Maple Leafs Just Made A Massive Blue Line Bet Fans Will Debate

Darren Raddysh's hefty contract with the Toronto Maple Leafs sparks debate, but experts see potential for big payoff in the team's power play strategy.

Darren Pang isn’t flinching at the Maple Leafs’ big swing on Darren Raddysh.

Toronto’s first major move of the offseason brought in the defenceman from the Tampa Bay Lightning in a sign-and-trade that cost the Leafs a fifth-round pick, but it also came with an eight-year, $68-million contract that immediately made him the team’s highest-paid blue-liner. For a lot of people, that price tag landed hard. Pang sees it differently.

Appearing on the Leafs Morning Take podcast, the former NHL goalie and analyst said the deal makes sense if Toronto believes Raddysh is the right fit for what it needs most.

“Darren Raddysh is a really good defenceman, and he's got great character. A lot of teams knocked on that door but were afraid of the price; I get it.

But if the Maple Leafs say, we need a right-hand shot that's going to run our power play and get us back on track with Auston Matthews, the dollar figure shouldn't matter to the general public.”

That’s the heart of this move. The Leafs weren’t just paying for a defenceman.

They were paying for a right-shot option with a heavy point shot, a player who can help the power play without giving away too much defensively. Raddysh isn’t being sold as an elite stopper, but he is viewed as a clear upgrade over Morgan Rielly in that specific role.

The skepticism came fast because the contract is built on one massive season. Raddysh had never topped 35 points before last year, then suddenly exploded for 22 goals and 70 points. That kind of leap makes people wonder whether they’re buying a breakout or just paying for a one-year spike.

Pang’s read is that Toronto needed to take the chance.

The numbers behind the fit are easy to see. Raddysh scored 22 goals, including nine from the dead centre of the point, and 10 of his goals came on the power play.

Toronto, meanwhile, has been looking for a true power-play weapon from the back end. Rielly has shown flashes as a quarterback, but the consistency hasn’t been there, and he hasn’t been the kind of threat that forces penalty killers to back off.

With Raddysh now in the mix, the Leafs can let him do what he does best: get space and unload.

There’s also the money side of the equation, and that’s where the deal starts to look a little different. His $8.5-million cap hit is steep now, but with the cap projected to rise, it would drop to $6.54-million in 2029-30 and then to $5.2-million in the final year of the contract, based on projected cap totals. With projected cap space of $162.3-million, the hit could end up looking much smaller over time.

Still, none of that matters much if Raddysh doesn’t produce.

If he comes in and gives Toronto the power-play boost it’s paying for, the contract will look like a smart bet. If he’s sitting on only a couple of goals by Christmas, the questions will start coming fast.

Last year, he had 27 points by that point, including eight goals. By comparison, Rielly had 24 points heading into the break, but only five goals and four power-play points.

Raddysh had more than double that with nine power-play points and four power-play goals.

That’s the gamble Toronto made. John Chayka and the Leafs are banking on Raddysh’s breakout being real, not a one-off.

If it is, the price won’t matter much. If it isn’t, the contract will be impossible to ignore.

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