A sign of the times: A fan shares a sentiment that now rings true as the Toronto Maple Leafs officially relieved Marc Savard of his coaching duties on Monday.
The axe has finally fallen in Toronto, and frankly, it felt like a matter of when, not if. On Monday, the Toronto Maple Leafs announced the firing of assistant coach Marc Savard, a move that screams desperation from a front office watching a season slip away. Sitting at 15-15-5 and dead last in the Atlantic Division, something had to give. But let’s be real for a second: Is firing the assistant coach really going to fix a roster that simply cannot defend?
This move delivers an immediate message to the locker room following a humiliating 5-1 loss to the Dallas Stars, but it also leaves fans with more questions than answers. The Leafs aren’t bringing in a fresh voice; they are looking in-house. This is the definition of a “shakeup,” but it rewards the click because it signals that the panic button has officially been pressed at Scotiabank Arena.
As an analyst watching this team crumble over the last month, the dismissal of Marc Savard feels like the classic “fall guy” scenario. Savard, 48, was brought in with high hopes on June 23, 2024, to revitalize the offense and bring a spark to the coaching staff. Less than two seasons later, he is out the door.
When you look at the numbers, the decision is justifiable on paper, but perhaps not in spirit. The Leafs have 35 points in 35 games. In the modern NHL, where the “loser point” keeps mediocre teams afloat, being .500 is essentially a death sentence for playoff aspirations. Sitting second last in the Eastern Conference is not just a slump; for a market like Toronto, it is a catastrophe.
Was Savard the Problem or Just the Convenient Scapegoat?
The reality is that General Management needed to throw a body onto the pyre to appease a furious fanbase and an ownership group wondering why this expensive roster is failing. Rumors have been swirling about the Leafs trying to acquire Calgary Flames defenseman Rasmus Andersson or shopping Mattias Maccelli. These trade rumors point to the actual issue: personnel.
Savard can draw up all the plays he wants, but if the execution isn’t there, or if the defensive core cannot move the puck, the system fails. By firing Savard, the Leafs buy themselves a few days of “new look” energy. However, TSN Hockey Insider Pierre LeBrun reports that the Leafs will not be hiring an external replacement, opting instead for an in-house solution.
To me, this is the most concerning part. It suggests a lack of long-term planning or perhaps a budget constraint that prevents them from going out and getting a top-tier tactical mind. It feels like a stop-gap measure. Savard, who had a respectable coaching stint with the Windsor Spitfires and a legendary playing career with over 800 games and 700 points, knows the game inside and out. If he couldn’t get through to this group, the rot might be deeper than the assistant coaching bench.
The 5-1 loss to Dallas was the breaking point—a third consecutive loss where the team looked lifeless. While Savard takes the walk today, the pressure now shifts entirely to the head coach and the players. The shield is gone. If they don’t turn it around immediately, the next press release won’t be about an assistant; it will be about the core roster or the General Manager.
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