Toronto is struggling to score from the bottom half of their lineup, and with talk of a trade to acquire a third line center to fix their issues the team is under a lot of pressure to make a move.
But that move depends on the health status of Calle Jarnkrok who has been recovering from sports hernia surgery and is working toward a return -- but he doesn't have long to make an impact.
So with Jarnkrok's status a key factor in Toronto's trade plans: How can Jarnkrok help the Maple Leafs?
We wouldn't even be having this conversation if Jarnkrok was healthy. Expected to be Toronto's third line anchor, a lot of the lineup shuffling is due to his absence.
While last season was a down season for Jarnkrok with only 10 goals and 11 assists -- he's two years removed from a 20-goal outburst. The offensive talent is there, and he's a huge improvement defensively.
For his career, Jarnkrok has 136 goals and 165 assists in 699 games. Drafted by the Red Wings in 2010, he was traded to Nashville in the blockbuster for David Legwand.
Selected by Seattle in the 2021 Expansion Draft, he was traded to Calgary before eventually signing with the Maple Leafs. He is in the third year of his four-year, $8.4M contract.
An elite defensive center, he has never had a season with more giveaways than takeaways, has strong possession numbers and would help Toronto's suddenly struggling penalty kill.
If Jarnkrok can get healthy and contribute with Toronto's final slate before the deadline, Brad Treliving can focus on adding a scoring winger to compliment John Tavares, and a defensemen to lend a hand to Morgan Rielly.
He also helps Toronto's prospect pool too, as if he can come in and be the pivot they need -- the team won't need to trade Easton Cowan or Fraser Minten.
With a two-week break for the 4 Nations Face-Off, Jarnkrok has time. But not much of it, and if he can't be the anchor Toronto needs -- the team may drift away from Atlantic supremacy.
But what do YOU think? Would Calle Jarnkrok solve Toronto's third line issues? Let us know!