William Villeneuve’s new two-year extension with Toronto doesn’t necessarily clear a path for him to stick with the Maple Leafs. In fact, it might be the opposite.
The 23-year-old has spent years as one of the organization’s longest-running prospects, carving out a steady role with the Toronto Marlies while barely getting a look at the NHL level. This season, he finally got into three games with the Maple Leafs, his first taste of NHL action, and handled himself well enough in limited minutes. But his real impact came in the AHL, where he kept driving play for the Marlies and played a major part in their Calder Cup run.
Villeneuve finished the postseason with 23 points in 24 games, a number that says plenty about the kind of threat he can be on the power play. He also brings the sort of mobility and youth Toronto can use on the blue line.
Still, the timing is awkward. Toronto’s right side already looks crowded, and that’s the biggest obstacle standing in Villeneuve’s way.
The Maple Leafs are expected to line up with Darren Raddysh, Chris Tanev, and Troy Stecher on the right side, with Philippe Myers also in the mix. That gives Toronto a group with plenty of NHL mileage, and it makes Villeneuve’s case harder to win, especially because there’s still uncertainty about how his game will translate at the highest level.
There is a path, of course. Injuries could open the door, especially with Tanev, and Toronto could also lean on Oliver Ekman-Larsson on the right side since he has experience there. But that only underscores the issue: there are a lot of bodies for very few openings.
If Villeneuve doesn’t crack the roster out of camp and only sees spot duty with the Maple Leafs, it would point to a pretty clear organizational view of him - an elite AHL defender who can be called up in a pinch, but not someone with a real NHL runway in Toronto.
That’s where the trade conversation starts to make sense. A move would be risky, because Villeneuve has already shown enough to make another team believe in him. And if he lands somewhere else and turns into the player Toronto hoped for, that decision would sting.
But with the roster jammed and the veterans already in place, John Chayka may eventually have to consider dealing him if there’s no room to grow. After five years in the system, Villeneuve may only have one real shot left.
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Maple Leafs Quietly Added A Defenseman Fans Will Instantly Debate
The Maple Leafs and Marlies have been busy on the margins, making a string of small signings as they look to shore up organizational depth. One of the more interesting additions is a defenseman who arrives with a reputation for moving the puck and bringing some leadership from his college days at UMass Lowell, plus a strong offensive season in the ECHL that turned heads across the lower levels.
What makes the move worth watching is how Toronto plans to use him. The Leafs can always use more depth on the blue line, but the next step is less clear, with the club weighing whether he fits best with the Marlies or another stop in the system. For a player whose game is built around offense, the real debate starts now: where does he fit, and how quickly does he get a chance to show it? [Read more 🡒]
Maple Leafs May Have Backed Themselves Into A Dangerous Corner
The Maple Leafs have built themselves into a tight corner on the roster front, with limited cap space and only a handful of contract openings left to work with. After adding five new players on Friday, Toronto is now operating with very little room to maneuver, which means any further upgrade is likely to require a corresponding move elsewhere just to keep the books and roster in order.
That leaves the front office weighing a familiar kind of tradeoff: chase another veteran fit for the top six, or clear space by moving out depth pieces and perhaps a Marlies prospect. Names such as Patrick Kane, Vladimir Tarasenko and Anthony Mantha fit the sort of forward help Toronto could still chase, but the harder part may be finding the room to do it while deciding which players, from Marshall Rifai to Michael Pezzetta, are expendable enough to make the math work. [Read more 🡒]
Maple Leafs Suddenly Risk Losing Blue Line Depth For Nothing
Torontos blue line is already crowded before the real decisions begin, with eight NHL defensemen under contract and only a couple of openings to sort out in camp. That leaves the Maple Leafs with a familiar late-summer problem: too many bodies for too few spots, and a need to figure out which depth pieces can actually be kept without creating another headache elsewhere.
Darren Stecher, Emil Andrae and Philippe Myers are the names in the mix for those final jobs, and the pressure is on Toronto to avoid losing useful depth for nothing. The front office could still look at trades or another move to ease the squeeze, but for now the situation is unresolved, and the longer it drags on, the more it looks like the Leafs will have to choose between keeping everyone in the picture and risking a loss on waivers. [Read more 🡒]
