John Chayka spent July 1 reshaping the Maple Leafs’ bottom six, and Calle Jarnkrok was the odd man out.
The veteran Swedish forward is no longer expected back in Toronto after a run of roster moves that brought in a wave of younger options to fill the lower half of the lineup. Jarnkrok had signed a four-year deal with the Maple Leafs in 2022-23 worth $8.4 million, carrying an AAV of $2.1 million, but that contract has run its course and the team has clearly moved in another direction under new general manager John Chayka.
Jarnkrok’s role had already been slipping. Over 200 games with Toronto, he produced 75 points, and his scoring has trended downward each year. He’s now 34 and approaching 35, and his spot on the roster was no longer secure.
Chayka’s offseason work made that reality even clearer. He brought in five new bottom-six forwards and, in effect, rebuilt that part of the forward group through trades and free agency. The biggest addition came via trade with Tampa Bay, where the Leafs landed Nick Paul, a big, strong forward who also brings speed.
From there, Chayka added four free agents: Colton Sissons, Jack Roslovic, Brandon Duhaime and Teddy Blueger. Sissons and Roslovic are both right-handed forwards who can do what Jarnkrok did, only better, and at least one of them is expected to handle center duties in the bottom six. Duhaime and Blueger round out the new group.
The appeal is obvious from Toronto’s perspective. Each of those players is younger, carries a similar cap hit, and offers more defense, production and versatility than Jarnkrok did at this stage. They also give the Leafs more than a player who tops out as, at best, a fourth-line center.
That left no real opening for Jarnkrok. His game had faded, and outside of a brief stretch last season, he struggled badly. In 56 games, he finished with six goals and two assists for eight points, all of them career lows on a per-game basis.
Even the one thing he could hang his hat on - being a right-shot option - wasn’t enough to keep him in the picture. Replacing him at roughly the same price was manageable, and Toronto did exactly that.
Roslovic and Sissons, in particular, are viewed as upgrades over Jarnkrok, and their combined AAV comes to $8.25 million per season. For Toronto, the message was simple: the veteran had given what he could, but with the new management regime in place, his time in blue and white was over.
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Maple Leafs Push For Veteran Upgrade As Familiar Cap Tension Builds
After a busy stretch of roster tinkering, the Maple Leafs are still shopping for another top-six forward, with the front office weighing both trade possibilities and free-agent avenues. The search is not limited to one position, either, since Toronto is open to adding a center or a winger as it continues to reshape the group around its established core.
The challenge, as always, is making the math work. Toronto is operating under familiar cap pressure, which means any meaningful addition may depend on moving someone out first, and the club has to be compliant by the start of the season. For now, the Leafs are doing the usual summer balancing act: keeping options open, monitoring veteran names, and trying to find a fit without creating a new roster problem in the process. [Read more 🡒]
Leafs Could Turn Anaheims Cap Squeeze Into A Risky Scoring Upgrade
Anaheims latest roster business has created the kind of cap-pressure ripple that always gets watched closely around the league, and Toronto is one of the teams that could be tempted if the price is right. The Ducks just locked up Leo Carlsson on a five-year deal, and with restricted free agent Cutter Gauthier still hanging over their books, they are looking for ways to open space. Frank Vatrano is the veteran name now floating in trade chatter, and his contract has put him squarely into the sort of conversation contenders tend to monitor.
For the Maple Leafs, the appeal is obvious enough: a chance to add scoring help without waiting for the market to sort itself out. The complication is just as obvious, because Toronto would have to create room before taking on Vatranos deal, and that is never a small task for a club already managing a tight cap picture. Even with Anaheim willing to make the move easier, the Leafs would still need to decide how far they want to go to chase a risky offensive upgrade, especially with bigger roster questions still unresolved. [Read more 🡒]
Ducks Just Faced Their Biggest Young Core Decision Yet
A day of front-office churn added another layer to the Maple Leafs offseason reset, with Hayley Wickenheiser departing after eight years in a variety of roles around the organization. Her exit came as Toronto continued to reshape its hockey operations group, a process that has already included other notable departures and reflects how much change has been flowing through the club behind the scenes.
The Leafs also moved on from director of amateur scouting Mark Leach and senior advisor of player personnel Dave Morrison, underscoring that this is more than a single personnel move. For a team trying to keep its footing while reworking the people in charge of finding and developing talent, the bigger question now is how much more of the old structure is left before the next phase of the overhaul takes hold. [Read more 🡒]
