How I Got Here

The edge of hockey's new frontier

Darryl Metcalfe standing in front of a blue wooden shed holding a hockey stick and wearing hockey gloves.

Finn O'Hara

The goal wasn鈥檛 to land a hockey job. Rather, Darryl Metcalf was driven by the need to satisfy his own curiosity.

By day he worked for a Toronto-based marketing and technology firm. But his spare time was devoted to the website he created to fill a void 鈥 ExtraSkater.com, an online hobby horse that explored the use of advanced statistics in the assessment of National Hockey League players.

鈥淭he primary audience was really just myself,鈥 Metcalf says. 鈥淚 was building something that I had wanted to see.鈥

So, how did that curiosity turn into a top hockey job?

鈥淸The journey is] definitely remarkable if I were to step back and look at it from a broader perspective,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 say that I saw any of this coming.鈥

Which is what makes it such a wonderful story.

Metcalf鈥檚 unprecedented road to the Leafs鈥 front office began in Toronto, where he grew up playing hockey and baseball. He adored the Leafs, admiring the heroics of Gary Roberts and Mats Sundin in the 鈥90s and early 2000s. But, perhaps hinting at his tendency to delve deeper, he also appreciated the contributions of lesser players such as Dmitri Yushkevich and Jason Smith.

At Queen鈥檚 University, intrigued by math and science classes, he pursued a degree in chemical engineering. Graduating in 2009, he was hired on at Yfactor Inc.

Continuing to follow sports closely, Metcalf noticed the 鈥渄ata evolution鈥 in baseball. The Moneyball approach, detailed by the book and movie of the same name, had thrust analytics into the mainstream.

鈥淭hat helped me to think about hockey in a different way,鈥 says Metcalf, 鈥渁nd wonder if there were things we could learn about hockey and how it鈥檚 played from the data, like people were doing in baseball.鈥

Were there better ways to measure performance? Were there underlying indicators beyond point totals and plus-minus ratings? Other sharp-pencilled keeners were on the same path, tracking variables such as shots taken, puck possession, and zone time.

Using statistics from the NHL, he was determined to develop his own analytics, and out of that fascination came ExtraSkater.com, which was launched in 2013. Early days saw the website averaging one view per day. Soon, though, daily traffic grew to 10,000. He began to receive positive feedback, first from like-minded fans, then from player agents and hockey writers 鈥 and soon from NHL clubs.

Emboldened in the lead-up to the 2014鈥15 season, he decided to expand the website and include analysis of junior players across Canada. That summer he batted around a few ideas with Victor Carneiro, scout for the Ontario Hockey League鈥檚 Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds.

Carneiro brought Metcalf鈥檚 plans to the attention of Kyle Dubas, the Greyhounds鈥 general manager, who had a productive exchange with Metcalf about the upside of underlying metrics and their rightful place in hockey performance measurement. The timing was fortuitous. Just a couple of weeks later, the Leafs hired Dubas as their assistant general manager, and shortly after, Dubas asked Metcalf, then 26, to come aboard as part of their new analytics department.

鈥淚t was a big decision because, obviously, I hadn鈥檛 had any realistic [thoughts] of working within hockey 鈥 it was just something I was doing for fun,鈥 says Metcalf. 

Shaking the shock, he shuttered the website and joined the Leafs in 2014. Dubas is now general manager of the team and Metcalf is officially the special assistant to the general manager. On the team鈥檚 website is a list of its brass 鈥 tellingly, only four names are above Metcalf鈥檚.

The wave of interest in the emerging field of advanced statistics was significant. The hockey world had been somewhat divided, with the old guard relying on observation to make decisions and these analytics upstarts brandishing their newfangled metrics. Now, you won鈥檛 find an NHL team that doesn鈥檛 depend on its own stats crunchers.

Metcalf is an integral part of that new frontier. In 2016, Metcalf was promoted to director of hockey research and development. He currently oversees an advanced stats department of eight full-time employees. Their handiwork influences all branches of the Leafs鈥 hockey operation 鈥 scouts, coaches, managers.

鈥淢y job is to help us improve our decision-making across the organization,鈥 says Metcalf, 33. 鈥淭he best part of my job 鈥 and probably the best part of any job 鈥 is being able to work with a team of people who you like and appreciate to make a real impact."

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