There is no more excuse for the bottom six to be on a budget. That is a positive.
The constant theme around Toronto is that it is eye-popping to see a 102-point player out the door, and that makes people nervous, but every single year, they couldn’t get it done in the playoffs. And it’s not just Mitch Marner; Auston Matthews, John Tavares, and William Nylander all took a step back in their play generally, and it was based on a model where those guys were making so much money that they had to carry the mail and make up for any other deficiencies in the roster because they coudln’t afford to fill the other holes.
The Leafs were running a third line against Florida that, ice time-wise, was generally Scott Laughton, Steven Lorentz, and Calle Jarnkrok. Those guys make $4.5 million combined, and they were playing a Florida line where Anton Lundell alone makes more money than they do. We haven’t even mentioned Brad Marchand yet.
They couldn’t fill it, and now they can. It would be nice to have a little bit more jam and energy down there in terms of players who are more physical, but we should never look at that kind of third line again going into the playoffs. There should be serious dollars and commitment put toward it now. You should be looking at it and saying, “It is genuinely a three or four-line team,” whereas the regular conversations in the past couple of years were, “If the top guys don’t do it, no one is doing it.”