For better or for worse, the 2021-22 Toronto Maple Leafs will be a different team than they were last season. As teams always do, each year some players depart and new players replace them. The purpose of this post is to ask the simple question: “Given the offseason roster turnover, will the 2021-22 Maple Leafs be better or worse?”

What a Difference a Year Makes for Maple Leafs’ Fans

Prior to last season, expectations were high. Once Maple Leafs’ general manager Kyle Dubas had finished making moves during the offseason, the majority of the Toronto fans were ecstatic about the 2020-21 NHL regular season. They felt Dubas had addressed areas of weakness, such as size, physicality, and, most importantly, defense.

We all know what happened. Things worked out great during the regular season, but then fell apart during the playoffs. What happened and why has been a debate during the current entire offseason. The mood of the Maple Leafs’ faithful is bleak; and, perhaps, that’s an understatement. Perhaps that context hints at the continued discouragement with Dubas’ moves this offseason. 

Have the Maple Leafs Taken a Step Backwards this Offseason?

From the reactions of our THW readers, many fans seem to think the Maple Leafs took a step backward this summer. Many believe that, with the team returning to the tough Atlantic Division, the current roster might not even make the playoffs. Are they right?

In this post, we’ll use some old-fashioned statistics to compare the two rosters – last season’s and this season’s – to see if we can answer that question. Is the 2021-22 iteration of the Maple Leafs truly that much worse than last-season’s? 

Players on Last Season’s Maple Leafs’ Roster Who Are No Longer with the Team

Here’s a list of those players who started last season on the Maple Leafs’ roster who are no longer with the team. We’ve also included their production stats from last season, as well as their ages, heights, and weights. 

Player Age Height Weight Games Played Goals Assists Points Plus/Minus Hits
Zach Hyman 27 6-foot-1 210 43 15 18 33 +19 69
Joe Thornton 40 6-foot-4 220 44 5 15 20  +6 32
Travis Boyd 26 6-foot-0 190 39 5 5 10 -5 18
Jimmy Vesey 26 6-foot-3 200 50 5 5 10 -14 38
Zach Bogosian 29 6-foot-2 200 45 0 4 4 +7 67
Mikko Lehtonen 26 6-foot-0 195 26 0 6 6 -2 37
Nic Petan 24 5-foot-9 175 7 0 1 1 -2 6

Of the players listed above, the average age was 28, the average height was 6-foot-1, and the average weight was 200 pounds. The total for games played was 254, the total goals were 30, the total assists were 54, the total points were 84, the total number of hits were 267, and the added and subtracted plus-minus totals +9. 

Looking at the new players who were brought in to replace them:

Player Age Height Weight Games Played Goals Assists Points Plus/Minus Hits
Alex Biega 33 5-foot-10 200 13 0 3 3 -1 22
Michael Bunting 26 5’10” 195 21 10 3 13 -1 28
Kurtis Gabriel 28 6-foot-4 200 11 0 0 0 +1 46
David Kampf 26 6-foot-2 190 56 1 11 12 -3 45
Andrej Kase 25 6-foot-0 190 3 0 0 0 0 1
Brennan Menell 24 5-foot-11 175 5 0 0 0 -1 2
Nick Ritchie 25 6-foot-2 230 56 15 11 26 -7 102
Antti Suomela 27 6-foot-0 180 4 0 0 0 0 6

Of the players listed above, the average age was 27, the average height was 6-foot-0, and the average weight was 195 pounds. The total for games played was 169, the total goals were 26, the total assists were 28, the total points were 54, the total number of hits were 252, and the added plus-minus is -12.

Comparing the Outgoing and the Incoming Maple Leafs’ Players

Comparing the 82-game rate of production for each group of players: 

Outgoing 10 goals 17 assists 27 points +3 86 hits
Incoming 13 goals 14 assists 27 points -6 122 hits

Comparing the two groups of players in relation to age, size, and in other categories shows that they aren’t much different. The new group of players is one year younger, one inch shorter, and five pounds lighter. 

As far as production, they’re almost identical. When their production was translated over an 82-game schedule, both groups produced exactly 27 points last season. The outgoing group was plus-9 collectively, while the new group was minus-12 altogether. Last, the new group had 40 percent more hits than the old group; however, that number was heavily influenced by Ritchie, who threw 102 hits in 56 games. That translates to 150 hits over an 82-game season.  

Considering the Intangibles of the Maple Leafs Coming and Those Leaving

Obviously, we’ve taken a narrow look at these two groups, and there are many intangibles these numbers don’t account for. Two of those intangibles are experience and proven talent. 

The Maple Leafs lost the two Zachs – Hyman and Bogosian. Insofar as we know before the season begins, the organization has not replaced either player with a player of equal value. It appears the Maple Leafs hope to replace Hyman by committee using Ritchie, Bunting, and Kampf.  

The Bottom Line: What the Maple Leafs Lost and What They Gained

Taking a systematic look at the players who are not returning to the Maple Leafs, as a group their impact drops quickly once you get past Hyman and Bogosian. Based strictly on the numbers, it doesn’t appear the team is losing much overall when the outgoing players’ contributions last season are compared with the incoming replacement players. 

Obviously, for as much as we engage the numbers, we won’t really know how good these players are until we see them together on the ice. We won’t know how good the team is until we see it working together as a finished product.

That’s where the most important number of all emerges: how many games can this new team win?

[Note: I want to thank long-time Maple Leafs’ fan Stan Smith for collaborating with me on this post. Stan’s Facebook profile can be found here.]

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