The Day

< Lou Lamoriello leaves the New Jersey Devils on Thursday to become general manager of the Toronto Maple Leafs.

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Toronto — Brendan Shanahan’s new-school Toronto Maple Leafs front office built on his philosophy of differing viewpoints has a new voice, and this one comes with a lot of NHL experience.

Shanahan, who’s a year into his duties as team president, believes new general manager Lou Lamoriello “will fit in very, very well and be an incredible boost” to what the Leafs are trying to accomplish.

Shanahan went looking for experience to join Kyle Dubas, Mark Hunter and Brandon Pridham in management, and found it in Lamoriello.

“If I could map out or draw out a descriptio­n of the kind of person that we wanted, it would be Lou,” Shanahan told a news conference Thursday. “I’ve always thought that there are certain advantages to hiring people on their way up that are looking to prove themselves and have that sort of hunger and energy to make a name for themselves. But I do think that we were lacking in some experience.”

In charge of the New Jersey Devils since 1987, the 72-year-old Lamoriello was the longest-serving GM in NHL history. Along the way, his teams won the Stanley Cup three times, a pedigree he brings to the Leafs, who are trying to build a championsh­ip contender.

Lamoriello becomes the oldschool GM working under the Hall of Fame player and overseeing assistants Hunter, Dubas and Pridham, also NHL management rookies. He’ll alsowork with coach Mike Babcock, who’s signed for eight years and $50 million and has committed to a longrange plan for success.

“Brendan’s hired some very good people kind of a little bit on an entry level, at the levels they are coming into the league,” said Pittsburgh Penguins GM Jim Rutherford, who made a similar transition last year leaving Carolina. “To add an experience­d guy like Lou, I think it was very smart on the Leafs’ part, and it’ll be a good fit.”

Lamoriello’s comfortabl­e fit for the past 28 years was gripping the reins of the Devils and asserting just about total control. New Jersey was his team until Ray Shero took over as GM in May, leaving Lamoriello as team president.

“I think this benefits everyone,” Shero said. “He’s a pretty amazing person, and he’s in the Hall of Fame for a reason. They’re going to find that out.”

Although Lamoriello said he was told he’d have autonomy as GM, Shanahan made it clear in conversati­ons “the kind of environmen­t and organizati­on” of collaborat­ion he was building. Lamoriello is OK with Shanahan not wearing a tie to work every day and might have to let Hunter keep his facial hair, and he’s fine with sharing decision-making responsibi­lities.

“No one makes any decision without consulting the people that are around them and their supporting staff,” Lamoriello said. “Everybody works together.”

The process of remaking the Leafs is already under way.

Since taking over, Shanahan fired several assistant coaches, executives and scouts, Randy Carlyle and Dave Nonis and presided over the trade of Phil Kessel to the Penguins. Yet there are still plenty of big decisions to make.

Shanahan is still setting the vision, but now it’s Lamoriello’s job to execute it.

“We know the roster needs some work,” Lamoriello said. “You have to have a foundation before you can go anywhere. Yes, it could be slower, there could be more pain, because there could be more subtractio­ns sometimes than additions to get that foundation with the right culture going forward.”

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