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If you’ve got around $14 million to spare, a sprawling historical mansion that former Toronto Maple Leafs boss Brendan Shanahan lived in during his time in Toronto can be yours.
The Maple Leafs have re-signed Nicholas Robertson to a one-year contract extension. It is not a major move, but a solid one ...
Where will Brendan Shanahan surface next? That's the question everyone is wondering after the former Toronto Maple Leafs president was not renewed. Despite what looked like an opening with the New ...
GoHealth, Inc. (GoHealth) (NASDAQ: GOCO), a leading health insurance marketplace and Medicare-focused digital health company, will announce strategic capital and governance actions to support ...
Even though not every offseason move was entirely within their control, the Toronto Maple Leafs finally made significant ...
Let’s see how long it lasts this time. (Photo of Brendan Shanahan: Arlyn McAdorey / The Canadian Press via AP) Sean McIndoe has been a senior NHL writer with The Athletic since 2018.
Brendan Shanahan is entering the Hall of Fame not far from that three-bedroom brick bungalow in Mimico where his mother still lives. A fantasy became reality, and then reality outgrew the fantasy.
FILE - Brendan Shanahan, president and alternate governor for the Toronto Maple Leafs, speaks to the media during a press conference at the start of the NHL hockey team's training camp in Toronto ...
Brendan Shanahan watched Alzheimer's disease take his father before his Hall of Fame NHL career had even begun. Now he's using his stature as Maple Leafs president to promote more research in the ...
It was the spring of 1994, and Brendan Shanahan suddenly had a lot of time on his hands. He was coming off a career year in St. Louis, with 52 goals, 50 assists, 102 points and 211 penalty minutes ...
Brendan Shanahan made his mark on the latest New York Rangers' win without even lacing up a skate. A simple hello in the dressing room when none of his teammates expected to see him lit the fuse ...
Brendan Shanahan, who was the No. 2 overall pick in the entry draft by the Devils in 1987, played for four other NHL teams before coming back to the Devils to end his career in 2009.