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Mitch Marner just sent another huge message to Leafs Nation and it's blowing up online

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Vincent Carbonneau
May 27, 2026  (11:00)
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May 24, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Vegas Golden Knights right wing Mitch Marner (93) celebrates being the third star after the game against the Colorado Avalanche in game three of the Western Conference Final of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena.
Photo credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Mitch Marner and John Tortorella just gave this playoff run a much heavier layer after Marner admitted hockey has brought him some dark times.

That quote lands hard because Marner usually keeps the sharpest parts tucked away.

This time he did not.

He said there have been some dark times in hockey for him, then thanked his family, his brother, his mom, his dad, his wife, and the friends around him.

That is not throwaway postgame filler.

That is a player opening the door just enough for people to see how much weight has been sitting there.

And for Marner, that weight has followed him for years.

The expectations.

The noise.

The constant judgment that comes with being one of the league's biggest names.

Mitch Marner: «There's been some dark times in hockey for myself, honestly. Thankful for my family, my brother, my mom, my dad, my wife, all my friends around me.»

Leafs fans are going wild over Mitch Marner's latest postgame message

That is why the quote hit.

He was not trying to win sympathy.

He was not lashing out.

He was just honest.

Sometimes that is more powerful than any emotional speech.

In hockey, players are taught to sand everything down. Keep it light. Keep it vague. Do not give the room anything messy to deal with.

Marner went the other way for a moment.

He let people hear that the outside pressure and the inside grind have left marks.

That matters because fans often talk about players like they are only stats, contracts, and playoff results. They forget how much of this sport is lived in the head once the rink gets quiet.

Marner's quote pulls that back into view.

It also explains why support systems matter so much for star players. He did not point to a coach, a system, or a fresh start first.

He pointed to family.

That tells you where the real stability came from when hockey got ugly.

For the people around him, this kind of honesty probably was not surprising.

For the public, it was.

And that is why it keeps moving.

A quote like this changes the way people hear the rest of his story. The talent was never the mystery. The pressure and the emotional toll were the parts people preferred to flatten into easy takes.

Now Marner has made that impossible for a while.

He gave a real answer.

And sometimes in this sport, that is the strongest thing a player can do.