Maple Leafs May Have Found A Cheaper Answer To Their Center Problem

The Toronto Maple Leafs are eyeing Morgan Frost as an affordable top-six option amid the Calgary Flames' willingness to entertain trade offers following their ongoing roster restructuring.

The Maple Leafs are still hunting for a top-six boost, and Morgan Frost has suddenly become a name worth watching.

According to David Pagnotta, the Calgary Flames are open to hearing offers for the centre, and that kind of availability could put Toronto in position to land a cheaper option for its lineup. Frost would give the Leafs another offensive piece without the kind of price tag that usually comes with bigger-name targets.

Toronto has already made plenty of changes around the roster, coaching staff and front office, but there’s still a clear need for another forward who can step into the top six and help the offence. The club has been linked to veteran options such as Patrick Kane, but Frost offers a younger path. He also brings something Toronto values: flexibility.

Pagnotta said on the trade front, “Morgan Frost's name still out there. They have others they're willing to listen on.

There are teams interested in Whitecloud still, and so on and so on. So this is going to be an interesting summer.”

That lines up with Pagnotta’s trade board, where Frost was ranked 12th even though no specific suitors were listed. The Flames are willing to move him, and he’s entering the final year of his current contract with an eight-team no-trade list. Calgary acquired Frost at 27 in the deal that sent him and Joel Farabee for a package that included Andrei Kuzmenko and Jakob Pelletier going to Philadelphia.

He had a strong first full season in Calgary in 2025-26, putting up 43 points with 22 goals and 21 assists while playing all 82 games. He also won nearly 57% of his faceoffs, picked up just 28 penalty minutes and averaged 15:30 of ice time.

That kind of profile fits what Toronto could use around John Tavares. Frost would give the Leafs another centre with faceoff ability and enough offence to matter, while also creating options for how the middle of the lineup gets deployed. Tavares could move to the wing, the two could alternate down the middle, or Tavares could slide into a third-line role.

Calgary’s direction also matters here. The Flames want to get younger and rebuild from the ground up, and Frost is expected to be looking for a raise from his $4.375-million deal. Next summer, a new contract could land around $7-million AAV, which makes him a player Calgary may be willing to consider moving if the right offer comes along.

That’s where Toronto’s prospect pool comes into play. William Villeneuve could help the Flames on the blue line right away, while Miroslav Holinka and Jacob Quillan are both forward options that could interest Calgary.

Holinka has spent time out west with Edmonton in the WHL and projects as a potential 20-goal scorer with two-way upside. Quillan brings versatility, scoring touch, leadership and is ready for the NHL now.

The proposed framework is more about volume than a single premium piece:

To Toronto:

(C) Morgan Frost

To Calgary:

(D) William Villeneuve

(F) Miroslav Holinka

(F) Jacob Quillan

All three would likely spend plenty of time in the AHL if they stayed in Toronto, and the Leafs are not in a waiting game. They want help now, and Frost fits that timeline better than a longer-term project.

He may not be the flashiest name on the market, but if Calgary really does make him available, Toronto has a clear reason to be in the mix early.

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