Morgan Rielly’s name is still floating around the trade market, and the latest chatter has pulled two Eastern Conference teams into the mix.
According to a report from David Pagnotta, the Pittsburgh Penguins and Philadelphia Flyers have both shown interest in the Maple Leafs veteran. The report stops short of painting either club as a clear frontrunner, but it does add another layer to a situation that has lingered since the season ended.
For weeks, there was speculation about whether Rielly would remain in Toronto. A possible San Jose deal was discussed at one point, but that never came together after the Sharks went with Darnell Nurse instead. For now, Rielly still looks set to be part of the Leafs’ lineup.
That doesn’t mean the noise has gone away. Toronto would love to free up his $7.5-million cap hit, and the reasoning is pretty straightforward: the Leafs no longer need him to be their No. 1 defender. His offensive production has slipped, and the defensive concerns remain part of the conversation.
Pagnotta’s note suggests the interest has moved beyond the Western Conference, with the Flyers and Penguins both at least poking around. He said:
“I know the Flyers, I believe Pittsburgh to some degree, have expressed interest...in Morgan Rielly.”
Pittsburgh, in particular, brings an interesting wrinkle. Kyle Dubas has already added Nick Robertson and Connor Dewar, while Conor Timmins was previously in the organization. Rielly would be the fourth former Leaf Dubas has brought in over the last two years, and if anyone knows the player well, it’s Dubas.
Even so, the report does not make this sound like a full-blown chase. Pittsburgh is described as interested, but not necessarily locked in on Rielly as a top target. Philadelphia feels a little more grounded as a possibility, though there still isn’t anything concrete on a package or serious traction.
Rielly had been believed to prefer a move out west, but the market has thinned enough that he may need to widen the search. Pittsburgh could make sense because he wouldn’t be asked to carry the whole operation, and he also wouldn’t be running the power play with Erik Karlsson already there.
There’s also familiarity in the Penguins’ corner. Dubas knows what Rielly can bring, and Pittsburgh would at least give him a chance to land in a place where he isn’t starting from scratch. The Metropolitan Division would also offer a different path to a playoff spot than the crowded Atlantic.
Philadelphia has a similar appeal in that Rielly wouldn’t need to handle everything himself, but the Flyers may need to sort out some contracts first before a move like this becomes realistic. Even there, he’d have some familiar faces around him in Joseph Woll, Simon Benoit, and Nikita Grebenkin.
The bigger issue is cost. Teams appear to view Rielly as more of a secondary piece than a must-have answer, and that makes a $7.5-million commitment a tough sell without Toronto adding something to sweeten the deal.
So the interest is real, but this is not the kind of development that should have anyone rushing to the finish line. Rielly still looks likely to be in the picture for Toronto this season, even if the Leafs continue working to move him. The challenge now is finding the right fit - and getting Rielly to open up his options.
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The Leafs also moved on from director of amateur scouting Mark Leach and senior advisor of player personnel Dave Morrison, underscoring that this is more than a single personnel move. For a team trying to keep its footing while reworking the people in charge of finding and developing talent, the bigger question now is how much more of the old structure is left before the next phase of the overhaul takes hold. [Read more 🡒]
