SAN JOSE, Calif. — Three in the net, three tacos you get.
The game wasn’t 22 minutes old when SAP Center’s 15,000-plus burst into thunderous roar.
Not only had the plucky home team built a 3-0 lead, but San Jose’s shooters had already met Taco Bell’s promotional quota for everyone who paid to watch the up-and-coming Sharks outskate the downtrodden Maple Leafs to redeem their ticket for a savoury snack.
Yes, on the night Toronto’s nine-year playoff streak was officially crunched, it was raining tacos in Northern California.
What happened in The Tank Thursday night was also good for the tank in Toronto.
“They come out hot. They were buzzing. They got two goals right off the bat,” Simon Benoit said, following a 4-1 loss the wild-card-hunting Sharks.
“They have momentum. They’re fighting for that spot. So, everything is urgency for them — and for us. You know, everybody’s playing for something, even though… I think we’re eliminated, right?”
Correct.
Critically, they were eliminated months ago. Emotionally, weeks ago. Mathematically, Thursday.
Anyone in Ontario who stayed up late for a 10:08 p.m. ET puck drop saw two franchises passing each other in the natural competitive cycle that is the NHL’s salary cap era.
The Sharks bottomed out not so long ago and were rewarded with saviour Macklin Celebrini, not unlike the Maple Leafs pulling the plug in 2015-16 to scoop Auston Matthews.
San Jose missed the playoffs six straight times, watching attendance and interest and foundational talent drain away. The Joe Pavelskis ad Patrick Marleaus and Joe Thorntons.
A couple of them even found their way east, to help mentor the young Leafs of the late 2010s
But today, the new-era Sharks have won four in a row. They’re swimming fast and free and find themselves playing house-money hockey with two weeks of optimism left on the calendar.
Amazing what the hope of youth can do to energize a barn older than maybe four guys on the roster. To say nothing of free fast food.
“It’s a great building,” Leafs coach Craig Berube said. “Back in the day, coming in here was a tough place to play. First period was like, ‘Woah.’ I mean, you gotta get out of the first period. But they’re definitely getting that attitude back here with their team.”
The Maple Leafs mustered merely six shots in the first period, five in the second. They were too hesitant to advance the puck and to rip it on net.
The Sharks, hot off an emotional comeback game here less than 24 hours prior, attacked the night with abandon.
Berube noted how San Jose’s young legs blow the zone as soon as they gain possession, looking to spring breakaways and odd-man rushes. Goalie Anthony Stolarz mentioned the challenge of blind behind-the-net passes to the F3 barrelling into the slot.
Their recoveries are speedy, their O-zone attacks dynamic and energetic.
“No doubt, they’ve been building. They got a lot of speed, a lot of skill up front. They use the width of the ice and the length very well,” John Tavares said.
“And when you when you get a player like 71 — one of the best in the game as a teenager — it’s pretty amazing how things can turn for a franchise.”
The mood around the ’26 Sharks is not so different than the vibes that percolated around the ’16 Leafs. Heck, the way things are trending, we might be saying this about the ’36 Leafs, too.
“They’re quick,” Berube said. “They got some good skill over there, and they try to extend the rink quickly.”
The veteran Maple Leafs have struggled this season when facing opponents that lean into a high-pace attack.
“They have their routes, and they’re kind of committed to it. Every time they would dump it in, there’s always a guy waiting for it,” Stolarz said. “As soon as their D touch the puck in the defensive zone, their wingers are flying.
“They have a lot of skill, a lot of speed, a lot of youth on that team. And it’s extremely impressive how they've meshed and how they can find one another.”
Funny, not funny: the losing room used to say similar things about the Maple Leafs’ emerging stars.
Unburdened, yet, by outside expectations or complicated by contract demands, we're reminded what momentum feels like, how playful promise can feel.
“They’re really young, right? Anaheim, they’re young. Sharks are young,” Benoit said.
“I mean, they’ve drafted well. And they’ve progressed in that sense of they rebuilt — but it didn’t take them 10 years. They took a couple years, and then it’s been working out for them.”
Fox’s Fast Five
• As the Maple Leafs and Sharks were asleep, a magnitude 4.6 earthquake rocked the Bay Area. No one was harmed. Some didn’t even notice.
“I guess I’m an earthquake survivor again,” smiled ex-Shark Steven Lorentz, who has endured seven of them. “A little bit scary.”
“I’m rattled,” Jake McCabe added. “I woke up to the alert on my phone, and I was pissed that I didn’t wake up (in the middle of it). I’ve always been wanting to feel one.”
• What is the most unique thing about Celebrini?
“A kid of that age and what he’s doing, it’s right here,” Berube replied, pointing to his head. “He’s smart. He’s a very intelligent player. He goes to the Olympics to play with a guy like (Connor) McDavid and (Nathan) MacKinnon and stuff, and the coach keeps putting him out there with those guys and using him — and they want to play with him. You have to have intelligence.”
You see that hockey sense watching the kid anticipate plays with and without the puck from up high. Go see him if he comes to your town.
As impactful as San Jose’s MVP candidate was in this one, he did not register a point, marking just the second time all season the Sharks have won without their phenom splashing the scoresheet. They improved to 2-16-3 on the season when Celebrini gets shut out.
“We did a decent job on him today,” Tavares said.
• Celebrini rightly hogs headlines for painting this town teal, but the breakout of sophomore Collin Graf is intriguing.
The undrafted Quinnipiac University product quadrupled his rookie goal total Thursday, sniping his 20th on the season. It stood as the winner.
No, Graf won’t always convert on 18 per cent of his shots, but doing so in his first contract year is smart timing.
• Easton Cowan says he missed George Springer and Ernie Clement’s mic’d-up moment last week, as the two Blue Jays gushed over the Leafs rookie when attending a game at Scotiabank Arena. They met up in the Leafs’ room as well.
“Easton Cowan, that’s my guy,” Clement tells Springer in the clip. “He’s a grinder.”
“Clement’s my favourite player, too, so that was pretty cool,” Cowan says. “We had a good talk and just hearing some stories from Springer too, it was awesome.”
Cowan says he appreciates Clement’s versatility and attitude.
“Can play wherever, brings good vibes, and he was really good in the post-season,” Cowan says. “Definitely super cool.”
• Meanwhile, in the OHL playoffs…
Maple Leafs prospect Sam McCue scored a beautiful Michigan goal in Game 4 of Ottawa’s first-round series versus Kingston. McCue, 20, was a seventh-round pick by Toronto in 2024.






