Marner got knocked around in this series and was not as effective as he was in the regular season, but you have to keep in mind that this is his first season and even Patrick Kane needed more than one season to learn to become real good.Defense matters.
Lou wasn't there to make the call in 2015, he would not have selected Marner over Hanifin. Marner may prove us wrong, he could develop into another Martin St Louis. The loss of Polak was worse than the loss of Alzner, the Caps still had Brooks Orpik. It cost the Penguins at least another Cup by not resigning him. Holtby had the advantage, he was dealing with far less traffic than Andersen. The Canes will make the playoffs next year and do significant damage. It may not look like it now but the Canes are ahead of the Leafs in the development curve. Dickhead move Pagula in Bufallo, he wont find a better management team.
Still thoroughly enjoyable season but I expect the Leafs to regress next season unless they add more muscle to the defense.
I know you have this obsession for Hanifin and I haven't watched enough of him to form an opinion as to who's better between him and Marner. Based on stats alone though, I'd say Marner's were more impressive than Hanifin's first year stats. Yes defence matters, but so does offence. Coaching can teach how to defend but you need pure skills to score that cannot be taught.
The Canes have the opposite problem as the have huge holes up front but solid on defence. They seem to have put more emphasis on drafting defence vs the Leafs' drafting offence. Maybe circumstances and availabilities of talent at the time played a big part. I can see a match for potential block buster type deals between the clubs.
The Leafs have an abundance of young forwards in Sashnitkov, Leivo, Kapanan, Lepsic etc. who are NHL ready but there may not be enough room to fit them all in next season. They may be trade baits to land one or two solid physical d men who they desperately need.