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Hockey

Tim Leiweke to leave president/CEO post with MLSE: report

According to a tweet from Hockey Night in Canada's Elliotte Friedman, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Tim Leiweke is preparing to leave the company for a different challenge.

Management teams with Toronto FC, Leafs, Raptors reshaped under his watch

Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Tim Leiweke, right, seen here enjoying a laugh with Toronto Maple Leafs president Brendan Shanahan, reportedly is preparing to leave the company. Besides helping bring Shanahan to the Leafs, Leiweke also oversaw the hiring of GMs Masai Ujiri with the Raptors and Tim Bezbatchenko with Toronto FC during his short time in the city. (Dave Sandford/NBAE via Getty Images/File)

Whats next for Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment president and CEO Tim Leiweke after helping reshape the managerial teams with Toronto FC of MLS, the NHLs Maple Leafs and the NBAs Raptors?

A different venture out of town?

It appears so, according to Hockey Night in Canadas Elliotte Friedman.

Not sure where hes going, but hearing the reason is he is looking for a new challenge, Friedman tweeted Tuesday afternoon.

Cathal Kelly of the Toronto Startweeted that Leiweke denies animminent departure from MLSE.

"Just talked to Tim Leiweke re: rumours he's leaving MLSE: 'It's not true. 100 per cent not true. I'm fully committed to the season at hand,'" Kelly tweeted.

Leiweke arrived in Toronto in April 2013 after running the company that owns the NHLs Los Angeles Kings and theLos Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer.

Under Leiwekes watch, Toronto FC brought in Tim Bezbatchenko as general manager, followed by the Raptors hiring of Masai Ujiri as GM and the Leafs luring of Brendan Shanahan from the NHL head office to become president and alternategovernor.

"I had to go through a learning process, and if TFCis the sailboat, and ultimately the Raptors are the yacht, the Leafs are a massive cruiser and it takes a lot to turn them around, and it takes a lot to shift strategy," Leiweke told reporters this past April. "And this is not a task you take lightly.

"I needed some time to understand what was right and wrong here."

Leiweke clearly left L.A. on a high, following the Kings' Stanley Cup victory in 2012 and back-to-back championships by the Galaxy in 2011 and 2012.

In Toronto, he would leave having reshaped the sporting landscape.

Toronto FC missed the post-season a year ago but with impressive youngsters on board such as Jonathan Osorio and Ashtone Morgan combined with the off-season additions of forward Jermain Defoe and Michael Bradley, the signs are there for a potentially quality team in the not-too-distant future.

As of Tuesday, Toronto sits third in the MLS Eastern Conference standings with a 9-5-8 record for 32 points, 10 behind division-leading Sporting KC.

The Raptors are coming off a franchise-record 48 wins and seven-game, first-round playoff loss to Brooklyn.

And the Maple Leafs? Well, they missed the playoffs for the eighth time in the previous nine years in 2014. Shanahan is aboard, GM Dave Nonis and head coach Randy Carlyle remain while their assistants have been shown the door.

Before arriving in Toronto, Leiweke was the head of Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), the owner of several sports teams and buildings. AEG also had a stake in the Los Angeles Lakers and Houston Dynamo of MLS, owned the Staples Center and Home Depot Center in California, andoperated a number of buildings around the world, including London's O2 Arena.

In addition to sports, AEG was heavily involved in several music and entertainment businesses.

Leiweke previously worked forU.S. Skiing, the Denver Nuggets, and the Minnesota Timberwolves.