A couple of seasons ago, fans of the Toronto Maple Leafs convinced themselves they could get by without William Nylander. Now, he’s become central to how the team functions. When he first went down against the Colorado Avalanche this season, the team tightened up, shared the workload, and even found enough momentum to win.
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For a moment, it felt like one of those stretches where you tell yourself the team is deeper now — that they’ll be fine. Then reality crept back in.
Without Nylander, the Maple Leafs Have Been a Losing Team
Over the last five games without Nylander, the Leafs are 1-3-1. They’ve scored 11 goals total. That’s barely two a night, and that’s not a recipe for success. The post-Christmas surge that dragged them back into the playoff conversation is suddenly starting to feel fragile, like something held together with tape and optimism.
This second stretch without Nylander has been different. There’s been less push in the team’s game and, frankly, far less energy.
The loss to Colorado on Sunday told the story about as plainly as can be. The last time Toronto beat the Avalanche, Nylander helped build a 2-0 lead before getting hurt. As noted, even after he left, the Maple Leafs hung on to the two goals he helped them get.
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This time, on home ice, facing a must-win game, there was no early punch, no game-breaker, no moment where the ice tilted in Toronto’s favour. The team didn’t collapse. They never took control.
Nylander Does More than Score, He Changes the Energy Level
That’s the thing with Nylander. He doesn’t just score. He changes the temperature of games. He forces defenders to back off. He buys time for linemates. He turns harmless possessions into scoring chances just by holding onto the puck a second longer than most players dare to.
Without him, the Maple Leafs feel rigid. Too predictable. Too cautious. Everything funnels through Auston Matthews, who is a great player. But he’s a different player than Nylander.

What the Maple Leafs miss without Nylander isn’t just goals or points — it’s initiation. Matthews remains one of the league’s great finishers, brilliant at reading space and punishing mistakes once the game tilts his way. But Nylander is the one who pushes play through resistance, forces defenders to move, and turns stagnant possessions into motion.
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Without Nylander, the game slows, the energy flattens, and Matthews is left reacting instead of feeding off momentum. The talent is still there. The spark isn’t.
With Nylander Gone, There’s Only One Elite Play-Driver
Take Nylander out of the lineup, and suddenly you’re left with Matthews as the best play-driver. That’s not roster balance; that’s dependency. When Matthews has an off night or runs into a team built to smother him, the Maple Leafs don’t have a second wave that scares anyone.

Nylander’s numbers back up his value to the team. Before his injury, he was producing at a high clip again — 17 goals and 48 points in 37 games. He’s not coasting. He’s still creating, still finishing, still dragging defenders with him into uncomfortable places. The fact is, the Maple Leafs need him back.
Fortunately, There Might Be Good News on the Nylander Front
The good news is that Nylander was back on the ice over the weekend, his first skate since his injury. The bad news is that groins don’t care about optimism or timelines. With only five games left before the break — and the Olympics looming — there’s pressure coming from every direction. Fans want him healthy for Team Sweden. But the Maple Leafs need him playing now.
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The Maple Leafs don’t just miss Nylander. They require him. His presence makes the roster make sense. Without him, the margins disappear, the offence dries up, and every loss feels heavier than it should. This season might still be salvageable. But the path forward is narrow, and it runs straight through Nylander.
