The Hamilton Spectator

Dubas out as GM of the Leafs

Toronto set franchise records during his tenure but saw Stanley Cup drought stretch to 56 years

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Brendan Shanahan started the week wanting to keep Kyle Dubas in the fold.

A stunning, roller-coaster five days culminated with the Toronto Maple Leafs now in the market for a new general manager ahead of what could be a defining summer for the success-starved Original Six franchise.

Shanahan, the team’s president, fired his 37-year-old GM on Friday, bringing an end to a tumultuous stretch that began with Dubas stating publicly Monday he wasn’t certain he wanted to remain in the role.

The Leafs said in a news release issued shortly after noon the organizati­on was “parting ways” with Dubas, whose contract was set to expire June 30, after five seasons in charge.

But, in a detailed opening statement that lasted more than 11 minutes at a news conference in the bowels of Scotiabank Arena some three hours later, Shanahan said he decided to hand Dubas his walking papers that morning. The decision came despite the GM sending an email the previous night indicating he wanted to stay on board — albeit with an increased salary demand via his agent.

“At that point ... I had gotten to a different place about how I felt about the future,” Shanahan told reporters. “As hard as it is to make a significan­t change to somebody that you’re close to ... the email that I received from Kyle, I just felt differentl­y, and I felt that the longterm future of the Maple Leafs might have to change.

“Slept on that and woke up this morning, drove to Kyle’s office ... and informed him that we were not going to be renewing his contract.”

With Dubas the jaw-dropping first domino to fall in what is shaping up to be an intriguing few months in hockey’s biggest market, attention now turns to his replacemen­t, along with the status of head coach Sheldon Keefe and the future of star forward Auston Matthews, who both have close ties to the now departed GM.

The Leafs won a playoff series for the first time in nearly two decades this spring when they defeated the Tampa Bay Lightning before bowing out to the Florida Panthers in a disappoint­ing second-round showing.

“Going throughout the year, the way that the team was managed, I had no issue,” said Shanahan, who took a total of eight questions from reporters in his first media availabili­ty in a year. “Kyle did an excellent job.

“When the season did end ... I had expressed to Kyle that night that, as disappoint­ed as we all were, that I thought he had done a good job,” Shanahan added.

But, despite all that praise, here the Leafs are — minus a GM and with some seismic decisions resting just over the horizon.

An emotional Dubas said Monday at his end-of-season media availabili­ty he didn’t know if he would continue as GM, citing the stress on his young family.

“Definitely don’t have it in me to go anywhere else,” he added at the time. “It’ll either be here or it’ll be taking time to recalibrat­e (and) reflect.”

Dubas joined the Leafs in 2014 as an assistant GM at age 28 and led the American Hockey League’s Toronto Marlies to a Calder Cup title four years later. He took over the general manager’s chair from Hall of Famer Lou Lamoriello in May 2018 as part of a succession plan under Shanahan’s direction.

Toronto experience­d unpreceden­ted regular-season traction and set franchise records during the Dubas era but saw their Stanley Cup drought stretch to 56 years.

He didn’t shy away from big moves — Dubas fired decorated head coach Mike Babcock and replaced him with Keefe — but struggled to find the right mix in the playoffs until this spring’s fleeting breakthrou­gh.

“I don’t see Kyle coming here as a failure,” said Shanahan, who added the process of finding a successor will start immediatel­y. “Kyle was instrument­al in where this organizati­on is today.

“I’ve got to think about: How do we get where we want to go in the future and what are the best ways for us to be better?”

Dubas offered unwavering support to Toronto’s so-called “Core Four” of offensive talent consisting of Matthews, Mitch Marner, John Tavares and William Nylander throughout his half-decade at the helm.

“Unbelievab­le throughout my whole time here,” Marner said of Dubas after the Leafs were eliminated by Florida.

Matthews also trumpeted what Dubas brought, while defenceman Morgan Rielly was firmly in their now former general manager’s corner earlier this week.

“I think the world of Kyle,” he said. “World-class GM.”

His first big splash was to lure Tavares with a seven-year, $77-million (U.S.) contract in free agency after just a few months on the job in 2018.

A tough negotiatio­n with Nylander followed before he eventually signed a six-year extension worth $45 million. That set the stage for Matthews to ink a five-year extension with a value just under $58.2 million. Marner then got paid with a six-year, $65.4-million pact as Toronto allocated roughly half its salary cap to four stars.

Dubas also wasn’t shy about changing course, realizing early on that Toronto needed more grit and playoff experience.

He acquired Stanley Cup winners Jake Muzzin in 2019 and Ryan O’Reilly in 2023 with an eye toward getting the Leafs over the hump.

Dubas remade the roster before this season’s trade deadline by adding the likes of O’Reilly, Noel Acciari, Luke Schenn and Jake McCabe.

“He made some very good moves,” Shanahan said. “He had prepared the team to the best of his ability.”

 ?? N AT H A N DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Kyle Dubas speaks to media during an end-of-season availabili­ty in Toronto on Monday. The team said Friday it is “parting ways” with the 37-year-old executive, whose contract was scheduled to expire June 30.
N AT H A N DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Kyle Dubas speaks to media during an end-of-season availabili­ty in Toronto on Monday. The team said Friday it is “parting ways” with the 37-year-old executive, whose contract was scheduled to expire June 30.
 ?? ?? Brendan Shanahan
Brendan Shanahan

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