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Major Quinn Hughes news has now officially been confirmed by the Canucks

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 14, 2026  (6:14 PM)
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May 11, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Wild defenseman Quinn Hughes (43) skates with the puck against the Colorado Avalanche during the second period in game four of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Grand Casino Arena.
Photo credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

Dougie Hamilton and Sheldon Keefe could end up tied to Toronto if the Devils really clear space for a Quinn Hughes swing.

That is the angle pushing this rumor. The piece you shared argues that if New Jersey makes a real run at Quinn Hughes, Hamilton becomes the contract and the blue-line name Toronto should chase.

It is a loud theory, but the logic is easy to follow. Hughes has 1 year left on his deal, and the file says people around the league still connect him to the idea of joining Jack and Luke in New Jersey.

That would force the Devils to make room somewhere. Hamilton's 9,000,000 cap hit is the number that jumps off the page in that scenario.

For Toronto, that is where the story gets real. The Leafs missed the playoffs at 32-36-14, and a club that badly needs a true top-pair right shot on the blue line is going to get linked to a player like Hamilton every time his name loosens.

The file also says Hamilton was once viewed as a lower-cost target before his form picked back up and New Jersey backed off the idea of moving him. That matters, because the price now would not look anything like a discount swing.

And New Jersey has pressure of its own. The Devils finished 42-37-3, which is not the kind of season that lets them sit still if they think a bigger star can reshape the room.

A major Quinn Hughes development is now officially confirmed

That is the key to the whole rumor. Hamilton is not really the first move in this story. He is the second move, the one that only makes sense if the Devils decide Quinn Hughes is worth a serious roster shift.

The upside for Toronto is obvious. Hamilton is 32, shoots right, and still carries the kind of profile that can change a pair and lighten the load elsewhere on the back end.

The risk is obvious too. A veteran with a 9,000,000 cap hit is not a casual add for a team already trying to reshape itself after a bad year. Toronto would be making a win-now bet on a player whose market would get expensive fast.

That is why this rumor sticks. It is not really about fantasy trade talk. It is about whether two separate pressures could line up at once: New Jersey chasing Hughes, and Toronto chasing a true answer on the right side.

Nothing in this says a move is close. But if the Devils open the Hamilton door to make a bigger swing, the Leafs are exactly the kind of team that should be standing there waiting.