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Connor McDavid's Oilers face a Toronto problem they can't ignore

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Skyler Walker
May 16, 2026  (9:50)
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Jan 16, 2024; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) carries the puck around Toronto Maple Leafs forward Auston Matthews (34) during the first period at Rogers Place.
Photo credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

Connor McDavid lost Kris Knoblauch, and that only turned Toronto noise into a real offseason pressure point for Edmonton.

This story is no longer built on childhood fandom alone.

It's built on timing, pressure, and what the Oilers can still sell over the next 2 seasons.

Edmonton moved on from Knoblauch just days after another short playoff run.

When the coach goes and the captain is still staring at a shorter commitment than the club wanted, people around the league notice.

Toronto added its own fuel.

Craig Berube is out after the Maple Leafs missed the playoffs at 32-36-14, and the front office is already reshaping the room under John Chayka and Mats Sundin.

That's what makes the latest McDavid chatter stick a little more than usual.

A recent post pushed the Toronto angle back into the cycle, and it landed at a moment when both teams look unsettled.

The Oilers still have the bigger problem. McDavid just finished another monster season with 138 points in 82 games, then saw Edmonton bow out in 6 playoff games against Anaheim.

That is not the kind of finish that cools down outside noise. It does the opposite, especially when the bench changes right after the exit.

Toronto keeps showing up in the frame of Connor McDavid's future

The Maple Leafs are messy too, but they can still sell name value, market pull, and a new front-office look.

Sundin's return only adds another layer because McDavid's admiration for him has followed this story for years.

There's also the money piece, and it's not clean.

McDavid carries a $12,500,000 cap hit, while Auston Matthews sits at $13,250,000, so any blockbuster path would force hard choices fast.

Then there's the draft lottery swing.

Toronto now owns the 1st overall pick, and that changes the tone of any future conversation if Edmonton ever believes McDavid is not staying long term.

That does not make a trade likely. It just makes the silence around McDavid feel a lot louder than it did a few weeks ago.

Edmonton now has to hire the right coach, steady the blue line, and show its captain there is still a clear Cup path in front of him. That's the real story.

Because once Toronto starts looking like an option instead of just a fantasy, the pressure shifts right back onto the Oilers front office.