After an 11-year tenure defined by highs, heartbreaks, and a star-studded rebuild that never delivered playoff glory, Brendan Shanahan is out as president of the Toronto Maple Leafs. His departure comes as speculation intensifies around a new leadership chapter—this time on Long Island, where the Islanders are in search of a visionary to reshape their front office.
End of an era in Toronto
On Thursday, Brendan Shanahan’s decade-long run as the Maple Leafs’ president came to an official close. The decision followed a board meeting of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment (MLSE), the ownership group of the franchise, which concluded that it was time for a new voice at the helm. “Brendan is one of the most respected leaders in the game,” MLSE President & CEO Keith Pelley said in a statement. “Our responsibility and driving motivation, however, is to add a new chapter to the Maple Leafs’ championship history, and it was determined that a new voice was required.”
Shanahan, a Hockey Hall of Famer, arrived in Toronto in 2014 tasked with overseeing a top-to-bottom rebuild. Though the team reached the postseason in nine consecutive years under his watch, it never made it past the second round. Their most recent playoff appearance ended in disappointment with a Game 7 loss to the Florida Panthers—another reminder that the core he helped assemble couldn’t deliver in the postseason.
Still, Shanahan’s fingerprints are all over the modern Leafs. He ushered in a wave of homegrown talent—Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner, and William Nylander chief among them—and secured marquee free agent John Tavares in 2018. But for all the regular season success and roster polish, the Stanley Cup eluded them.
“While I am proud of the rebuild we embarked on starting in 2014, ultimately, I came here to help win the Stanley Cup, and we did not,” Shanahan said in a statement. “There is nothing more I wanted to deliver to our fans, and my biggest regret is that we could not finish the job.”
Islanders’ front office watch intensifies
Shanahan’s sudden availability may be of particular interest to the New York Islanders. Just one day before Toronto parted ways with him, the Islanders reportedly received permission to speak with Shanahan as they continue to search for a new front office leader following the departure of Lou Lamoriello earlier this offseason.
The connection isn’t random. Shanahan previously worked with Isles executive John Collins during their time at the NHL league office, and it was Shanahan who brought Lamoriello to Toronto in 2015. As the Islanders navigate a methodical and closely watched executive search, Shanahan’s résumé stands out.
The team’s current priority is to fill its general manager position, with Marc Bergevin and Mathieu Darche reportedly receiving second interviews. However, there’s a growing sense that the franchise could benefit from separating the GM role from a higher-level president of hockey operations post—a role Shanahan would seamlessly fill. According to reports from The Athletic, the Islanders are “narrowing in” on their next GM, but Shanahan’s availability could reshape that timeline or structure.
A franchise in flux
The Islanders’ offseason has already included a few surprises, none bigger than landing the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming NHL Draft. That stroke of lottery luck places even greater urgency on building a front office capable of maximizing that opportunity—and charting a clear, long-term vision for the team.
After an underwhelming 2024-25 season, the Islanders face key roster questions and organizational restructuring. Speculation continues around whether Lamoriello might retain some influence behind the scenes, but The Athletic has reported he’s unlikely to play any role in hockey operations going forward.
Whoever steps into leadership will inherit a pivotal draft position and a roster that has teetered on the edge of relevance for the last few years. Shanahan, despite his playoff shortcomings in Toronto, offers the rare mix of front office experience, player credibility, and league-wide respect to bring clarity and structure to a franchise at a crossroads.
Why Shanahan makes sense for Long Island
While some may view Shanahan’s Leafs tenure as a cautionary tale, others see it as a blueprint for sustained competitiveness. Under his leadership, Toronto built a development pipeline, embraced data-driven decision-making, and maintained a consistent playoff presence in a brutal Eastern Conference.
The Islanders have long operated with a traditionalist approach under Lamoriello. A Shanahan hire would signal a cultural shift—one that marries experience with a more modern management philosophy.
In many ways, Shanahan’s unfinished business in Toronto might find new life in New York. A chance to build again, this time with lessons learned and a clean slate, may prove to be the right opportunity at the right time—for both the executive and the organization.
What comes next
With the NHL Draft looming in June and free agency close behind, the Islanders are expected to make decisions quickly. Whether Shanahan is brought in as president of hockey operations or remains an outside candidate, his name will likely stay in the mix until the front office picture is finalized.
His next move could define the Islanders’ trajectory—and perhaps allow him one more shot at delivering what he couldn’t in Toronto: a Stanley Cup.