The Toronto Maple Leafs haven’t won a Stanley Cup since 1967. The 1966-67 season was the last season of the six-team format for the NHL, which expanded to 12 the next season.
This generation-spanning drought doesn’t phase new Leafs’ President Tim Leiweke who has already started planning the Maple Leafs’ Stanley Cup Parade. No, really. From ProHockeyTalk:
The new boss of Maple Leafs Sports & Entertainment told Bloomberg as much on Monday, saying he’s already mapped out the club’s Stanley Cup parade while suggesting images of the 1960′s-era Leafs — who won four Cups between 1962-67 — should be scrapped.
“I have it planned out and it’s going to be fantastic,”Leiweke said of the proposed victory parade. “If you can all dream about that and get that in your mind, we’ll have something we’re all driven toward.”
That’s a brazen statement itself, but it wasn’t the only one.
As mentioned, Leiweke not-so-indirectly claimed Toronto needs to lessen the focus on its glory teams of the 60s.
“I don’t want the players walking in the hallways of the Air Canada Centre and seeing pictures from 1962,” he explained. “Get rid of those pictures and tell them, this is your legacy.”
Something tells me this vote of confidence won’t sit well with Maple Leaf fans who generally are a surly, superstitious bunch and coming off of one of the worst collapses in post-season history.

About Michael Leboff
Recent Posts
Italy misses World Cup, Gennaro Gattuso out
"I need to leave it in the hands of a new technical team going into the future."
Fernando Mendoza wanted to showcase teammates during Pro Day
"I just wanted to make sure everybody could showcase their abilities in front of all 32 NFL teams."
Jerry Jones in favor of NFL’s technological advancement
"Fans deserve that.”
JJ Redick vouches for Luka Doncic as MVP
"He's the engine that's driving all of our winning."
Mike Macdonald excited about running back room
Coach is ready to get rolling.
Kim Mulkey addresses retirement rumors
"I’m going to be in this game unless LSU fires me."