Evan Gold’s path to Toronto may not be closed after all.
Gold is leaving the Boston Bruins on August 1 to pursue other opportunities in the NHL, and that development has reopened the door to a move that had already been discussed before the Maple Leafs hired John Chayka. Toronto had been linked to Gold during its search after firing Brad Treliving on March 30, and his name was one of several that surfaced before the team settled on Chayka.
The Bruins announced the move this way: “The Bruins also announced that, effective August 1, Evan Gold will be departing the organization to pursue other opportunities in the National Hockey League.”
Gold’s departure comes amid major turnover in Boston, and he had also been serving as GM of Providence, the Bruins’ AHL affiliate. No replacement has been named there yet, though Jeremy Rogalski appears set to move into Gold’s assistant GM role with a strong analytics focus.
Reporter Kevin Paul Dupont also said some people around Gold believed he could wind up taking a job with the Maple Leafs.
That possibility fits the shape of Toronto’s front office right now. The Leafs lost Brandon Pridham, and they still need another voice with a strong handle on analytics and money management. Gold’s background makes him a natural fit for that kind of role, and he could slot into the kind of position previously held by Pridham or Darryl Metcalf.
At the same time, this would be more than just a plug-and-play hire. Gold would also be trying to build a case for a bigger job down the road. In that sense, the move would resemble Daniel Alfredsson’s arrival as associate coach: a chance to contribute now while also gaining the kind of experience that can lead to a GM opportunity later.
For Toronto, the appeal is obvious. For Gold, it would be a first step. There’s nothing concrete yet tying him to the Maple Leafs, but with both organizations going through so much change, another front office move would not come as a shock.
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