TORONTO — The need simply grew too big to ignore.
So desperate had the Toronto Maple Leafs become for a right-shot defenceman that, prior to Thursday’s 4-2 win over the Arizona Coyotes, Sheldon Keefe had already held discussions behind the scenes about deploying one of the sport’s most elite forwards as a blue liner.
Then once Mark Giordano‘s head crashed into the end-boards during a first-period scoring chance and the veteran needed assistance off the ice from Morgan Rielly and trainer Paul Ayotte, Mitch Marner became the best option to play D.
“We’re in a jam,” the head coach said, multiple times, the morning after the trade market’s No. 1 RD, Chris Tanev, was dealt to a competitor.
Publicly and privately, Keefe had been pleading to Brad Treliving for a righthanded defenceman.
And while the general manager was on the same page, he had been choosing patience.
It wasn’t until after Giordano departed the Coyotes game with a head injury (the severity of which is unknown) and Marner partnered with T.J. Brodie, wondering when to pinch and how big his gaps should be while skating backward, that Treliving made the leap on Feb. 29.
Treliving hopped on the phone with Anaheim Ducks GM Pat Verbeek and secured the services of stay-at-home righty Ilya Lyubushkin at 50 per cent retained in exchange for Toronto’s 2025 third-round draft pick. He also convinced the Carolina Hurricanes to retain an additional 25 per cent of the 29-year-old’s salary for a 2024 sixth-rounder.
The deal fills a gaping immediate hole and widens the growing wasteland that is the Maple Leafs’ draft capital.
Double retention means Lyubushkin will only cost the Leafs $687,500 against the cap. That’s less than the NHL minimum and leaves leftover cash for another addition prior to the March 8 deadline.
Two more picks out the door means the Leafs, barring future moves, won’t select until the fifth round in 2025. But that’s tomorrow’s problem.
The urgency to act today had been mounting, especially after Treliving swung and missed on top target Tanev and, months ago, Nikita Zadorov.
Back in the summer, the executive had stated his intent to bolster his questionable blue line mix. He had called every executive employing a defender who curved his stick the opposite way of Morgan Rielly’s.
Meanwhile, Toronto’s blue line kept getting weaker and more awkward. The absence of righties John Klingberg (season-ending hip surgery), Timothy Liljegren (undisclosed), and Conor Timmins (mono) resulted in this week’s all-lefty defence group.
An imperfect mix of skill sets and handedness that felt destined to get exposed over what is sure to be a gruelling first-round playoff series.
When decent rental defencemen go for second-rounders (minimum), and you weren’t left with one until 2027, and you are reluctant to part with the prospects your opponents actually value (Fraser Minten, Easton Cowan), well, that makes meaningful trades tricky.
“[Treliving] is doing all he can to try to help our team while recognizing, at the same time, that the team has played really well and done a good job,” Keefe said Thursday morning.
“Brodie has been better on the left, but he has played more on the right than anybody on our team. When we have no righties in a jam like this, we have to trust and give these guys a chance to go out and play.”
The return of the six-foot-two, 200-pound Lyubushkin — a.k.a., the “Russian Bear,” as his Leafs teammates affectionately anointed him during his 2022 rental and only NHL playoff taste — should bring a stay-at-home partner for Rielly and permit Brodie to play his natural side once Liljegren (day-to-day) gets healthy.
The pending UFA’s numbers haven’t wowed in Anaheim (four assists, minus-13, 51 PIM), but he’s an established NHL D-man skating more than 17 minutes a night, knocking bodies and blocking pucks. Bonus: His Leafs teammates love his hard-nosed brand of hockey.
The Maple Leafs, now carrying three goalies, must clear a roster spot for Lyubushkin by Friday afternoon, but that may be as simple as placing Giordano on LTIR.
The Boosh is back.
And while it’s a win for Toronto’s blue line balance and cap conservatism, the trade is hardly a blockbuster.
It’s not perfect, but it’s what they got.
And, boy, did they need to go get something.