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It's over for two key NHL players and a major announcement just followed

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Vincent Carbonneau
June 7, 2026  (7:18 PM)
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Feb 3, 2026; Edmonton, Alberta, CAN; The Edmonton Oilers celebrate a goal scored by defensemen Jake Wahlman (96) during the second period against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Rogers Place.
Photo credit: Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

Morgan Rielly and Darnell Nurse now sit in the same offseason storm after Craig Berube's firing and Edmonton's bench reset.

That is why Darren Dreger's line hit so hard. He said Rielly's time in Toronto has more or less come to an end, and that it carries a similar feel to Nurse in Edmonton.

This is not just two fan bases getting restless at the same time. The Leafs and Oilers are both staring at veteran left-shot defensemen who have been part of the core for years and now feel less locked in than ever.

Rielly is 32 and has 4 years left at a $7.5 million cap hit. Nurse is 31 and carries a $9.25 million cap hit through the same 2029-30 finish line.

That contract overlap is what makes the comparison real. These are not expiring veterans teams can slide out quietly. These are franchise names with term, money, and history attached.

Rielly's side of it has been building for weeks. Sportsnet reported Toronto has been looking into options, Rielly is aware of it, and he could be presented with choices if they develop.

Nurse's side has a different sound, but the same pressure. Marqueur reported a pre-deadline framework involving Nurse, Rielly, and Nicolas Roy had real legs, which tells you both clubs were already exploring something much bigger than surface chatter.

" Darren Dreger: [Morgan Rielly's] time in Toronto has more or less come to an end, it's expected that he will get traded; it does have that similar feel with Darnell Nurse with the Oilers, it does - Barn Burner (6/5) "

It's over for two NHL key players and we just received something big

Because both teams already changed the easy thing. Toronto fired Berube. Edmonton fired Kris Knoblauch. Once the coach is gone and the same blue-line questions stay alive, the spotlight shifts straight to the roster.

The regular-season numbers only sharpen it. Toronto finished 32-36-14 with 78 points. Edmonton went 41-30-11 for 93. Neither front office can sell patience the same way after those results.

Rielly still has value around the league because he moves the puck and has real playoff production for a defenseman. Nurse still brings size, range, and heavier minutes than most blue-liners are asked to carry.

But that is exactly why this feels like a mirror story. Both players are still useful. Both players still matter. And both teams may be at the point where usefulness is no longer enough if the fit feels stale.

That is the part Dreger nailed. This does not sound like a small tune-up anymore. It sounds like two organizations looking at familiar names and asking whether the reset has to go deeper.

If that answer is yes, Morgan Rielly and Darnell Nurse may end up defining each other's summer.