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Fresh news in Auston Matthews saga is the best thing Toronto fans have heard in months

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Jonathan Ouimet
May 21, 2026  (9:58 PM)
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Feb 25, 2026; Tampa, Florida, USA; Toronto Maple Leafs forward Auston Matthews (34) handles the puck against Tampa Bay Lightning during the third period at Benchmark International Arena.
Photo credit: Morgan Tencza-Imagn Images

Auston Matthews isn't leaving Toronto this summer, according to The Fourth Period's reporting amplified by Nick Alberga Friday morning.

Alberga laid it out plainly. Matthews likes playing for the Maple Leafs. He wants to win in Toronto. He's not asking for a ticket out.

But there's a second sentence in that report that deserves the same volume. Matthews, like any star, wants to know what the plan is.

That's the part Leafs fans should sit with for a minute. A 28-year-old centre making $13.25 million doesn't ask about the plan when he's confident in the building around him.

He asks when he's just watched his team finish 32-36-14 for 78 points and rank 28th overall. That kind of finish forces every star to ask the question.

What Toronto actually has to show Auston Matthews this summer

The math behind the ask isn't subtle. Matthews played 60 games this season and posted 27 goals, 26 assists, 53 points, and a -4.

He went minus-8 over his last 10 games as the season collapsed. A 1-goal, 5-point stretch from a 60-goal-scorer reads like a player who already had one eye on the bigger conversation.

The Chris Johnston report from Tuesday made the picture sharper. Toronto told other teams they'd discuss every player on the roster except Matthews.

Now you have the bookend. Matthews isn't going anywhere, but the room around him is openly on the market.

That's the plan he's waiting on. Not whether the Leafs want him. They've made that clear with the no-trade message to other clubs.

The real question is who he's playing with in October. Which contracts get moved.

A 78-point team gave up 299 goals at 3.6 a night. Telling Matthews the plan means showing him a defence that doesn't bleed the same way.

And it means moving real money. Cap commitments well over $25 million sit on names Matthews has been told are now in play.

The reassurance is that the franchise centre is staying. The pressure is that he's now publicly waiting on his front office to show their work.

So which version of the Leafs walks into training camp? The one Matthews stays patient with, or the one that finally gives him a reason to ask a different question?