William Nylander faces harsh reality check from Craig Berube as growing tensions spark fresh concerns for Maple LeafsWilliam Nylander (Getty Images) William Nylander did not need a long speech. Craig Berube made sure of that. The message was short, sharp, and impossible to misread. Shoot the puck. For a team searching for life without Auston Matthews, the margin for hesitation has disappeared. Every scoring chance matters now, and Nylander’s instinct to pass has started to feel like a missed opportunity rather than a creative choice.There is context behind the urgency. Matthews is out for the season after a knee injury, leaving a gap that cannot be filled by committee alone. Toronto Maple Leafs are drifting, results slipping, confidence thinning. In that environment, Berube’s tone makes sense. He is not asking Nylander to change who he is. He is asking him to lean into what he does best, and to do it without second guessing.

Craig Berube urges William Nylander to shoot more and fill scoring void

The conversation between coach and winger was direct, almost blunt. “I don’t know if you’re a playmaker now or are you going to shoot?” Craig Berube said, laying out the choice in simple terms. It was not a criticism dressed up as advice. It was accountability, delivered at the right time.William Nylander’s skill set has never been in doubt. His wrist shot is among the cleanest in the league, the kind that can beat goaltenders before they fully set. Yet in recent games, he has drifted toward overthinking. Passing lanes that are not there, plays forced through traffic, moments where a quick release would have been the better option. On the power play, that hesitation has been costly.Berube’s point about the man advantage carries weight. Shooting creates chaos. Rebounds spill loose. Defenders panic. When Nylander holds onto the puck too long, that chain reaction never begins. It becomes predictable, easier to defend. For a team already struggling, that predictability is a problem.To his credit, Nylander did not push back. He understood the message and accepted it. The response showed up quickly. Against the Carolina Hurricanes, he found space and finished the tying goal in the third period. It was a glimpse of the version Toronto needs more often.Still, the bigger picture remains uneasy. The loss stretched a difficult run, and the standings reflect it. With Matthews unavailable, the responsibility is no longer shared evenly. It shifts, naturally, toward players like Nylander who can change a game with one touch.The next test comes against the Ottawa Senators. The expectation is clear now. When Nylander crosses the blue line, the decision should already be made. No extra pass. No hesitation. Just trust the shot.Banner Insert