Journal Pioneer

Out the door

Toronto Maple Leafs lose Lamoriello, Hunter as executives leave roles

- BY JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Maple Leafs president Brendan Shanahan says he knew once Kyle Dubas was elevated to general manager, an exodus from Toronto’s front office was all but assured.

That shoe having now firmly dropped, the club finds itself with some big holes to fill. The Leafs announced Tuesday that assistant GM Mark Hunter and the team had mutually agreed to part ways, and less than an hour later the New York Islanders confirmed Lou Lamoriello, who had recently shifted to the role of senior adviser in Toronto after three years as GM, will be their new president of hockey operations. “It’s always a sad day when you say goodbye to people that you respect and have worked with for a while, but it’s something that certainly does not catch the organizati­on by surprise,” Shanahan said in a phone interview with The Canadian Press. “With every organizati­on, there’s people that are integral to the developmen­t for different stages. I think having those two guys aboard - Mark for four years, Lou for three has been vital.

“Making the decision on Kyle, is really in my best assessment, what I thought was best for the organizati­on going forward into the future.”

The 32-year-old Dubas was promoted from assistant GM on May 11, a move that shuffled the 75-year-old Lamoriello to sidelines and saw Hunter, 55, passed over for a job he no doubt wanted.

“This was a likely scenario,” Shanahan said of the departures.

“What was most important to me was picking the person that I thought was ready to take the Leafs to the next stage of developmen­t.”

Toronto’s initial statement regarding Hunter made no mention of Lamoriello. The Islanders broke that news, thanking the Leafs in their release.

“We are committed to giving Lou every resource and the full support of the entire organizati­on as we pursue our program to compete at the highest level,” said Scott Malkin, managing partner of the Islanders. The Leafs confirmed the Lamoriello move some 70 minutes after announcing Hunter had left.

Shanahan said Tuesday he could tell Lamoriello, who drafted him in 1987 when he was in charge of the New Jersey Devils, wasn’t ready to fade away.

“Watching him in the last few months, it was my belief that if somebody made the right opportunit­y available for him, he was ready for a new challenge,” Shanahan said.

“I’m happy for him that he’s taken one on close to his old stomping grounds, reuniting him with some people that he’s worked with before.” Lamoriello was the Devils’ GM and president of hockey operations from 1987 to 2015, a period that saw the team reach the Stanley Cup final five times and win the title in 1995, 2000 and 2003.

The Hall of Famer helped guide Toronto to a 49-26-7 record in his third season at the helm with young stars Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner and William Nylander in 2017-18 just two years removed from a last-place finish.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? London Knights general manager Mark Hunter, right, is shown behind the Ontario Hockey League team’s bench in 2014. At left is assistant coach Jeff Paul.
CP PHOTO London Knights general manager Mark Hunter, right, is shown behind the Ontario Hockey League team’s bench in 2014. At left is assistant coach Jeff Paul.

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