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Massive one for one trade is brewing between Toronto and a Western team with a top asset on the line

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Jonathan Ouimet
June 2, 2026  (1:34)
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Mar 28, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Toronto Maple Leafs right wing William Nylander (88) center John Tavares (91) and left wing Matthew Knies (23) talk before a face off against the St. Louis Blues during the third period at Enterprise Center.
Photo credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

The Toronto Maple Leafs and Utah are quietly working on something big.

Hockey 24|7 reported on Sunday that Utah is interested in Matthew Knies. The Leafs response told you exactly how big this conversation could get. Toronto asked for Clayton Keller in return.

That's a real ask. Not a fishing expedition. Not a fan-tweet trade machine fantasy. A specific name. A specific player profile. A potential one-for-one core piece swap.

Knies is 23 years old and just finished a 66-point season for the Leafs on a $7.75 million cap hit. 23 goals. 43 assists. The catch is the minus-30 rating, which speaks to how rough Toronto's overall season got around him.

Keller is the established star Utah captain. He just authored an 88-point year at age 27. 26 goals. 62 assists. Plus-20 rating. On a $7.15 million cap hit. Utah captain in name and in production.

The cap hits are remarkably similar. The age gap is 4 years. The production gap is real. The fit on both rosters changes the team in different ways.

Why both front offices have actual reasons to make this deal

John Chayka's new Toronto regime needs a different kind of top-six identity. The Leafs landed the No.1 overall pick at the draft lottery. Gavin McKenna is the projected selection. Building around McKenna with Keller as a top-line stabilizer fits the longer-term vision.

The Auston Matthews trade chatter is still real. Pierre LeBrun reported the captain hasn't made a final determination on his future. Adding Keller in front of an unsettled Matthews situation gives Toronto insurance regardless of which way that conversation goes.

Bill Armstrong's Utah group needs the opposite. They have stars already. What they need is size, term, and the kind of young body that fits Andre Tourigny's bench identity. Knies brings all three in one player.

The Utah franchise also benefits from Knies' American profile. He's from Phoenix. He played college hockey at the University of Minnesota. He's exactly the kind of marketable young centerpiece the relocated former Coyotes brand can build around in their second year in Salt Lake City.

Honestly, this is the kind of trade math that rarely actually closes. Both teams are asking each other for high-end production. Both teams are also negotiating around long-term contracts that limit flexibility for years to come.

But the fact that Toronto put Keller's name on the table tells you Chayka is serious. New front offices don't make wild opening pitches that get laughed off. The asking price reflects what they think Knies actually deserves in return.

Utah finished 15th overall at 43-33-6 with 92 points. The team ended a long playoff drought. They knocked out Edmonton in the first round. They're knocking on the door of being a real contender.

The Maple Leafs landed 28th overall at 32-36-14 with 78 points. The Knies trade money goes back into the cap pile for the rebuild around McKenna and the existing core.

The 2026 NHL Draft is June 26. The teams have less than four weeks to figure out if this works. The names involved are big enough to make it interesting.

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Massive one for one trade is brewing between Toronto and a Western team with a top asset on the line

Should the Toronto Maple Leafs trade Matthew Knies for Clayton Keller ?