🡒]

Bobrovskys Arrival Just Changed Everything For The Leafs Goalie Future

Sergei Bobrovskys arrival in Toronto immediately reshapes the Maple Leafs goalie picture, and not just for the present. Signed to be the starter, Bobrovsky also brings the kind of veteran presence that can matter to a young prospect like Artur Akhtyamov, who still looks like part of the organizations long-term plan. For a club that has been searching for stability in net, the move gives Toronto a proven option while also setting a very different timeline for its next wave of goaltending.

Akhtyamov remains a promising name in the system, but the path to real NHL minutes just got a lot narrower. Bobrovsky is expected to handle a heavy workload and stay durable enough to keep the crease mostly spoken for, which means Akhtyamovs chances could be limited to spot duty if injuries open the door. For now, the Leafs get the security they wanted, while their prospect may have to spend a lot more time waiting for the opportunity that once looked much closer. [Read more 🡒]

Leafs Just Settled A Depth Question Fans Have Been Watching

The Maple Leafs quietly wrapped up a small but important bit of business by locking in three depth pieces for the next stretch of roster planning. Forwards Jacob Quillan and Ryan Tverberg each landed one-year extensions, while defender William Villeneuve got a two-year deal, giving Toronto a little more clarity on the back end of its organizational depth chart and in the group of forwards pushing for AHL and NHL opportunities.

Villeneuve stands out as the most immediate insurance policy, a right-shot defender with limited NHL experience who is viewed as an injury call-up option when the Leafs need help. Quillan and Tverberg come with their own roster-management wrinkles, including waiver and arbitration considerations that matter if Toronto wants to keep shuffling players between the big club and the Marlies. For a team that has been watching its depth decisions closely, these were the last relevant RFA boxes left to check. [Read more 🡒]