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Maple Leafs fire coach Craig Berube after two seasons, last-place finish in Atlantic Division

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Maple Leafs fire coach Craig Berube after two seasons, last-place finish in Atlantic Division
Sport

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Maple Leafs fire coach Craig Berube after two seasons, last-place finish in Atlantic Division

2026-05-13 23:07 Last Updated At:23:20

TORONTO (AP) — The Toronto Maple Leafs fired coach Craig Berube on Wednesday after he guided the team to a last-place finish in the Atlantic Division this season.

The move ended Berube’s two-year run with the Maple Leafs. He helped the club to a 108-point campaign in his first season as coach, but Toronto struggled mightily in 2025-26.

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New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka speaks during a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka speaks during a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations Mats Sundin, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, hold up a jersey following a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations Mats Sundin, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, hold up a jersey following a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations, Mats Sundin, hold a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations, Mats Sundin, hold a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

FILE - Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube speaks to media during NHL hockey training camp in Toronto, Sept. 18, 2025. (Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

FILE - Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube speaks to media during NHL hockey training camp in Toronto, Sept. 18, 2025. (Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

“Craig is a tremendous coach and an even better person,” general manager John Chayka said in a statement. “This decision is more reflective of an organizational shift and an opportunity for a fresh start than it is an evaluation of Craig."

Chayka was hired earlier this month. He succeeded Brad Treliving, who was fired in March.

Toronto won the NHL draft lottery last week. The Maple Leafs are expected to pick either Gavin McKenna or Ivar Stenberg with the first overall pick on June 26 at the NHL draft in Buffalo.

Berube went 84-62-18 with Toronto, but the Maple Leafs were just 32-36-14 this season. The drop in points — from 108 to 78 — was the team’s largest year-over-year points decline.

The Maple Leafs headed into the season with high hopes despite the loss of star winger Mitch Marner.

Toronto added a trio of forwards — Matias Maccelli, Dakota Joshua and Nicolas Roy — in hopes of replacing those minutes by committee on a team thought to be still poised for Stanley Cup contention.

The Maple Leafs, however, never really got out of second gear. Along with a string of key injuries and absences, the club largely looked out of sorts from puck drop.

Despite a roster still anchored by star forwards Auston Matthews and William Nylander, the Maple Leafs’ power play was a huge issue.

Defensive deficiencies also caused glaring problems for a club that finished with the second-worst goals-against mark and was outshot a league-worst 66 times.

“They played with more passion than we did,” Berube told reporters in December after a 4-0 road loss to the Washington Capitals. “That’s what it boils down to. It looked to me like they had way more urgency in their game, more passion in their game. That’s the difference.”

Asked to explain how that could be the case, he replied: “Ask those guys, not me.”

The exchange was just one example of clear disconnect.

A three-time Maurice (Rocket) Richard Trophy winner as the NHL’s top goal-scorer, Matthews found the back of the net just 27 times before suffering a season-ending knee injury on a hit from Anaheim Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas in March.

Toronto’s players didn’t do much in the immediate aftermath, which led to stinging rebukes from Berube — a former NHL enforcer with the seventh-most penalty minutes in league history — media members and fans as the locker room culture was called into question.

Berube, 60, was hired in May 2024 after Treliving let Sheldon Keefe go following 4 1/2 seasons in charge.

Toronto won a playoff round for just the second time in the NHL’s salary-cap era during his first campaign. The Maple Leafs beat the Ottawa Senators before falling to Florida in a series accented by 6-1 losses on home ice in Games 5 and 7. The Panthers would go on to win their second straight Stanley Cup.

The Maple Leafs had embraced Berube’s straightforward, no-nonsense, north-south approach in 2024-25 after Keefe was unable to get the same talented group over its playoff hump but didn’t come close to duplicating that success a second time.

Berube’s coaching journey began with the Philadelphia Flyers organization after retiring as a player. He worked his way up the ladder, moving from the AHL to the NHL as an assistant in 2006-07.

He took over as Flyers head coach early in 2013-14 and lasted another season before getting fired.

Berube then led the St. Louis Blues’ AHL affiliate after a year on the sidelines. He became an NHL associate coach in 2017-18 and was promoted to the top job with St. Louis in November 2018.

Berube rallied the group, which at one point sat last in the overall standings, to make the playoffs before it went on a magical run that culminated with the franchise’s only Cup victory.

Berube lost in the first round each of the next three seasons and missed out entirely in 2022-23. The Blues fired him just 28 games into the subsequent campaign.

When Berube was hired by the Maple Leafs, Treliving said he had plenty of conversations with people who worked with, worked under and played alongside the former tough guy.

“They talked about how they would go through a wall for him,” Treliving said. “There was the connection he had with his players, the accountability he had with his players, and the bond he was able to build with staff.”

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka speaks during a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka speaks during a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations Mats Sundin, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, hold up a jersey following a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations Mats Sundin, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, hold up a jersey following a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations, Mats Sundin, hold a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

New Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager John Chayka, left to right, MLSE President and CEO Keith Pelley, and new Toronto Maple Leafs Senior Executive Advisor, Hockey Operations, Mats Sundin, hold a press conference in Toronto on Monday, May 4, 2026. (Arlyn McAdorey/The Canadian Press via AP)

FILE - Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube speaks to media during NHL hockey training camp in Toronto, Sept. 18, 2025. (Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

FILE - Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube speaks to media during NHL hockey training camp in Toronto, Sept. 18, 2025. (Sammy Kogan/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — The South Carolina Supreme Court on Wednesday overturned the murder convictions and life sentence of disgraced lawyer Alex Murdaugh in the shooting deaths of his wife and younger son.

In a unanimous ruling, the justices said the conduct by the court clerk “egregiously attacked Murdaugh’s credibility” by suggesting to jurors his testimony could not be trusted. They also said the trial judge went too far in allowing evidence of Murdaugh’s financial crimes into his murder trial

But Murdaugh won’t be getting out of prison. The 57-year-old pleaded guilty to stealing around $12 million from his clients and currently is serving a 40-year federal sentence.

Still, the state Supreme Court ruling is a win for Murdaugh, who admits to being a thief, liar, insurance cheat and bad lawyer, but has adamantly denied killing his wife Maggie and younger son Paul since he found their bodies outside their home in 2021.

Prosecutors didn’t immediately say if they planned to retry Murdaugh for the murders in light of his long sentence for financial crimes. The original trial took six weeks.

The justices ruled Colleton County Clerk of Court Becky Hill, assigned to oversee the evidence and the jury during the trial, influenced jurors to find Murdaugh guilty. She hoped to improve sales of a book she was writing about the case.

The name of the book was “Behind the Doors of Justice: The Murdaugh Murders.” It was pulled from publication after plagiarism allegations were made.

“As her book’s title suggests, it turns out Hill was quite busy behind the doors of justice, thwarting the integrity of the justice system she was sworn to protect and uphold,” the justices wrote in an unsigned 27-page ruling.

Hill has since pleaded guilty to lying about what she said and did to a different judge.

Murdaugh’s lawyers also argued before the high court that the judge at his 2023 trial made rulings that prevented a fair trial, such as allowing in evidence of Murdaugh stealing from clients that had nothing to do with the killings but biased jurors against him.

They detailed the lack of physical evidence — no DNA or blood was found splattered on Murdaugh or any of his clothes, even though the killings were at close range with powerful weapons that were never found.

Prosecutors argued that the clerk’s comments were fleeting and the evidence against Murdaugh was overwhelming. His lawyer said that didn’t matter because the comments a juror said she made — urging jurors to watch Murdaugh’s body language and listen to his testimony carefully — removed his presumption of innocence before the jury ever deliberated.

Murdaugh’s legal drama continues to captivate. There have been streaming miniseries, best selling books and dozens of true crime podcasts about how the multimillionaire Southern lawyer whose family dominated and controlled the legal system in tiny Hampton County ended up in a maximum security South Carolina prison.

The justices in their ruling praised prosecutors, the defense team and the judge for outstanding work, heaping all the blame for having to try Murdaugh again on Hill.

Hill's attorney in her criminal case didn't return a phone call or email seeking comment.

Hill “placed her fingers on the scales of justice, thereby denying Murdaugh his right to a fair trial by an impartial jury,” the justices wrote. “Our justice system provides — indeed demands — that every person is entitled to a fair trial,”

FILE - Disbarred attorney Alex Murdaugh arrives in court in Beaufort, S.C., Sept. 14, 2023. (AP Photo/James Pollard, File)

FILE - Disbarred attorney Alex Murdaugh arrives in court in Beaufort, S.C., Sept. 14, 2023. (AP Photo/James Pollard, File)

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