Nylander

MILTON, Ontario --William Nylander remains a restricted free agent with the Toronto Maple Leafs, but John Tavares is hopeful his contract situation will be resolved before the start of training camp.

"We believe we are going to have Nylander]*
"We're continuing to work towards a solution to it and I'm confident that we'll get there," general manager Kyle Dubas told TSN last week.
Nazem Kadri knows exactly what Nylander is going through. After his entry-level contract expired five years ago, he signed a two-year, $5.8 million contract on Sept. 10, 2013, the day before training camp began.
"It's a little bit stressful. I know in my case it was and they were very similar, so I know [Nylander] wants to be here and wants to be around his teammates," Kadri said. "It's not the easiest thing to go through. He's a great player, a great teammate and we'd love to have him around. That's a discussion obviously him and management have to have, but we'll be ready for him when he decides to come."

At this point, it is unclear whether Nylander, who was not in attendance at Toronto's annual Leafs & Legends Charity Golf Classic on Monday, would attend training camp in the absence of a contract in place, but Dubas said last week that he would not expect him to report without one.
"I would think that like most players, that if training camp was to start and there was no contract, that the player and his representative would elect not to attend. But I haven't had that discussion with them, I'm just surmising based on history," Dubas told TSN.
Nylander is not the only notable restricted free agent still unsigned. Buffalo Sabres forward Sam Reinhart, Edmonton Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse and Winnipeg Jets defenseman Josh Morrissey are each in similar situations.

"[Nylander] is obviously a big part of the team and a big part of the future, so this has kind of been proven in the past and even with a few other players around the League, guys kind of in this situation. It always seems to come down to the wire a little bit," Tavares said.
On July 1, coach Mike Babcock said he expected Nylander to start on a line with left wing Patrick Marleau and center Auston Matthews. But if Nylander is not in camp at the outset, defenseman Morgan Rielly said the team will have no choice but to let the situation play out.
"He's a great player and he was a big part of our team last year. There's time between now and camp so who knows, but hopefully he comes on board," Rielly said. "If so, we'll be happy, but if not, you just kind of carry on and go through camp just the way we normally would."