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Critics aren't holding back on Leafs top prospect and Toronto is rattled

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 24, 2026  (11:36 PM)
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Dec 15, 2015; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; The Toronto Maple Leafs logo at center ice before the start of the game against the Tampa Bay Lightning at Air Canada Centre. The Lightning beat the Maple Leafs 5-4.
Photo credit: Tom Szczerbowski-Imagn Images

Easton Cowan is supposed to be Toronto's next homegrown answer. The early reviews from this AHL postseason aren't lining up with that timeline.

Prospect analyst Nick Richard didn't sugarcoat it on Saturday. He's been underwhelmed by Cowan's play in the Calder Cup playoffs with the Marlies.

The bigger issue is pace. Richard wants to see the 21-year-old play faster overall instead of leaning on slowing the game down and dictating with the puck.

That's a notable critique. Pace is the gap between AHL skill and NHL impact. Plenty of prospects never close it.

Cowan got his first taste of the NHL this season at the top level. 66 games, 29 points, 11 goals, on a $904,667 cap hit. Useful flashes. Not yet the breakout.

His minus-5 rating tells you the deployment was managed and the results were still mixed. That's the prospect curve doing exactly what it's supposed to do.

Why this matters for Toronto's coaching search

The Leafs finished 28th overall at 32-36-14 with 78 points. That number ranks ahead of only four other NHL teams. The roster is broken. The pipeline has to start delivering soon.

GM John Chayka is currently working through a head-coach search after the off-season shake-up. The new bench voice inherits a development job, not just a tactical one.

Cowan needs the kind of coach who'll push him on the parts of his game he can't out-skill in the AHL. Pace. Pressure. Forecheck details.

Was 21 too young to expect Calder Cup heroics? Probably. The pressure on a Leafs first-rounder doesn't care about that nuance.

Honestly, one underwhelming playoff stretch from a 21-year-old doesn't shift a career path. It does shift the conversation around expectations next October.

Toronto's reset cannot work if its top young forward needs another full season in the AHL to find another gear. The math on this rebuild assumes Cowan is ready sooner than that.

The next head coach behind Toronto's bench will inherit the project. So will the prospect. The runway is shorter than fans want to admit.