Auston Matthews
C #34 Toronto Maple Leafs Trade value: 8/10

Auston Matthews

Born Sep 17, 1997
Birthplace San Ramon, California, United States
Nationality United States
Height 6'3"
Weight 215 lbs
Shoots L
Draft 2016 Round 1, Pick 1 - TOR

Contract

AAV $13.25M
Cap Hit $13.25M
Term 2024 – 2028
Clauses Full NMC
Status Signed

Scouting Report

Skating8/10
Shooting10/10
Hockey IQ9/10
Physicality7/10
Defense7/10

✓ Strengths

The Deadliest Release in Modern Hockey Matthews' wrist shot release is the fastest among active NHL forwards \u2014 he gets the puck off his blade and into the net in under 0.4 seconds from catching position. His career 15.8% shooting percentage across 2,700+ shots is elite for a volume shooter. He scored 69 goals in 2023-24, the most in a single season since 1992-93, because goalies literally cannot react to his release quickly enough. He doesn't need space. He needs a fraction of a second. Goal Scoring From Everywhere on the Ice Matthews doesn't have a "spot" the way Ovechkin owns the left circle. He scores from the slot, the half-wall, the crease, the point, off the rush, on the backhand, on deflections, and on rebounds. In his 69-goal season, 47 came at even strength \u2014 the highest 5-on-5 goal total in the salary cap era. That distribution means you can't game-plan against him by taking away one zone. He creates goals from positions that most forwards don't even occupy. Size and Physicality for a Skilled Center At 6'3" and 215 pounds, Matthews combines skill with a frame that most NHL skill players don't carry. He uses his reach and body positioning to protect the puck along the boards, shields defenders off the puck in tight spaces, and wins net-front battles against defensemen 20 pounds heavier. His size is the reason he absorbs contact through the slot without losing his shooting angle \u2014 smaller forwards get pushed off their spots, Matthews plants and fires. Two-Way Play That Justifies the $13.25M Cap Hit Matthews' defensive metrics have improved every season since 2019. His Corsi-For percentage at 5-on-5 has been above 54% in four of the last five seasons. He kills penalties. He wins defensive zone draws. His slot coverage without the puck has evolved from a genuine weakness into a top-15 forward skill. The 69-goal season wasn't built on cherry-picking \u2014 it was built on winning the puck back and transitioning to offense faster than anyone in the league. Elite Faceoff Ability for a Goal-Scoring Center Matthews consistently wins above 52% of his faceoffs \u2014 a critical skill for a center who takes 15+ draws per game. In the 2023-24 season, his offensive zone faceoff win rate was among the highest in the NHL, directly generating additional scoring chances. For a player who already creates offense at a historic rate, winning the draw first is a compounding advantage that doesn't show up in the goal column but shows up in the process.

✗ Weaknesses

Durability Has Been a Career-Long Concern Matthews has played 75+ games in only 3 of 10 NHL seasons. Shoulder injuries limited him to 62 and 68 games early in his career. A wrist issue cost him games in 2022-23. And the Grade 3 MCL tear in March 2026 ended his season at 60 games \u2014 his worst availability since 2017-18. For a player earning $13.25M AAV, the games-played number matters. Toronto has had to plan around his absence more often than any franchise should for its centerpiece. Assist Production Trails His Goal-Scoring Peers Despite scoring 69 goals in 2023-24, Matthews finished with 107 points \u2014 outside the top five in league scoring. His career assist average of 0.51 per game is low for a first-overall center. By comparison, McDavid averages 1.02 assists per game and Crosby averaged 0.73 at the same age. Matthews elevates himself more than he elevates linemates. The 2025-26 season (26 assists in 60 games) continued this trend. He's a scorer who passes, not a passer who scores \u2014 and at $13.25M, some argue the Leafs need the latter. Playoff Production Has Not Matched Regular Season Dominance In 68 career playoff games, Matthews has 26 goals and 59 points (0.87 PPG) \u2014 good numbers diminished by zero series wins as a captain and only one total series win in his career. His shooting percentage drops from 15.8% in the regular season to approximately 11% in the postseason. Whether that's small sample noise or a pressure-related pattern is debatable, but in Toronto, the debate itself is the problem.

Playing Style

Elite goal-scoring center who combines the fastest wrist-shot release in hockey with a 6'3", 215-pound frame built for net-front warfare. Creates goals from every zone on the ice \u2014 slot, crease, rush, cycle \u2014 with career 15.8% shooting accuracy across 2,700+ shots. Three-time Rocket Richard winner with improving two-way play. Current overall rating: 8.4/10 \u2014 peak rating (2023-24, 69 goals): 9.6/10.

Trade Value Analysis

Matthews at $13.25M AAV through 2028 is a premium cap hit, but his production \u2014 428 career goals by age 28, three Rocket Richard Trophies, a Hart Trophy \u2014 justifies every dollar when healthy. The MCL injury introduces short-term uncertainty, but the 12-week recovery timeline means zero impact on 2026-27. A trade package would require multiple first-round picks, a top prospect, and a roster player. Toronto won't trade him \u2014 he's their captain and their identity. But if they ever did, half the league would empty their prospect pools to get him. The only factor preventing a 9 or 10 rating is the injury history: a player who misses 15-20 games per season is inherently less valuable than one who plays 80.

Career & Biography

From Scottsdale to Switzerland: The Unlikely Origin Story

Auston Taylour Matthews was born September 17, 1997, in San Ramon, California, but his family moved to Scottsdale, Arizona, when he was two months old. His father Brian played college baseball at Pepperdine. His mother Ema is from Hermosillo, Mexico — making Matthews the first Mexican-American player ever drafted first overall in the NHL. He started attending Phoenix Coyotes games at age two, demanded to play hockey at five, and chose it over baseball because — his words — he hated how slow baseball was. In Arizona. Where hockey rinks are outnumbered by golf courses roughly 400 to 1.

Matthews joined the Arizona Bobcats minor hockey program as a kid and was good enough to get drafted 57th overall by the WHL's Everett Silvertips in 2012. He turned them down. Instead, he joined the USA Hockey National Team Development Program, where he broke Patrick Kane's scoring record with 116 points (55 goals, 61 assists) in his final USNTDP season. Then he did something nobody his age had ever done: instead of playing major junior, he signed with ZSC Lions in Switzerland's National League A at 18. He scored 24 goals and 46 points in 36 games against professional adults, won the NLA Rising Star Award, and led the league in goals-per-game. The NHL draft was a formality at that point. Toronto selected him first overall on June 24, 2016.

Matthews' NHL Career: The Best Goal Scorer of His Generation

His NHL debut on October 12, 2016, is the single greatest first game in league history — four goals against the Ottawa Senators, an NHL record nobody had managed in 100 years. He finished his rookie season with 40 goals and won the Calder Trophy, becoming just the second post-lockout rookie to hit 40 (after Ovechkin). I'd argue that debut set an impossible standard. Everything Matthews did after that would be measured against the absurdity of scoring four goals before most rookies score one.

The injury concerns arrived early. Matthews played 62 games in 2017-18 and 68 in 2018-19 — shoulder issues that limited his availability but never his per-game production. When healthy, he was the most dangerous goal-scoring center in hockey. The 2019-20 season (47 goals in 70 games) proved his pace was legitimate. Then the shortened 2020-21 campaign (41 goals in 52 games, his first Rocket Richard) proved his efficiency was absurd — 0.79 goals per game, a number that projected to a full-season pace of 65.

The 2021-22 season was Matthews' masterpiece. Sixty goals. The Hart Trophy. The Ted Lindsay Award. The Rocket Richard Trophy. He became the first Maple Leaf to score 60 since — well, no Leaf had ever done it. The closest was Rick Vaive's 54 in 1981-82. Matthews didn't just break the franchise record. He obliterated it by six goals. My read: that was the season he went from "star" to "generational." The franchise's entire identity became inseparable from his goal-scoring.

Then came 2023-24. Sixty-nine goals. The most in a single NHL season since Alexander Mogilny and Teemu Selanne hit 76 in 1992-93. Matthews became just the sixth player in NHL history with multiple 60-goal seasons — joining Gretzky, Lemieux, Bossy, Hull, and Esposito. Only Ovechkin (65 in 2007-08) had scored more in a single season during the salary cap era before Matthews hit 69. At 26, he was doing things that only all-time legends had done. The problem — and it's always the problem in Toronto — was the playoffs. First-round exit. Again.

The playoff narrative hangs over Matthews like Toronto's humidity in July. In 68 career playoff games, he has 26 goals and 59 points — a 0.87 points-per-game rate that's objectively good. But the Leafs have won exactly one playoff series since he arrived. The losses have been spectacular: blown 3-1 leads, Game 7 collapses against Montreal, Columbus sweeps. None of that is Matthews' fault alone. But in Toronto, the captain carries the weight of 1967.

The 2025-26 Season: 428 Goals and a Torn MCL

Matthews was named the 26th captain in Maple Leafs history on August 14, 2024 — the first American-born player to wear the C in Toronto. His 2025-26 season started with the usual goal production: 27 goals and 53 points in 60 games. Then Radko Gudas happened.

On March 12, 2026, a knee-on-knee collision with the Anaheim Ducks defenseman tore Matthews' MCL — a Grade 3 tear plus quadriceps contusion. Surgery followed on March 19. Season over. Twelve-week recovery. Gudas received a five-game suspension that drew outrage across the league for its leniency. Matthews will finish 2025-26 averaging fewer than a point per game for the first time in his career — a statistical footnote that says more about bad luck than ability. He's expected back for the start of 2026-27.

Off the Ice: The Quiet Superstar

Matthews dates Emily Ruttledge, a clinical psychologist and childhood friend from Arizona. He has two sisters — Alexandria and Breyana — and remains deeply connected to his Mexican heritage through his mother Ema. The Auston Matthews Foundation funds mental health awareness, cancer research, and youth education programs. He's a committed Movember ambassador for men's health. He also shaved his iconic mustache for charity, which is probably the most controversial thing he's ever done off the ice. Matthews is, by all accounts, the quietest franchise player in the loudest hockey market on Earth — and that contradiction might be his most impressive achievement.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many goals has Auston Matthews scored?

Auston Matthews has scored 428 career regular-season goals and 26 playoff goals in 689 NHL games since being drafted first overall in 2016. He scored 69 goals in 2023-24, the most in a single NHL season since 1992-93. He's a three-time Rocket Richard Trophy winner and the fastest American-born player to reach 400 career goals.

What happened to Auston Matthews?

Matthews suffered a Grade 3 MCL tear and quadriceps contusion on March 12, 2026, from a knee-on-knee hit by Anaheim's Radko Gudas. He underwent surgery on March 19 with a 12-week recovery timeline, ending his 2025-26 season at 60 games played. He is expected to be fully healthy for the start of the 2026-27 season.

What is Auston Matthews' contract?

Matthews is on a 4-year, $53 million contract ($13.25M AAV) signed August 23, 2023, running through the 2027-28 season. He becomes an unrestricted free agent after 2027-28. The deal makes him one of the highest paid players in the NHL and is the largest contract in Maple Leafs franchise history.

Has Auston Matthews won the Stanley Cup?

No. Matthews has not won the Stanley Cup despite being the Leafs' franchise centerpiece since 2016. Toronto has won only one playoff series during his tenure — a first-round victory over Tampa Bay in 2023. The Cup drought has been the central narrative of his career in the most pressure-filled hockey market in the world.

Is Auston Matthews Mexican?

Matthews is Mexican-American. His mother Ema is from Hermosillo, Mexico, and his father Brian is from California. Matthews is the first player of Mexican descent to be drafted first overall in NHL history. He grew up in Scottsdale, Arizona, and has spoken publicly about his pride in his Mexican heritage and its influence on his identity.

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