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Message   The Hockey Writers    All   Top 10 Offensive Seasons in Maple Leafs History   August 10, 2018
 9:13 AM *  

In 2011-12, as a member of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Phil Kessel tallied 37
goals and 82 points for a team that would go on to miss the NHL playoffs for
the seventh straight season since the 2004-05 lockout. He was the last Maple
Leafs player to surpass the 80-point plateau, while also hitting the 80-point
mark exactly in 2013-14.

Before him, however, it was Mats Sundin who tallied 80 points in 2001-02 and
since then no Maple Leafs player has reached the mark. While current Leafs will
 surely look to chase down some of the best seasons in franchise history,
here's a look at the top 10 offensive seasons by individual players in Maple
Leafs history.Mats Sundin (1996-97) - 94 points

Backstopped by Felix Potvin and captained by Doug Gilmour, the 1996-97 season
was a tough one to swallow for the Maple Leafs. They finished with just 30 wins
 and 68 points, on the road to missing the playoffs.

The team would trade Gilmour after 60 points in 61 games to the New Jersey
Devils and still he finished second in team scoring that year. However, there
was one bright spot for the Maple Leafs in 1996-97 in the form of future
captain Mats Sundin.He remains the highest scoring Maple Leafs player in
franchise history. (Mike Lynaugh Photography)

Sundin was just one of two players to score 30 goals that year (the other being
 Wendel Clark who tallied 30) finishing the year with 41, while he led the team
 in scoring with 94 points.

He went on to put up 987 points in 981 carer regular season games with the
Maple Leafs over parts of 13 seasons and remains first in franchise history in
both goals (420) and points (987) during the regular season.Gary Leeman
(1989-90) - 95 points

The 1989-90 Maple Leafs were a little more offensively inclined than the
players that Sundin played with in 1996-97. Mark Osborne and Daniel Marois both
 hit the 70-point mark, while Ed Olczyk and Vincent Damphousse tallied 88 and
94 respectively.

But at 25, the team was led on the offensive end by Gary Leeman who put up 95
points in just 80 games for the Maple Leafs. He was the only player on the team
 that season to finish the year with 50 plus goals (at 51) and added 44 assists
 on top of that.

Leeman was just one of a number of players who helped the Leafs to the playoffs
 in 1989-90 where they ended up losing the St. Louis in the first round in five
 games.

Still, it was a career-year for Leeman whose next highest point total was 75
the year before with the Maple Leafs.Darryl Sittler (1980-81) - 96 points

The eighth best offensive season in Maple Leafs' history takes us to a guy who
we'll find quite often on this list - Darryl Sittler. At 30 years old, Sittler
played in 80 regular season games for the Maple Leafs scoring 43 goals and a
total of 96 points.Sittler is arguably one of the greatest offensive players to
 ever don the Maple Leafs jersey. (Photo by Denis Brodeur/NHLI via Getty
Images)

Like Leeman's Leafs from 1989-90, the team lost in the preliminary round of the
 playoffs to the New York Islanders. Sittler was ultimately shutout in that
series, but it was a far cry from what he did in the regular season.

He fired home five hattricks during the season on route to his 43 goals - which
 was his second-highest total during his career. What's crazy is that he
actually finished second on the team in points - one behind a 25-year-old Wilf
Paiement.Wilf Paiement (1980-81) - 97 points

Let's stay in 1980-81 for just a moment and look at the season Paiement had. At
 25, the winger played just 77 games for the Maple Leafs. Still he finished
second in goals for the team with 40 behind Sittler and atop the team's scoring
 list with 97 points.

While he led the team in scoring, Paiement didn't even crack the top 12 in the
NHL with Bryan Trottier, Rick Middleton and Jacques Richard closing out that
list with 103 points. Still, that was his best and only full season with the
Maple Leafs on his way to 203 points in 187 games with the team over parts of
three seasons.

The Maple Leafs traded Paiement the following year to Quebec for Miroslav
Frycer and Quebec's seventh-round choice (Jeff Triano) in the 1982 NHL
Draft.Darryl Sittler (1979-80) - 97 points

Jumping back one year to 1979-80, we're back talking about a Leafs legend in
Sittler. One year before he put up 96 points and finished second in team
scoring, a 29-year-old Sittler notched 40 goals and 97 points in 73 games for
the Maple Leafs - leading the team by a long shot that year.On two occasions,
Sittler scored 100 points or more for the Maple Leafs. (Tom Szczerbowski-USA
TODAY Sports)

The closest player to him was defenceman Borje Salming who tallied a whopping
71 points in 74 games behind Sittler's 97. Still the Maple Leafs were shut down
 in the preliminary round of the playoffs losing three straight to the
Minnesota North Stars.

Sittler finished ninth in league scoring that year with Kings' forward Marcel
Dionne leading the way with 137 points in 80 games. It was the third highest
point total in Sittler's career.Dave Andreychuk (1993-94) - 99 points

In more recent memory, the 1993-94 season was one of significant offence for
the Maple Leafs. The team finished among the middle of the pack in goals for
and among the top ten in goals against.

While Doug Gilmour would lead the way offensively, a 30-year-old Dave
Andreychuk came in behind him in team scoring with a career year. He played 83
games during the regular season tallying a team-high 53 goals and finishing the
 year with 99 points.

It secured him ninth in league scoring and helped get the Leafs into the
playoffs. The Maple Leafs would go on to lose to the Vancouver Canucks in the
Conference Finals in five games while Andreychuk added another 10 points in
their 18 postseason games.Darryl Sittler (1975-76) - 100 points

Getting back to Sittler, he owns two of four seasons of 100 or more points in
franchise history. The first came in 1975-76 while he captained the franchise
to a record of 34-31-15. The team was eventually forced out of the postseason
in the second round thanks to a seven-game series loss at the hands of the
Philadelphia Flyers, but it wasn't for a lack of effort.Related: Darryl
Sittler - Toronto Maple Leafs Legend

Sittler led the team with five goals and 12 points in 10 playoff games and that
 came after he led the Maple Leafs in the regular season with 41 goals and 100
points - seven more than the second place Lanny McDonald.

He finished ninth in league scoring, while the season would go down as the
second-highest point total in his career. He also finished the year with four
hattricks - and two of which led to games of five or more goals.Doug Gilmour
(1993-94) - 111 pointsGilmour brought excitement back to the Maple Leafs in the
 early 1990s. (Image Courtesy of D';Oliveira Photography)

Getting back to the 1993-94 season when Andreychuk notched 99 points, there was
 another Maple Leafs who broke the 100-point barrier - Gilmour. At the time,
Gilmour was 30 years old with 10 seasons of NHL hockey under his belt. But that
 didn't stop him.

The Killer put up 27 goals and 111 points while averaging just over an assist
per game. Come playoff time he maintained the torrid pace tallying another six
goals and 28 points in just 18 games for the Maple Leafs before they were
bounced from the postseason.

While Sittler accounts for two of the Maple Leafs' 100-point seasons, Gilmour
is responsible for the other two and his 111-point campaign is nothing compared
 to what he achieved one year earlier.Darryl Sittler (1977-78) - 117 points

Two seasons after Sittler hit the 100-point mark for the Maple Leafs, he did it
 again in 1977-78 as a 27-year-old captain of the team. This time, he notched
117 points, including 45 goals. He finished 30 points up on McDonald (87
points) in team scoring and essentially carried the team into the playoffs.

He added another 11 points in 13 postseason games as the Maple Leafs were
finally ousted in the semifinals by the Montreal Canadiens in four straight
games, but what Sittler was able to do in the regular season has only been
bettered once in franchise history.

On top of that, he finished third in NHL scoring that year behind only Bryan
Trottier (123 points) and Guy Lafleur (132 points).Doug Gilmour (1992-93) - 127
 points

But the greatest offensive season in franchise history takes us back to 1992-93
 and a 29-year-old Gilmour. The Maple Leafs went 44-29-11 led largely on the
offensive end by Gilmour's 32 goals and 127 points.

Nobody came close to doing what Gilmour did for the Leafs that year - with
Nikolai Borschevsky coming in second on the team in scoring with 74 points. It
was Gilmour's first full season with the Leafs after coming over from Calgary
and he impressed the brass quickly.Related: Maple Leafs Round Table - Who Else
 Belongs on Legends Row?

He added 35 more points in 21 playoff games as the Maple Leafs were knocked off
 by the Los Angeles Kings and Wayne Gretzky in the semifinals missing out on a
chance to play Montreal for the Stanley Cup.

Gilmour finished eighth in league scoring and was awarded the Frank J. Selke
award as the league's top defensive forward. Now, a Hall-of-Famer, he will
always be remembered for having the greatest offensive campaign in Maple Leafs'
 history.

The post Top 10 Offensive Seasons in Maple Leafs History appeared first on The
Hockey Writers.

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