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Hockey

Maple Leafs creating analytics department: report

It looks like the Toronto Maple Leafs think analytics could offer a solution to their Stanley Cup curse. A report Tuesday said that the team is creating an analytics department and will hire three respected names from the advanced-stats set.

New hires to include head of ExtraSkater.com blog

Maple Leafs president Brendan Shanahan, left, has rebuilt GM Dave Nonis's staff this off-season. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

It looks like the Toronto Maple Leafs think analytics could offer a solution to their Stanley Cup curse.

Greg Wyshynski of Yahoo's Puck Daddy blog reported Tuesday that the Leafs are creating an analytics department and are in the process of hiring three respected names from the advanced-stats set: Darryl Metcalf, who ran the blog ExtraSkater.com (now offline);Cam Charron, an advanced stats-savvy writerwho has contributed toYahoo Canada and Grantland.com;and Rob Pettapiece, who worked with Yahoo Sports' Buzzing The Net junior hockey blog.

The new hires would likely report toassistant general manager Kyle Dubas, Wyshynski reported.

Dubas, 28, was hired last month from the OHL's Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds and is considered an analytics-friendly executive.

These moves by theLeafs, who haven't won the Cup since 1967, are part of a trend that has swept the NHL recently. Earlier this month the Edmonton Oilers hired Tyler Dellow, a blogger with an analytics bent. The New Jersey Devils added former pro poker player Sunny Mehta as their director of analytics.

Other pro sports leagues, most prominently the NBA and Major League Baseball, have been doing this for years, turning to mathematically inclined, often young, minds to make personnel decisions rather than the former players who dominated front offices for decades.

Still, not everyone is a fan. Old-school Toronto Sun columnist Steve Simmons, who has tangled with the advanced-stats community, tweeted his opinion that Charron "is a weasel who can't be trusted."

Leiweke leaving?

It was quite a day for the Leafs, who also hired Brandon Pridham as an assistant to GM Dave Nonis.

Pridham, a 40-year-old who had worked at NHL headquarters, will "assist with salary cap analysis, contract negotiations and collective bargaining agreement interpretation," the team said Tuesday in a release.

An even bigger front-office move may be in the works involving the Leafs, as Hockey Night in Canada's Elliotte Friedman reportedthat Tim Leiweke will step down as the president and CEO of Maple Leaf Sports & Entertainment, the company that controls the team.

Leiweke denied the report.