The Leafs effectively abdicated those rights practically when they handed Marner a NMC for his final 2 seasons on his current deal. All decisions come through Marner except whether the Leafs accept the final number on a deal should Marner allow it to get that far.Cathal Kelly writes sports columns now?
If Marner is exercising his full rights to not negotiate during the season and also veto any potential trades, then the Leafs are exercising their full rights to ask him whenever something comes up. The front office has a job to do to make the team better. Doing their job to explore options and avenues does not constitute 'playing games' with the player. Not publicly mollifying a pending UFA in the midst of an organizational crisis after failure does not constitute 'playing games' with the player.
If Marner is truly discombobulated by standard operating procedures in team management and media, then he is in the wrong line of work and definitely chose the wrong representative.
Marner was agreeable to discussions last spring. But did not get the priority commitment from Treliving that Matthews and Nylander did. Their leading playoff scorer since his arrival got baked in the media without the Leaf management coming to his defense for weeks. Leafs management mumbled about seeing what they could get for him in a trade and got the media all worked up over that. Leafs management's handling of the situation over the summer created the media circus that Marner did not appreciate.
Marner resolved to not talk about his contract with the media during the season so he could focus on playing hockey and not be a distraction for his team. He supported his agent and Treliving having discussions during the season to try to work something out - just as he had last spring.
Stirring up the media circus with the Rantanen deal is on Leafs management. That contradicted what Marner wanted both in terms of his consistent desire to play for the Leafs, to not accept a trade - especially with his pregnant wife - and to not have a distraction during the season. Sure, Leafs management broke no laws doing it but they obviously upset the player significantly as his voice trembled in response to the media.
You can spin it a thousand ways: the next contract as a UFA is Marner's decision ultimately. Leafs management are about to find out in 15 weeks or so if it was smart to upset the guy who is going to make that decision - as they have much of the last year - and could leave for nothing while he is in his prime.
Why should Marner want uproot his pregnant wife to go to Carolina, who are lower in the standings and notoriously cheap, when he could pick from nearly any of 32 NHL destinations for maximum dough 15 weeks from now and see this season through with his pals on the Leafs?
That was a downright shortsighted, stupid stunt for Leafs management to pull - oblivious to what Marner has expressed and his circumstances.