Maple Leafs Finally Have A Prospect Story Fans Can Brag About

Gavin McKenna of the Toronto Maple Leafs has been crowned the NHL's top prospect in a stunning new evaluation, showcasing his elite skills while hinting at areas needing growth.

For the first time in a long time, the Toronto Maple Leafs can point to the top of the prospect mountain and see one of their own sitting there.

Gavin McKenna has been ranked No. 1 in The Athletic’s latest top-100 NHL prospect list, giving the Leafs the game’s best young player who has yet to make his NHL debut. Scott Wheeler released the rankings on Tuesday, and McKenna landed at the very top.

Wheeler’s evaluation was loaded with praise for the winger, calling him “a captivating and supremely gifted winger.” He also noted that McKenna’s lean frame and some “bad habits” can chip away at his five-on-five impact, especially when it comes to being more physically engaged and sharper off the puck. Even so, Wheeler made clear the upside is impossible to miss.

“McKenna is a captivating and supremely gifted winger. His lean build and some bad habits (notably, a need to be more physically engaged and show more effort off-puck/detail) can lessen his shift-to-shift five-on-five impact at times, but the talent and upside are undeniable and unique among the game's prospects.

He's a flowing skater with corner speed more than straight-line speed (he lacks explosiveness in straight bursts), great edges and an ability to make plays at whatever pace is required - with a preference for slowing things down, at times to a fault. He’s impressive at carrying and dodging sticks through neutral ice to create entries.

He has a first touch like glue, where the puck just lands and sticks to his blade when he’s catching it, even when it’s coming in hot or into compromising positions. He’s an excellent puck transporter and get-out-of-jail-free card who can skate pucks out of the zone himself and relieve pressure, though I’d like to see him be lower for that more often instead of cheating up ice.

McKenna is extremely shifty with the puck, blending shoulder fakes into his playmaking. He has impressive maneuverability and adjustability from his hips down.

He plays pucks into space and leads guys at an advanced level. He shields pucks well from defenders’ sticks when he can play in open ice and they try to close on him.

He’s constantly changing directions and keeping defenders off him. He pre-scans and sees and reads the game at an elite level.

The elements of a brilliant perimeter playmaker are all there.

... Still, despite some of the flaws in his game, McKenna projects as a first-line star winger and dynamic power-play tactician. Improvement in his five-on-five play and the consistency of his competitiveness will determine his ultimate impact beyond the counting stats he should rack up.”

Scott Wheeler, The Athletic

That’s a heavy endorsement, and it puts McKenna ahead of some serious company. Ivar Stenberg, who went right after McKenna last month to the San Jose Sharks, checked in at No.

  1. Philadelphia Flyers standout Porter Martone, who already has some NHL playoff experience and was taken sixth overall last year, came in at No.
  2. Wingers filling the top three spots is a notable wrinkle in itself.

The Leafs had one more name on the list, too. Easton Cowan came in at No. 70, a placement that still reflects real respect for a player who put together a strong rookie season. The 21-year-old winger scored 11 goals and 29 points in 66 games while averaging 14:43 of ice time.

Cowan is expected to take on a bigger role next season and could end up locking down a top-six spot beside Auston Matthews or John Tavares for the full year. Even though No. 70 may not jump off the page, he was ranked ahead of players such as Tom Willander and Cole Eiserman, both of whom were drafted higher and had been viewed as top-end talents in earlier rankings.

For Toronto, the list brings a rare kind of spotlight. McKenna is at the top, Cowan is in the mix, and both are set to start next season in Blue and White.

In Other News...

Patrick Kane Twist Leaves Maple Leafs Facing Another Painful Pivot

Patrick Kanes free-agent picture appears to be coming into focus, and it is not breaking Torontos way. Chris Chelios said he spoke directly with Kane and believes the wingers market has narrowed, leaving the Maple Leafs on the outside as the veteran weighs his next stop. For a club still looking to add some finishing touch up front, the update is another reminder that the most recognizable names do not always line up with the cleanest fit.

What makes the pivot sting is that Torontos level of interest has never been entirely clear, even as Kane lingered as a plausible target. With that door now effectively closed, the Leafs may have to shift to thinner alternatives on the wing, with Eeli Tolvanen among the remaining options worth watching. It is the kind of late-summer turn that can force a team to choose between patience and a move that feels more like settling than solving. [Read more 🡒]

Matthew Knies Just Made Toronto's Toughest Trade Debate Even Harder

The price tag on young NHL talent keeps climbing, and that only makes Matthew Knies look better for Toronto. While other top prospects and young stars are landing richer deals or forcing their way into bigger negotiations, Knies remains locked in at $7.75 million per year through the 2030-31 season, a number that feels increasingly friendly for a player the Maple Leafs still view as a major part of their future.

That bargain is part of what has made Knies such a tricky name to even put in trade conversations. Toronto wants a quick path back to contention, and the wing depth around the roster gives the front office options, but moving a player with this kind of upside and cost control is not a simple decision. The Leafs may have reasons to listen, yet the longer the market keeps resetting upward, the harder it gets to imagine replacing what Knies already gives them. [Read more 🡒]

Matthew Knies Is Starting To Look Like A Massive Leafs Win

The market for young NHL forwards keeps climbing, and the latest benchmark came when the Flyers locked up Trevor Zegras on a four-year deal worth $9.125 million a year. For Toronto, that kind of number only sharpens the view of Matthew Knies six-year, $46.5 million contract, which already looked sensible when it was signed and now sits even better against the going rate for players in that age bracket.

Knies has given the Leafs real value on the ice, too, with a breakout season that showed why the team was comfortable making a long-term bet. As salaries for ascending forwards keep pushing higher, Toronto has to like where it landed with a player who is still trending up and whose deal leaves the club with more flexibility than many of its peers enjoy. [Read more 🡒]