The Toronto Maple Leafs are staring at a deadline that could cost them a prospect for nothing.
Joe Miller’s rights expire on August 15, and if Toronto doesn’t get him signed before then, the 23-year-old can walk into free agency. That would close the book on a player the Maple Leafs drafted 180th overall in 2020 and have held onto through four seasons at Harvard.
Miller’s college resume is respectable. Over 128 NCAA games, he put up 90 points, finished at plus-21, and racked up just 28 penalty minutes. He’s spent the last four years developing at Harvard University, but despite that steady run, he still hasn’t landed an entry-level deal from Toronto.
The timing matters because of the way NCAA rights work. August 15 is the final day a drafted college player can sign an ELC, and once that date passes, the team loses the ability to bring him in. That gives the Maple Leafs a hard choice: commit now, or let the rights lapse.
Toronto’s offseason has already brought a lot of movement, and the roster is starting to look closer to what the organization had in mind when John Chayka and company took over. The bottom six is supposed to be tougher and more reliable defensively, there’s a star goaltender in place, and one of the most exciting prospects of all time has changed the feel around the team. But with the roster and contract picture tightening up, there may not be much room left for another addition.
That’s where Miller runs into the problem. Even with a solid college career and a reputation as a dependable center, Toronto already has a crowded group down the middle. Jacob Quillan, Luke Haymes, Logan Shaw, Tinus Luc Koblar, Tyler Hopkins, and Zac Olsen are all in that mix, and the organization doesn’t have much flexibility left.
An AHL deal could be one path, but that would still take up one of the team’s remaining contract spots. Toronto has only three spots left for a contract, and any waiver or PTO considerations would make that even tighter.
Another option would be to send him to Cincinnati of the ECHL, where he could get pro experience while staying in the organization. But even that feels more like a placeholder than a real solution.
For now, the reality is simple: there may not be enough room for Miller in Toronto’s pipeline. Unless the Maple Leafs make a move before August 15, he’s likely to slip away without much of a fight.
In Other News...
Maple Leafs Face A Tough Reunion Question Fans Know Too Well
Michael Bunting is back on the market after finishing a three-year deal with the Carolina Hurricanes and spending last season with both the Nashville Predators and Dallas Stars, which naturally puts Toronto in the conversation. He already has a track record with the Maple Leafs, and his best stretch came when he was part of the mix with Auston Matthews, making him the kind of familiar name that always gets a second look around this time of year.
The catch, as always for Toronto, is roster math. The Maple Leafs do not have the cap room to add him right now, so any serious pursuit would have to wait until they clear salary, and that is where the real intrigue begins. For a team that knows how quickly a reunion can go from appealing to complicated, Bunting is exactly the sort of player who forces those uncomfortable summer calculations. [Read more 🡒]
Morgan Rielly Trade Saga Just Took A Turn Leafs Fans Needed
Morgan Riellys future has become one of the more intriguing subplots around the Maple Leafs, with the veteran defenseman now at the center of a trade conversation that has moved well beyond simple due diligence. Toronto is exploring options on a player who still has four years left on his contract, and the presence of a no-movement clause means any deal would have to clear a major personal hurdle before it ever reaches the finish line.
What makes this latest turn notable is how the market around him has shifted. Interest from the West has faded as other clubs have made roster moves and run into salary-cap limits, leaving the Leafs to navigate a narrower field as they weigh what kind of return could even be available. For a team trying to manage both its present blue line and its long-term cap picture, Riellys situation remains one of the most consequential files on the table. [Read more 🡒]
