The Maple Leafs may have a shot at fixing one of the more painful mistakes from the Kyle Dubas era.
Mason Marchment, once moved out of Toronto for Denis Malgin, is now a pending unrestricted free agent and has been linked to the Leafs. At 31, he has turned himself into the kind of winger Toronto has been missing: big, physical, responsible, and productive.
Marchment has put together 366 NHL games and 233 points since leaving Toronto, doing it for four different teams. That’s a sharp contrast to the player the Leafs sent away. Malgin played 83 NHL games after the trade, while Marchment kept climbing elsewhere and became a legitimate middle-six threat.
The appeal is obvious. Marchment is 6'5, brings strong physicality, can defend in his own end, handles the puck responsibly, and works hard. He’s also a 50-point winger, and in today’s league, that kind of depth matters all the way through the lineup.
Toronto’s forward group has been short on size and toughness for a while, aside from the occasional fourth-liner like Ryan Reaves. Marchment would change that. He gives a team more weight on the wings and more push in the middle six, and he fits the profile of a player who can make a lineup harder to play against.
His path to this point has been a long one. Marchment spent five years in the Leafs organization, with decent numbers for the Marlies over that stretch, but his breakout came only after Toronto let him go.
Once he landed with the Panthers organization, his NHL game took off. He became a good top-six winger, spent time with the Florida Panthers and Dallas Stars, and was later traded to the Seattle Kraken and Columbus Blue Jackets.
The late-bloomer comparison fits. Like Darren Raddysh, Marchment is an extreme example of a player who needed the right development path to unlock his game. Once he got it, he turned into a valuable piece.
His production since then backs it up. After a stint on a bad Seattle team, Marchment was traded to the Blue Jackets and put up 15 goals and 17 assists for 32 points in 39 games, finishing at plus-21. Even if that scoring came in a short run, it underlines what he can do when things click.
For Toronto, the fit goes beyond just stats. A left side that could include some order of Gavin McKenna, Marchment and Easton Cowan would be extremely cheap relative to the talent and upside involved. And if Marchment were to skate with John Tavares and Matthew Knies, his numbers would likely rise again.
That’s the selling point for the Leafs: even if Marchment ends up on the third line, he improves the team. In a league where depth is everything and there is talent spread across lines one through four, a player like this can make a roster meaningfully better.
He would have ranked fifth on Toronto last season with 45 points, and that’s while playing on teams that weren’t exactly offensive powerhouses in Seattle and Columbus. That kind of production, paired with his size and edge, makes him one of the more attractive names in a weak free-agent class.
The catch is simple. Toronto would have to win him over, and Marchment won’t come cheap. But if the Leafs want a chance to repair an old mistake, this is the opening.
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Adam Boqvist has also entered the discussion as a possible low-risk depth play if he remains unsigned, with a professional tryout at training camp on the table. For Toronto, that kind of move would not solve the whole issue on its own, but it fits the broader approach of trying to strengthen the back end wherever possible while the bigger questions around a major trade continue to hang over the summer. [Read more 🡒]
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For the Maple Leafs, the appeal is obvious if they want a steadier layer of depth behind their top scorers and a player who has shown he can still contribute. Montreal is in the mix too, which turns the chase into a little more than simple free-agent shopping, and it adds another wrinkle to a market where Toronto may have to move quickly if it wants to land him. [Read more 🡒]
