TORONTO -- Auston Matthews was named the 26th captain in Toronto Maple Leafs history Wednesday.
He is the first United States-born player to be captain in the franchise's 107-year history and the second non-Canadian player to hold the role; Mats Sundin of Sweden was captain from 1997-2008.
The 26-year-old center replaces John Tavares, who had been captain since Oct. 2, 2019, and will be an alternate.
"I got chills, honestly," Matthews said about being named captain. "I'm so honored and humbled since being drafted here eight years ago. You realize how special it is to play for the city of Toronto, to wear the Maple Leaf on your chest every single night. It just means the world to do that. To have the support from Johnny, my teammates, our staff, ownership, my family, it just means the world to me. I look forward to continuing our journey to obviously get to the top of the mountain and win the Stanley Cup and bring it back to Toronto."
Tavares said he called Matthews in late July to let him know the news.
"I just wanted to let him know what I thought about him and that I thought the time was now for him to take charge and be the captain and be the leader of our club and how ready he was for it," Tavares said. "He's got my full support to continue what when I came here six years ago to do and wanting to bring the Stanley Cup back here to Toronto and finding a way to do that."
Maple Leafs general manager Brad Treliving first broached passing on the captaincy to Matthews with Tavares in a meeting earlier this summer and Tavares was immediately on board.
"This was not a hard conversation in the sense that John is a really smart guy and when you start having conversations about the team and the evolution, at the end of the day everybody has the same goal," Treliving said. "The goal here is to win and you are always finding different ways to push the process along. John right from the start when we talked about it, he's seen the evolution of Auston. It was a smooth process."
Matthews was born in San Ramon, California, but grew up in Scottsdale, Arizona, after his family moved there when he was an infant.
Selected with the No. 1 pick in the 2016 NHL Draft by the Maple Leafs, Matthews had an NHL career-high 107 points last season, including 69 goals, which was the most in a season since 1995-96, when Mario Lemieux scored 69 for the Pittsburgh Penguins.
"After [Tavares] kind of let me know, I told him I was like shaking. I had chills," Matthews said. "It's such a big honor just to represent the Maple Leafs and put on that jersey every night. To be the captain is truly special. For him to call me and kind of let me know that he wanted to pass on the captaincy to me was very emotional. I felt a lot of things, but it's truly an honor."
Matthews has won the Maurice "Rocket" Richard Trophy as the NHL's leading goal-scorer three times (2020-21, 2021-22, 2023-24). When he scored 60 goals in 2021-22, he became the first U.S.-born player to hit that mark. That same season, he won the Hart Trophy as the League's most valuable player and the Ted Lindsay Award, given annually to the most outstanding player in the NHL as voted by members of the NHL Players' Association. He won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year in 2016-17.