In his new book, Kyle Dubas explores his “biggest mistake,” which, no, wasn’t signing Tavares.

The past year in Pittsburgh has given Kyle Dubas time to reflect on his eventful years as Maple Leafs general manager.

While there were various on-ice accomplishments, multiple 100-point seasons for the team and some feel-good stories, playoff success eluded him, tied directly to contract difficulty with the NHL’s salary cap after he out-bid many teams for John Tavares with a seven-year, $77-million US offer.

 

In a new book by Craig Custance, an ESPN reporter now working for The Athletic, the entire Tavares pursuit by Dubas and his 10 years in Toronto are part of The Franchise: The Business Of Building Winning Teams.

Dubas has no regrets about the Tavares deal, with a year still to run on it, that’s caused inherent headaches for replacement Brad Treliving, but there are aspects of it he’d want back.

“The biggest mistake I think I’ve made in my whole time here has been not taking care of the three incumbent contracts,” Dubas told Custance. “(William) Nylander was up, (Mitch) Marner and (Auston) Matthews could have been done on July 1 extensions.”

Dubas laments not making more progress on all of those before Tavares, though he did talk to the trio about the impact winning the J.T. sweepstakes would have on their future standing.

“The thing I learned was once we signed John to the (AAV) we did, it lifted the lid on the entire ceiling,” he said.

 

Starting with Nylander, there were complications when an unnamed team floated the possibility of an offer sheet and his price shot up. It led to the winger’s two-month absence impacting his 2018-19 schedule, in which he scored just seven goals in 54 regular-season games, then just one in the playoffs.

 

There was a brief camp holdout by Marner before he signed his current deal and finally Matthews came aboard at a team-high $13.25 million AAV through 2027-28.

Others have since come to Dubas’ defence and in the book, Darryl Belfry, then a member of the Leafs hockey office in player development, reminds that COVID-19’s fallout led to the flat cap at the time and history could have judged Dubas differently.

 

“What would the cap be, $90 million?,” Belfry theorized. “Kyle would never say it, but I will. You have a world shut down, it’s a flat cap for multiple years and you’re stuck holding the bag on a projection. You didn’t miscalculate, it’s an act of nature that beat you.”

The book also has interviews with Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper, Lou Lamoriello on his various stops as GM, Washington Capitals owner Ted Leonsis and Dallas Stars GM of the year Jim Nill.

Marner’s long-term future as a Leaf is not clear, but his sixth annual all-star invitational hockey event is certainly on.

 

After a red-carpet launch Thursday night (hockey media was forewarned there’d be no interviews with the winger) Marner and NHL friends were to hold an on-ice clinic for donors on Friday morning at The Sports Village in Vaughan with instruction on puck control, stick-handling and scoring. It was to be followed by a 3-on-3 tourney of NHLers in the afternoon.

 

The charity, a big reason why Marner hopes to remain in Toronto (the Leafs have had two weeks to begin talks on an extension), has raised $2 million for sustainable change for children and youth in social care, health, education and environmental causes.

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