• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Boston Sports Today

Boston Sports News Contentiously Updated

  • Patriots
  • Red Sox
  • Bruins
  • Celtics
  • Revolution
  • Colleges
    • Boston College
    • Boston University
    • Harvard
    • Northeastern
    • Providence
    • UMass
  • Team Stores

Scott Laughton’s Return and Fit with the Toronto Maple Leafs

November 8, 2025 by Last Word On Hockey

Scott Laughton made his Toronto Maple Leafs debut after being traded from the Philadelphia Flyers on March 7, 2025, during the NHL Trade Deadline, bringing with him 12 seasons of NHL experience. He stepped into a Leafs lineup looking for toughness, depth, and reliability traits he had shown throughout his career in Philadelphia.

Scott Laughton with Leafs Beyond the Stats

Laughton’s 2024-25 season played out in two halves. With the Flyers, he logged 60 games, producing 11 goals and 16 assists for 27 points, before the trade. After joining Toronto, he suited up for 20 more games and added two goals and two assists, completing an 80-game campaign with 13 goals, 18 assists and 31 points.

In training camp ahead of the current season, Laughton looked sharp, skating with intensity, punching pucks out on the forecheck and showing more pace than in previous years. Unfortunately, that momentum was interrupted when he suffered a lower-body injury in the preseason and was listed week-to-week. Laughton missed the start of the regular season after blocking a shot. His return Wednesday night against the Utah Mammoth marked the next chapter.

Scott Laughton Will Come Back Into the Leafs Lineup, Easton Cowan is Being Sent to the Minors pic.twitter.com/LdmzfANRzm

— The Hockey Podcast Network (@Hockeypodnet) November 5, 2025

Career Lens: From Flyers Foundation to Leafs Opportunity

Drafted 20th overall in 2012 by Philly, Laughton spent his early years in the NHL learning how to carve out value beyond raw scoring. Over his Flyers tenure, he established himself as a dependable third or fourth-line centre, a penalty kill fixture, and a player who brought battle-level intensity every shift. His career numbers are 108 career goals and 161 assists in 681 games before the start of the regular season.

While he never became a 20-goal scorer, Laughton’s contributions were often the unsung kind, winning battles in the corners, blocking shots, sacrificing for the team, and chipping in offensively. That profile made him a natural fit for Toronto’s roster strategy. That strategy being a deep team built to contend, not simply score. His arrival signaled the Leafs were prioritizing sandpaper and two-way reliability in their bottom six.

Role with Toronto: What He Brings and What He Can Improve

In Toronto’s system under head coach Craig Berube, Laughton slides into the bottom six, but brings top-six intangibles. On any given night he can be asked to drive a shift, support a scoring line when injuries strike, help shore up a defensive pairing or contribute on the penalty kill. His game-used 178 hits last season across teams indicate he still brings physicality.

What makes his fit especially valuable, is that the depth forwards like Laughton allow the Leafs to roll four effective lines, rather than dragging three and hoping. His consistent compete, net-front presence, and readiness to jump into the offensive zone time give Toronto flexibility in deployment.

That said, the improvements he needs are clear. First, staying injury-free is non-negotiable. Already, the pre-season setback slowed his momentum. Secondly, while Laughton can score, for Toronto to maximize him, he’ll need more consistency in finishing chances when he gets them. Last season, he had 125 shots, but shot at a 10.4% rate overall. Lastly, defence remains part of his job. Some possession numbers with his previous team were misleading, while his high danger chance share was strong in Philadelphia (55.6% HDCF% top on the Flyers), the Leafs need him also to excel in exit pressure, board battles and transition recovery every night.

Building Off His Return: The Season Ahead

With his injury behind him and training camp showing promise, Laughton enters this season with renewed purpose. His brief sample of action with Toronto offered glimpses: efficient shifts, cleaner positioning, fewer giveaways, and situational awareness. If he replicates that at a full-season level, his impact could be meaningful.

In practice, Scott Laughton should aim for a 10–15 goal, 20–25 point season while maintaining 150+ shots on goal and uptick in hits/blocking stats. More importantly, he should earn the coaches’ trust as the forward who can take late-game shifts, handle difficult matchups and relieve the top lines. As Toronto’s core pushes for deeper playoff runs, Laughton’s presence brings depth that can be the difference in 50-50 games.

Why Scott Laughton’s Role is Critical

Scott Laughton may not carry the flash of the Maple Leafs’ top stars, but his return and role may end up being one of the more underrated stories this season. He is the kind of player who wins ugly games, brings structure, depth and occasional offence. If he stays healthy and builds off his return, Laughton could become a quiet but pivotal piece in Toronto’s push for contention.

Main Photo Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

The post Scott Laughton’s Return and Fit with the Toronto Maple Leafs appeared first on Last Word On Hockey.

Filed Under: Bruins

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Boston’s Single-A affiliate has a brand-new name and look — meet the Salem RidgeYaks
  • Spicy Red Sox trade prediction puts spin on Ceddanne Rafaela Gold Glove announcement
  • Patriots’ return to relevance includes appearance by Jim Nantz in TV booth to call game for CBS
  • What insiders are predicting for the Red Sox in free agency this offseason
  • Projected Lineups for Bruins vs Maple Leafs – 11/8/25

Categories

  • Bruins
  • Celtics
  • Colleges
    • Boston College
    • Boston University
    • Harvard
    • Northeastern
    • Providence
    • UMass
  • Patriots
  • Red Sox
  • Revolution
  • Uncategorized

Archives

Our Partners


All Sports

  • Boston Globe
  • Boston.com
  • Boston Herald
  • 247 Sports
  • 985 The Sports Hub
  • Bleacher Report
  • Chowder And Champions
  • NESN
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • WEEI Sports Radio Network

Baseball

  • MLB.com
  • Bosox Injection
  • Last Word On Baseball
  • MLB Trade Rumors
  • Over The Monster

Basketball

  • NBA.com
  • Amico Hoops
  • Celtics Blog
  • Celtics Wire
  • Hardwood Houdini
  • Hoops Hype
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball
  • Pro Basketball Talk
  • Real GM

Football

  • New England Patriots
  • Last Word On Pro Football
  • Musket Fire
  • NFL Trade Rumors
  • Our Turf Football
  • Patriots Gab
  • Patriots Wire
  • Pats Pulpit
  • Pro Football Focus
  • Pro Football Rumors
  • Pro Football Talk
  • Total Patriots

Hockey

  • Causeway Crowd
  • Elite Prospects
  • Last Word On Hockey
  • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Talk
  • Stanley Cup Of Chowder
  • The Hockey Writers

Soccer

  • Last Word on Soccer
  • MLS Multiplex
  • The Bent Musket

Colleges

  • BC Interruption
  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Eagle In Atlanta
  • Forgotten 5
  • Saturday Blitz
  • The Heights
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in