Mitch Marner returns to Toronto with Golden Knights (Image via: Getty Images) Mitch Marner’s return to Scotiabank Arena came without the noise or sentimentality that usually surrounds these nights. There was no points column impact, no signature moment with the puck. Instead, it was defined by discomfort, closure, and a Vegas Golden Knights team that played with clear purpose in a 6-3 win over the Toronto Maple Leafs.For Marner, the night was less about production and more about getting through it. The former Maple Leaf faced his old team in Toronto for the first time since the July 1 sign-and-trade that reshaped his career, and the emotions surfaced long before the puck dropped.
Mitch Marner feels relief in first game back against Maple Leafs
Marner finished the game without a point, registering one shot on goal in 17:25 of ice time. Statistically, it was quiet. Contextually, it was anything but. After nine seasons in Toronto—where he ranks fourth in franchise history in assists and sixth in points—he simply stepped onto the home ice as an opponent carried weight.“It was really kind of in warmups where it felt odd and weird,” Marner said afterward. “It was a little bit of an odd day, but happy to get the two points… honestly relieved it’s over.”That relief mirrored the Golden Knights’ approach. Mark Stone made sure the night didn’t drift into distraction, scoring twice and adding an assist to extend his point streak to a franchise-record 14 games. His first-period playmaking helped Vegas set an early tone, and his late empty-net goal sealed a result that mattered beyond the standings.Stone admitted the locker room understood what the game meant for Marner. After a sluggish loss in Boston the night before, Vegas wanted a reset— and a response. Winning in Toronto offered both. Jack Eichel’s continued production, including a goal and an assist, reinforced that the Golden Knights remain built for controlled pressure rather than emotional swings.For Toronto, the loss exposed familiar issues. Despite pushing back late in the second period, the Maple Leafs couldn’t sustain momentum in the third. John Tavares and Craig Berube both pointed to pace and execution, especially against a team playing its second game in as many nights.Marner, meanwhile, walked out of the building with closure. No tribute video. No dramatic arc. It was simply a strange yet necessary step forward. Sometimes, it’s the most straightforward approach, and for both the player and the team, it could have been the intended outcome.