Toronto Maple Leafs stars Auston Matthews and William Nylander send strong offseason message to John Chayka NHL roaster plans | NHL News
The Toronto Maple Leafs are under a lot of offseason pressure after franchise stars Auston Matthews and William Nylander reportedly laid out key roster concerns after a disappointing 2025-26 NHL season. Now, team president John Chayka faces a pivotal summer with heightened expectations for roster improvements, leadership decisions and long-term playoff aspirations for one of the NHL’s most closely watched franchises.Toronto ended the season with a 32-36-14 record, near the bottom of the standings and on a seven-game losing streak. Matthews and Nylander had big offensive seasons, but it couldn’t mask Toronto’s defensive issues, lack of depth and consistency at centre and inability to consistently beat the better teams in the Eastern Conference.
Auston Matthews and William Nylander discuss Toronto Maple Leafs NHL offseason roster priorities
Reports have it that Auston Matthews and William Nylander believe the Toronto Maple Leafs need to improve three key areas of the roster before the next NHL season starts.Insider chatter around the organization indicates both stars recognized the need for a second-line center, an impact winger and a right-shot defenseman who could boost the blue line. The comments follow a tough end to the season for Toronto, which included a 1-3 loss to the Ottawa Senators in the final game.Matthews finished the year with 27 goals and 53 points in 60 games, while Nylander had 30 goals and 79 points in 65 games. Both forwards remained productive individually, but Toronto struggled as a team all season and finished with a minus-46 goal differential.The concerns being reported only increase the pressure on John Chayka and the Maple Leafs front office as they enter a critical offseason of NHL trade rumors and roster speculation.A lot of analysts think that Toronto might want to bring in some veteran defencemen or goal-scoring wingers right away. Speed, puck movement and secondary scoring remain a big organizational focus after the club’s inconsistent campaign.Matthews and Nylander publicly calling out roster weaknesses only adds to the scrutiny of management decisions this summer.Toronto now faces an offseason where impactful moves will be necessary to regain playoff credibility and improve the team’s long-term NHL outlook.