Friday, January 31, 2020

Let's trade Player XX for a bag of pucks...



                                                                                    Okay, c'mon you've all said it, "let's trade so and so for a bag of pucks, so we can get a better scorer, d-man, or goalie.

So I have been busy scribbling down little ideas that I can send to Kyle Dubas for his scrutiny.
It will not be easy. It will not be for the faint of heart.  I’ve condensed this down to the top 8 trade proposals, as there were many, many variations of “Kasperi Kapanen for Player XYZ” with different prospect and pick combinations attached.



Here we go …

 Kasperi Kapanen for Josh Manson 
 It’s not altogether implausible, given Manson has had a tough season, but fits Toronto’s need for an experienced right-shot defenceman to play in their top four. He’s cost-controlled and under contract for another couple years at a reasonable number. The biggest question here is can the Ducks afford to move out one of their few experienced D, and would they want a winger like Kapanen in return? My guess is they’d prefer a younger defenceman, which may make this move improbable, but the value proposition isn’t way off here.

 Andreas Johnsson, Jeremy Bracco, 2021 second-rounder and Cody Ceci (with 50 percent retained) for Chris Kreider and Alexandar Georgiev 
 The Leafs are a bit low here, given the Rangers are hoping to land a first-round pick for the rights to rent Kreider. But Johnsson is probably worth more than Georgiev and there is a second-rounder included, plus a prospect like Bracco, who has at least some value, even during a tough season. I like the idea of getting an experienced LW like Kreider to fill the void left by Johnsson temporarily, although I’m not sure Kyle Dubas will have much interest in rentals, in any circumstance. There’s a framework here that could make sense, though, and I think a larger trade is how Georgiev might ultimately wind up in Toronto.

 Kapanen and a fourth-round pick for Georgiev and Lias Andersson
 This comes down to what you think of Andersson. I know he was taken seventh overall in 2017, but that’s currently looking like a terrible pick, as he hasn’t produced in the NHL or AHL when given an opportunity. He’s only 21, but if I’m trading Kapanen, I want a sure thing – likely on defence – not a couple of lottery tickets. Sorry Rangers fans.

  Travis Dermott and Johnsson for David Savard and a pick 
 The Leafs and Blue Jackets are weird trade partners. I’m not sure why they ended up in so many proposals here, as Columbus is in basically the exact same spot in the standings as Toronto. There’s no clear buyer-seller relationship to be found. That said, Savard is a middle-of-the-road, right-shot defenceman who will turn 30 in the fall and has only one year left on his deal until he’s UFA. I guess if the Leafs are prepared to give up on Dermott, who’ll be cheaper and continue to improve, maybe there’s a fit here. But as of now, I expect Toronto would want more of an upgrade if they’re giving up two younger roster pieces like this. Besides, I loathe John Tororella.

Johnsson for Colin Miller  
 This frankly just seems like too much for Miller, who’s not playing a lot on a bad Buffalo team. I’m not convinced he’s more than a third-pair type.

 Kapanen and Dmytro Timashov to Edmonton for Adam Larsson
Timashov has been shopped around the league with no takers and is barely playing, so he’s essentially a throw-in. This boils down to Kapanen for Larsson, which,  is an intriguing idea. I think the deal would have to be expanded beyond that to make sense for the Leafs, however. The Oilers really like Kapanen, though, and he’d play higher in their lineup than Toronto’s. I do wonder about Larsson, given his age and injury history. I could see this being something talked about more seriously in the offseason. to Edmonton for Adam Larsson.

 Kapanen and Dermott for Connor Murphy and Alex Nylander
 This is a tough one.  But I'm higher on Murphy than others, and I’m really uncertain if mini-Nylander is going to be an impact player in the NHL. Again, Dermott’s potential is a big factor here. Is he going to be a top-four defenceman? How you feel about his development is going to swing whether you’d want to pull the trigger on a trade like this or not.

 Johnsson and Ceci for Malcolm Subban 
 We’re making Vegas retain salary on a near-league minimum backup goalie? Odd. But OK. Subban hasn’t had a great year, and it’s unclear how much of an upgrade he would be for the Leafs. Why give up someone like Johnsson for him? Plus Vegas isn’t exactly swimming in cap room to make this happen.

So you see, it's hard to make deals, even when all you do is sit on your ass in front of a keyboard for a couple of hours and produce drivel, such as it is.

Well, I saved the best one for last

Johnsson, Ceci, Trevor Moore (California kid), Bracco and Hutchinson for Manson, Miller and Nick Ritchie

I’m going to call this a Kitchen Sink offer. Throw together a whole pile of lesser assets and try and get fewer, better ones by hoping volume makes them look better. It doesn’t. There’s no reason on earth for Anaheim to do this unless Bob Murray is just a really big Leafs fan.

Look these ideas aren't any better than any of you folk could come up with.  So with that I am going back to the couch and finish my coffee, and watch Murdock Mysteries.....at least he solves some riddles.




Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Road Warriors in Smashville



It was a night the Maple Leafs’ century belonged to Rasmus Sandin.
With his opening National Hockey League goal and a two-point night, the rookie Swedish defenceman became the first Toronto player born in the 2000s to score and appeared to be having the time of his life — even if he looked too young to think of celebrating in a Smashville honky tonk.
After the 5-2 win over the Predators, he posed with the souvenir puck that William Nylander retrieved for him, wearing a mile-wide grin.

“I’ve had a lot of dreams about how I’d do the (goal) celebration — but I didn’t do anything, except for the screaming,” Sandin said. “I was standing a little bit behind the play, the puck popped out and I saw at the last second that he (Pekka Rinne) was covering the low ice and leaning forward, so I put it high.”
Also looking for Sandin following the game at Bridgestone Arena was defenceman Jake Muzzin, who had put up pre-game money for the winning goal in his return from injury and wanted to pay the kid.

“He’s a great player, right place, right time, he picks his spots,” Muzzin praised. “He’s very poised for a young fella back there. I remember my (first NHL goal).”
For the rest of the Leafs, the victory was a blessed relief after a soul-searching all-star break preceded by one victory in six games. It’s also apparent that the arm injury that took winger Kasperi Kapanen out of the game after one period is not serious, with negative X-rays and Kapanen fine to get in the chow line after the game. But he will be examined again Tuesday in Dallas.

It’s still going to be a long haul back to playoff positioning, but the Leafs are within two points of the pack and the play of Sheldon Keefe’s ‘old’ Leafs was evident, including Frederik Andersen in net with 34 saves, 14 in a busy first period.
“We had good (team) talks to try and get better at certain things,” Andersen said. “Like everyone at this time of year, we want to push and get better. This is a good first step.”

Andersen was there to clean up some odd-man rushes caused by Leafs jumping in too far and one nail-biter when Tyson Barrie’s stick was lifted in the slot. Andersen got across to foil Viktor Arvidsson on Nashville’s only power play.

Kapanen’s injury meant a quick promotion for another player returning from injury. Trevor Moore moved up from the fourth line to the third, joining Pierre Engvall and Andreas Johnsson.
But the Leafs were up a goal after losing Kapanen, starting with Nylander taking a perfect long lob from Sandin to get his career best 23rd goal and fourth in as many games. That also stopped the Rinne hex on the Leafs, two straight shutouts with their last goal against him back on March 28, 2018.

Zach Hyman answered Mikael Granlund’s goal for the Preds and Sandin’s winner came after Alex Kerfoot was having a great shift, capped by a drive to the net, the rebound out to an uncovered Sandin.
The club’s first-round pick in 2018, Sandin made the team out of camp when Travis Dermott was hurt, but was clearly not ready as the Toronto stumbled early under Mike Babcock and the kid was pushed around. A return to the Marlies and a strong showing at the world juniors boosted his confidence.
It was Auston Matthews’ first game since his sore wrist became news, but he leaned into the opening faceoff very hard to beat Ryan Johansen on his way to winning nine of 13 draws. His empty-netter was for No. 35 in his quest for 50 goals with 32 games remaining.

When Jason Spezza beat Rinne with a strange one from a sharp angle it gave the Leafs seven straight road games with at least four goals for the third time in club history and the first since 1983.
Arvidsson drew the Preds closer, but Nashville, which has failed to catch fire since changing coaches, remained at the bottom of the Central Division.
“A game like this, you’re not really sure what you’ll get,” Keefe said of one practice. “We executed well enough to score enough goals. I liked parts of our game and other parts we want to make sure we continue to grow.”

Welcome back to the road to victory. Now it's onto Big D.


Saturday, January 25, 2020

Leafs seek a trading partner...so how bout Columbus




We are just 30 days away from the Trade Deadline. While the players are in the midst of both the All-Star Game and their bye weeks, management is starting to decide how they want to handle this all important day.

Do they buy? Do they sell?

 Maybe they do nothing at all.



When you have a case of two teams in which one has what the other wants, it deserves attention. The Toronto Maple Leafs and Columbus Blue Jackets definitely have what the other wants. They’re a trading-partner match made in heaven. Whether they actually talk and come up with a deal is another matter altogether. But in this space, we will explore why these teams should talk and what makes them so perfect together.

The Maple Leafs have been hammered of late with key injuries to their best defensemen. It’s no secret that they’re actively looking for an experienced blueliner who can step in and help right away. While handedness doesn’t necessarily matter, they’d prefer someone who can play the right side.
The Leafs also prefer someone with term. They don’t want just a rental in this case. They’re looking for a hockey deal. They have some very interesting players they could deal to make something like this happen.

This is where the Blue Jackets come into play. They have plenty of defensive depth. Thanks to their run of injuries, we saw 10 defensemen get into games at one point or another. And as you may have seen or heard, they’re one of the hottest teams in the NHL. But if there is an area where the Blue Jackets need an upgrade, it’s up front. Despite being on a 16-2-4 run to enter the playoff picture, they are still 23rd in the NHL in goals for with 138 in 51 games. While the goals per game is starting to creep up, they still need to see improvement if they hope to make the playoffs. The question here will be does Jarmo Kekalainen tap into his defensive depth and acquire a top-nine forward?

Like the Maple Leafs, the Blue Jackets are not interested in a rental. They want someone who can not only help them now, but also in the future. Given that the Blue Jackets don’t have their second or third rounder in the 2020 Draft, you can bet their first rounder isn’t going anywhere. So this would also be a hockey deal if an agreement can be reached with anyone.
The Maple Leafs need a defenseman. Duh , no kidding. The Blue Jackets need a forward. Both teams want a hockey deal. This is a match. Now, who would the teams target?

The Maple Leafs want someone with term and is experienced. If they had a wish list of defensemen on the Blue Jackets, two would come to mind. Those are David Savard and Ryan Murray.
Savard fits exactly what the Maple Leafs are looking for. He’s an experienced right-shot defenseman. He’s plays a very defensive style of game and is not afraid to block shots. He also has term remaining. He carriesa cap hit of $4.25mill this season and next. He has everything the Maple Leafs are looking for.

 As for Murray, he is currently out with an injury. As of this writing, there is no definitive time frame as to when he’ll return. His name has been mentioned many times before as a trade candidate. He is a left-shot but can play the right side. But when he’s in the lineup, he’s been really good. In fact, the pair of Murray and Savard have been one of the best when paired together in terms of expected goals against when on the ice. I would prefer Ryan Murray, myself, as he skates like Morgan Reilly and hits like Jake Muzzin.

Murray is an excellent passer and can start the puck up the ice in transition. That would fit an element of what the Maple Leafs are looking for. Like Savard, Murray has one year left after this season. His cap hit is slightly higher at $4.6 million.
With Seth Jones and Zach Werenski being basically untouchable, Savard and Murray would be your most ideal candidates for trade in this scenario. Now what would the Blue Jackets get in return?
 
The Blue Jackets need an impact scorer. If they can throw three lines at you with noted scorers, that would be ideal. They also want someone who can skate and can shoot.
He shoots ...he scores


This fits the profile for Kasperi Kapanen. He’s just 23. He has two years remaining after this one at just $3.2 million cap hit. He’s also an RFA after the season. To be able to bring someone in like this fits what the Blue Jackets are looking for. Plus can the Maple Leafs afford to keep him given their cap crunch and others needing a new deal?
To a lesser degree, I could see the Blue Jackets inquiring of a player like Andreas Johnsson. He has three years after this one at $3.4 million cap hit. He had 20 goals last season but has been slowed by injuries this season. I don’t think the Blue Jackets would have to give as much up for Johnsson if they believe his outlook is that of a potential 20-goal scorer.

 Keep a couple of things in mind here. First, the Maple Leafs are under a ton of pressure. If they miss the playoffs, it’s not out of the question to think Kyle Dubas could be in trouble. There’s sky-high expectations in Toronto and not making the playoffs is unacceptable in their mind. They will do everything they can to find a hockey deal.
 Second, the Blue Jackets are the ones in the driver’s seat. They have depth. They have cap space. They can explore the market and see if something falls to them that makes them better. They aren’t under the same kind of pressure to make a deal. If the asking price for Kapanen is too much, the Blue Jackets will move onto something else. Patience could work out in their favor with all the flexibility they have.
Third, any deal from the Leafs would have to work within the cap. To say it’s a tight squeeze doesn’t give it justice. They will have to be creative in not only finding the right hockey deal, but making it work to the cap. Perhaps the Blue Jackets can get more out of this if discussions ever get that far.
And finally for now, it would take a lot to pry Savard from the Blue Jackets. He’s steady. He’s dependable. He’s a shot-blocking machine. You better be offering up an impact forward if you want to make that kind of deal happen.

 So a framework of Kasperi Kapanen for David Savard with some other pieces involved? I’ve seen crazier things suggested. Both players would fill needs of their new teams. Both players fit the kind of trade each team is looking for. With all of these elements in play, it’s no wonder the Leafs and Blue Jackets would make for perfect trade partners. But will they talk? And would they even try to make a deal with both fighting for their playoff lives in the East? Stay tuned.

Friday, January 24, 2020

A week in the life of Tyson Barrie


Tyson and dog pal Ralph

It is an overcast morning in Toronto as Auston Matthews drives west out of Toronto’s downtown core with Tyson Barrie in the passenger seat. The Maple Leafs team charter is waiting to depart at 11 a.m. and head south to sunnier skies. The Leafs are playing the Florida Panthers on Sunday evening, but the opportunity to spend a few extra hours in the sun on an off day has the players in high spirits.

On the flight, Barrie sits beside Matthews, as has become customary. Earlier in the season, there was an empty seat beside Matthews on a flight and Barrie was in need of one.
“Luck of the draw I guess,” says Barrie.
The pair pull out a laptop and headphone splitters.

They’re deep into “Money Heist,” a Netflix series about nine thieves trying to rob Spain’s Royal Mint.
They don’t get very far. Barrie is prone to stopping and discussing the show.
“I always hit the space bar,” says Barrie. “I like to break it down.”
Matthews shakes his head.
“He makes you laugh,” says Matthews.
It wasn’t long ago that it looked as if Barrie might not have the time to develop a close relationship with Matthews.
After a summer trade from the Colorado Avalanche that saw Toronto fan favourite Nazem Kadri go the other way, Barrie’s initial transition to Toronto wasn’t a smooth one. He had played his entire NHL career in Colorado, where the spotlight is nowhere near as intense. He struggled to defend and his freewheeling approach on the ice was stifled under Mike Babcock’s system.
“You get traded for a guy that was here for a long time and was a big part of this team, fans really liked Naz around here. He was a heart and soul guy, great player,” says Barrie. “He goes out, I come in, there’s some pressure that comes with that. People saw what I did in Colorado and they’re expecting the same thing. To come and not deliver right off the bat was tough.”
On Nov. 16, it was reported that NHL teams had contacted the Leafs about a possible trade for Barrie. In an 18-game stretch throughout October and November, the offensively-gifted defenceman had just one point.

But Barrie’s game has found new life under Sheldon Keefe and the spotlight is becoming easier to deal with. The night before, Barrie takes part in the MLSE Foundation’s “A Night with Blue and White” fundraiser. Along with the team stars including Matthews, Mitch Marner, Morgan Rielly and John Tavares, Barrie plays Family Feud against celebrated Leafs alumni such as Doug Gilmour and Darryl Sittler.
“Unfortunately we lost,” says Rielly. “(Tavares) kind of blew it for us. But I wasn’t great either.”
He took issue with them answering “Darth Vader” to the question: Which “Star Wars” character would you choose to be your teammate?
“He’d be a horrible teammate,” says Barrie. “He’s evil. He’d kill you.”
Barrie’s team might have lost, but the company made for a good night.
“It’s nice to be together,” he says. “And if it’s for a good cause, that’s great.”
After the team lands and checks in to their hotel on the beach in Fort Lauderdale, Barrie and a handful of players move to a nearby patio bar. Barrie orders a Corona.
“Just embracing the beach, the day off and unwinding a little bit,” he says.

The Leafs might have lost their last two games, but many players wear smiles throughout a 12:15 p.m. practice at the BB&T Center. Barrie is no different.
After the practice, some players head out for a round of golf. Barrie, dressed in a plain white T-shirt and faded blue jeans, boards the bus back to the hotel. Like so much in his life, he is comfortable going with the flow.
Upon returning to the team’s hotel, Barrie and his teammates find a buffet lunch including lobster and steak awaiting them.
Barrie samples both before moving with Matthews, Rielly and Marner across North Fort Lauderdale Beach Boulevard onto the beach that stares out at the Atlantic Ocean.
The conversation is lighter than the lunch. Feeling a kinship with his new teammates has made life with the Leafs easier.

“It was nice to be able to come in and feel comfortable with and share the same sense of humour,” says Barrie. “When I was struggling earlier in the year, it was good to have them to lean back on.”
It was a shared sense of humour — based on a lot of self-deprecation — that led Barrie to grow especially close with Matthews. It didn’t hurt that their homes in Toronto are close by.
“I’d play a bad game and I’d just carve myself,” says Barrie. “We’d have a big laugh at it.”
Matthews calls Barrie an “easy-going guy who is fun to be around.”
The laughs continue on the beach. A few Leafs fans stop to say hello, but the attention mostly goes to Matthews.
“He’s got the big body,” says Barrie, “and the big mustache.”
Later that evening, after a quick dip in a hot tub, Barrie leads a few players north to Café Martorano, a “hole in the wall,” that former teammate Nathan MacKinnon introduced him to.
The chicken parmesan, complete with San Marzano tomatoes and fresh pappardelle tossed in butter and Parmigiano-Reggiano, would knock anyone out after a long day. Barrie is in bed by 11 p.m., and he channel surfs to end his day.

With Keefe curbing morning skates, the team does not make the 30-minute drive to the BB&T Center.
Instead, they head back to the beach for a more dynamic warm-up. For 15 minutes, one of the team’s strength and conditioning coaches, Louis Rojas, leads a number of barefoot exercises in the sand, including sprints.
“I loved getting out there,” says Barrie. “It’s good to do something different and enjoy your surroundings.”

About half an hour before puck drop, with the lights of the BB&T Center down low and the sound of Meek Mill’s “Going Bad” blaring throughout the arena, Barrie is second on the ice after Frederik Andersen.
He knocks a single puck from the top of a pyramid onto the ice with his left palm.
Throughout the warm-up, Barrie spends time on his own practicing dangling with the puck at the half wall. He finishes the warm-up by firing one-timers fed by Marner and is off the ice at the exact moment the warm-up timer concludes.
While some might grow anxious having hours to kill before puck drop, Barrie is not one of them.
“I don’t need to think about the game all day,” he says. “We have our meetings and we focus on what you need to focus on.”
But the Leafs lack focus against the Panthers. They allow multiple odd-man rushes and Barrie is on the ice for four goals against, the most of any defenceman. Barrie was frozen in front of the net as Aleksander Barkov leisurely skated towards him and scored.
The Leafs lose 8-4 to the Panthers in one of their most embarrassing efforts of the season. Barrie logs 19:56, his second-lowest ice time in his last 10 games.
“When you lose a big game like that, against a division rival, and you give up big goals, it’s disappointing in a different way,” says Barrie. “Guys were upset.”
On the flight back to Toronto, Barrie and Matthews opt not to continue with “Money Heist.”
“We stopped watching it because it was giving us way too much anxiety on plane rides,” says Matthews. “It was getting out of hand.”
Barrie and Matthews chat quietly before each plug in their headphones.
Barrie arrives home around 2 a.m. and heads straight to bed.

On his days off, Barrie tends not to set his alarm. Instead, he gets up at “whatever time my dog lets me.”
Today, that means Ralph, a golden doodle, wakes Barrie up at 7 a.m. to step outside.

Barrie returns to bed. Around 10 a.m., he again relents to Ralph and drives 15 minutes south to Cherry Beach, home to one of Toronto’s most popular off-leash dog parks. Barrie appreciates Toronto’s many dog parks and believes Ralph does too.
“I wasn’t a diehard dog guy, but now that I’ve got Ralph, he’s my best buddy,” says Barrie.
Ralph also gets along well with Matthews.
“Auston’s the dog father,” says Barrie. “They have a good bond.”
After a few laps, both Barrie and Ralph have worked up an appetite. Back home, Barrie feeds Ralph and instead of firing up a food delivery app as many of his younger teammates might, he begins putting together his own lunch. Barrie learned the joy of cooking while making use of the “beautiful kitchen” at his Denver home.
“It’s more of a feel thing than using a recipe,” he says. “It’s a lot of fun to throw some good music on, have a glass of red wine and cook a little bit.” Barrie makes a turkey bolognese sauce before tossing in chickpea pasta.
“You should try it,” he says.
The influence of former teammate Nathan MacKinnon extends beyond restaurant recommendations. MacKinnon, who is dedicated to eating healthy, turned Barrie on to chickpea pasta.
“It’s working for him, obviously,” says Barrie.
Just before 1:30 p.m., Barrie’s phone buzzes with a new email alert: Pearl Jam,  has just announced “Gigaton,” their first new album in more than six years. The email contains details on a North American tour that will kick off in Toronto on March 18 at Scotiabank Arena.
Barrie quickly checks the team’s schedule and breathes a sigh of relief when he sees the team will not be on the road. He’s been a member of the band’s official fan club, the Ten Club, for five years now. He starts researching how to submit a request for designated fan club tickets.
“I didn’t even really know they were working on a new album,” says Barrie. “But that’s how they operate. I’m excited we’re not on the road and we’ll get to see them.”

On game days, when Barrie’s alarm goes off at 9:30 a.m., he has little time to hang with Ralph and get out the door. He prefers it that way.
With a quick shower and no coffee or breakfast, Barrie is out of his condo in less than 20 minutes. His goal is to be inside Scotiabank Arena by 10:15 a.m.
He heads into the subway for the 12-minute commute on the TTC south to Union Station and then into Scotiabank Arena. After swapping homes with Kadri following the trade, the former Leaf told Barrie about the benefits of taking public transportation to games.
“I’ve got it down,” says Barrie.
Today, he arrives well before his self-imposed deadline and sits down to a breakfast of scrambled eggs and bacon, passing on any available carbs until later in the day.
“I’d blow up if I had that many carbs,” says Barrie.
Ahead of every game, Barrie cuts a new stick and puts new laces into his skates. He skips the optional morning skate, as always. Power play meetings follow. Barrie then gets out the foam roller and begins to stretch. If he’s logged heavy minutes in his previous game, his legs will get a massage.
Today, Barrie is the first player to speak to the media in the dressing room. Rielly broke his foot in a game against the Panthers, so Barrie — Rielly’s defensive partner — is expected to have a more prominent role.
Wearing blue shorts and a blue hoodie with his No. 94 on the front, Barrie keeps his message succinct: “We’ve got to take pride. Some of us on the back end will have more opportunity and will be relied upon more. So it’s going to be a big challenge for us.”
Closer to noon, Barrie eats a typical pregame lunch: pasta with chicken and olive oil.
“I try to keep it pretty bland so you’re not tasting anything later,” he says.
He eats quietly seeing as his schedule doesn’t line up with many of his teammates’.
“I’m usually the last one to eat,” he says. “Everyone eats so early here. I’m in there at like 11:45 and everyone’s gone!”
After a quick trip home on the subway, Barrie puts on a pair of NormaTec compression pants to optimize recovery time ahead of the game, and watches an episode of “Arrested Development.”

Once the episode is done, he calls his dad Len, a former NHL player, to chat about players they know and news around the league.
“He loves talking hockey,” says Barrie.
By 1:30 p.m., he’s ready for his pregame nap. Two hours later, Barrie wakes for his pregame meal: a “quick hitter,” that he, once again, learned from MacKinnon. He whips up one, sometimes two if he’s feeling adventurous, paleo pancakes. No syrup. He brews a coffee and once again, things are quiet.
“That’s probably my favourite part of my day,” says Barrie. “A nice Americano, a couple pancakes, relax. The calm before the storm.”
Barrie arrives back at Scotiabank Arena at least two hours before puck drop. He’ll skip the team’s soccer game, instead opting to foam roll and “shoot the shit” with teammates.

“Keep it light,” he says.
After team meetings, Barrie begins his full warm-up. He takes 25 minutes to stretch out and “activate.”
“They want us to do three exercises before every game,” says Barrie. “Which I’ve never done before, but I don’t mind it.”
When he dresses, he puts on the same ragged, white Reebok shoulder pads he’s had since playing for the WHL’s Kelowna Rockets.
“They do the job,” says Barrie. “I don’t really see the need to switch ‘em up. I probably don’t use my shoulder pads as much as other guys.”
His jersey is the last piece he puts on. It always falls into a tuck inside his pants on his left hip, which bears a resemblance to a certain look made famous by Wayne Gretzky.
“I think I’m small, and my pants are big,” says Barrie. “Unintentional Gretzky tuck.”
Compared to other games, one MLSE staffer calls it as quiet a scene outside the Leafs dressing room as warm-ups approach as she has ever heard. Only four fans stand behind a barrier to watch Barrie give Mitch Marner a tap with his stick and become the second player out onto the ice at 6:29 p.m. Just as he used to follow Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog out as the third player on the ice for warm-ups, Barrie generally follows Jake Muzzin out. But with Muzzin sideline with an injury, Barrie is now second on the ice after Frederik Andersen.
Barrie gives a young fan holding a “Muzz get well soon” sign a fist-bump and offers a quick wink and a smile at other fans standing nearby. He again spends time dangling by the blue line in the warm-up. He will stop from time-to-time to survey players in front of him. He feeds Marner one-timers near the face-off dot before Marner returns the favour as Barrie stands by the blue line.
As the buzzer goes to signal the end of warm-up, Barrie steps off the ice, third from last, leaving Matthews and Marner on the ice. He claims he is not superstitious.
Barrie and the Leafs return to the win column with a dominant, 7-4 showing over the New Jersey Devils. But Barrie plays just 17:52, his fourth-lowest total of the season.
More than ever, with promising defenceman Rasmus Sandin having returned to the Leafs, the voices questioning Barrie’s role with the Leafs have gotten louder.
After the game, Barrie lifts weights with the rest of the team, though “not by choice.”
“We play so much, our schedule is so busy, I wouldn’t lift a ton of weights during the year,” says Barrie. “I like to do more recovery stuff. As long as my hips feel good, I’m good. That’s really the biggest thing, keeping my hips loose because I’ve had some issues in the past.”
After grabbing a protein shake, Barrie heads home to continue watching “Arrested Development.” He’s ventured into the murky waters of the cult classic: the questionable fourth season, called “Fateful Consequences,” which features an inconsistent narrative.
He’s on episode three of the season, but he’s committed to seeing it through, even if he believes the whole series has gone “sideways” by this point.
“Not in love with it right now,” he says.

As Barrie makes the 30-minute drive to the Ford Performance Centre for practice, he feels the need to switch up his routine.
Instead of listening to one of his typical playlists that includes Pearl Jam, Cigarettes After Sex and the Lumineers, Barrie is “feeling a bit gangster this morning” and opts for DaBaby and Roddy Ricch.
“But that’s unusual for me,” he says.
At 11:41 a.m., Barrie walks across the lobby from the Leafs practice rink to the Marlies practice rink for a skills session.
As soon as he takes the ice, he begins yapping at William Nylander, and tries to dangle around him with the puck. From a distance, Barrie then tries to hit the post with shots. He does not, and the group of defencemen gathered at one end of the ice give him grief.
The defencemen are joined by Leafs assistant coach Dave Hakstol, who runs drills with an emphasis on puck movement and maintaining possession, close to the goal.
Whenever Barrie gets a chance, he shouts down to the other end of the ice to get Nylander’s attention.
His need to switch things up has continued: Barrie is trying out one of Nylander’s sticks during the skills session.
The reasoning? Barrie shrugs.
“Always looking for something new,” he says.
At 12:02 p.m., with the full team practice now slightly behind schedule, Keefe bangs his stick on the glass and leaves. Every player follows him.
When Barrie walks into the Leafs practice rink, he is greeted by “Bastille” by Pompeii blasting from a speaker in the stands.
Keefe was known to play music during Marlies practices, but Wednesday is just the second time the Leafs have done so.
Barrie is becoming a fan.
“I wasn’t the first time we did it, but this was better today,” he says. “It was louder and they had more appropriate songs.”
Throughout practice, Barrie eagerly chats to any nearby teammate.
At 12:39 p.m., as Bruce Springsteen’s “Hungry Heart” plays from the speakers, practice wraps up.
After practice, Barrie and the rest of the team receive a guest speech from Molly Bloom, the former competitive skier-turned-motivational speaker and author of “Molly’s Game: The True Story of the 26-Year-Old Woman Behind the Most Exclusive, High-Stakes Underground Poker Game in the World!”
Her book was adapted into the Aaron Sorkin-directed film, “Molly’s Game.” The focus of the hour-long talk was her own redemption and second chances, something Barrie knows all too well. It’s no surprise that was one of his takeaways from her speech.
“You can make mistakes and get back on your feet,” says Barrie of the speech.
Barrie appreciated the team having the opportunity to ask questions. He was curious just how some of the high-profile clients were invited to the game.
After he returns home, Barrie takes Ralph for a stroll through Grange Park before walks to Moretti in downtown Toronto for dinner.
Barrie again orders chicken parmigiana. It’s become his go-to meal the night before a game to keep him full the following day.
“I’m a sucker,” he says.
Barrie is joined by Mitch Marner for dinner.
“He’s an infectious personality to be around,” says Barrie of Marner.
It is the support of his teammates which has helped Barrie, in his estimation, “find my groove.”
“It’s really tough when you spend your whole career somewhere and then you make a move and you don’t gel right away, you don’t fit in, things aren’t going great for you,” said Barrie. “But luckily, I’ve made some good friends on the team that have a good sense of humour and will get you through it.”
Things have improved so much that he admits he’d like to stay in Toronto beyond this season.
“I’m getting to love the city, I love the guys and Sheldon’s great,” says Barrie. “Kyle and Shanny have been great to me.”

After two less-than-stellar games, Barrie plays as well as ever in a Leafs jersey against the Calgary Flames. He moves the puck confidently and jumps into the play, looking like the player that the Leafs traded for. It was only when Barrie, manning the first power-play unit as he did in Colorado, found John Tavares from the point, who then set up William Nylander, did the Leafs score the game’s tying goal. It is Barrie’s 10th point in his last 11 games.
“The style of play that we’re playing suits my game quite a bit better,” says Barrie.
Though the Leafs go just 1-for-4 with the man advantage and lose in a shootout, Barrie’s 24:02 ice time is the most of any Leafs defenceman, and his 6:03 of power-play time is a team-high.
After the game, Barrie grabs a bottle of yellow SOS hydration drink.
“It would’ve been nice to capitalize on another one of those power plays,” he says.
At 10:21 p.m., Barrie walks alone up the two sets of stairs from the Leafs dressing room, again wearing his black suit, and through a small lobby towards the Bay Street exit.
Just around the corner from the exit is a wall-sized photo of the Leafs stars, including Barrie.
Outside, temperatures have dropped to what feels like -14, some of the coldest weather of the season. There is a man drumming relentlessly outside the arena. Handfuls of fans are eagerly flagging down their Uber drivers.
Barrie’s mother arrived mid-game and she is waiting for him in his apartment with another bowl of chickpea pasta, this time, tossed with pancetta.
Barrie pushes open the door and walks out into the cold of the city he now calls home.
Let's hope he stays.

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

The quest for 50

The next guy to score 50



In the spring of 1990, after Gary Leeman became the second player in Maple Leafs history to score 50 goals in a season, the franchise bestowed two gifts.

The first was a contractual obligation — a $50,000 bonus previously written into his deal — and the second was so strange, he had to take a picture of it.
The team gave him a trophy.

It was not a large trophy. In the picture he snapped, Leeman placed it next to a trophy he won for being named player-of-the-month during his bantam season in Toronto. His minor hockey trophy was bigger than the one he got for scoring 51 regular-season goals in the NHL.
“I really haven’t made it that public, you know?” he said with a chuckle. “I’d love to take it into Shanny and say, ‘This is what it was like, so make sure this doesn’t happen with your guys.’

“I couldn’t see them giving this trophy to Auston.”
Leafs president Brendan Shanahan will have to start shopping for ideas this spring if Auston Matthews, his young star centre, stays on the pace he has set heading into the all-star break. The 22-year-old is on pace to score 57 goals by the end of the season.
Despite a history that stretches back more than 100 years, only three Leafs players have scored 50 goals in a season. Rick Vaive did it first, in 1982, setting the franchise record (54) in the first of three straight 50-goal seasons. Leeman followed, and Dave Andreychuk was the last, in 1994.

“You look at Rick Vaive, he had a great shot,” Leeman said. “If you ever saw the stick he scored 50 with, you’d think it was more of a superhero. It was the worst hockey stick you could possibly shoot with, and he did it three times with that stick.”
It was truly amazing, he said: “Rick’s stick, I could barely bench press.”
“It weighed about 10 pounds,” Vaive said with a laugh. “Very little curve. But it worked for me.”
Vaive was only 22 years old when he hit 50 for the first time in Toronto. Like Matthews, Vaive had also been a first-round draft pick (fifth overall, in 1979), but his arrival was not as immediately celebrated.

He arrived as part of a trade that sent Dave (Tiger) Williams to Vancouver. The Canucks appeared to be giving up on a prospect who had worn out his welcome.

The Leafs were hosting the St. Louis Blues at Maple Leaf Gardens the night Vaive scored his 50th. It was late March, and he would go on to score four more times over the final five games to set a franchise record that has stood for the better part of four decades.
“Records are meant to be broken,” Vaive said. “It’s going to happen one day. And why not this year, with him? And then it’d be a pure, unbelievable goal-scorer who broke the record.”
He said he mentioned the record to Matthews when they chatted during a recent team event. Vaive told Matthews he would have to hit 55 to set the new record.
“He goes, ‘Oh, I got a little bit of work to do then,’” Vaive said. “We had a good chuckle over it.”
John Tavares has gotten closer to 50 goals than any Leafs player over the last quarter-century, with 47 last season. (He was held without a goal over his last two games of the season, despite managing eight shots on goal against Montreal in the finale.)


Gary Leeman

Leeman was born in East York and skated at Dieppe Park, one of the local outdoor rinks. By the time he reached the NHL, his hometown team had already fallen into one of its darkest eras. Owner Harold Ballard had turned a flagship franchise into a (lucrative) doormat.
“To be honest with you, I’m not really a numbers or stats guy,” Leeman said. “I just wanted to win.”
He said he did not know how close he was to getting 50 goals until the general manager pulled him to the side before a game in New York. Leeman had gotten into a fight five or six games earlier, and he cracked a knuckle.

It got to the point where he could barely hold his stick. The goals started to dry up, and Floyd Smith wanted to know what was wrong. He told Leeman he had the chance to do something rare in Toronto.
“I wasn’t thinking about it, and I didn’t want to think about it,” Leeman said. “To me, it was more of a line thing. It wasn’t an individual thing. Our line was playing great. We were producing, and that’s all you can really ask for — doing your part in a line.”
He was on a line with Ed Olczyk and Mark Osborne that season. Leeman sought them both out after meeting with the general manager.
“I said, ‘Hey, I just got the message, so all passes come here,’” he said. “And they looked at me funny, like, ‘What are you talking about?’”
He was joking.

Ricky Vaive
His father turned 50 a month or so before Leeman scored his milestone goal. The son framed the puck and gave it to his father as a belated birthday present. He still has it.
“That’s the kind of thing that makes me feel good,” Leeman said. “I shared it with my dad, and anybody that sort of was involved with my career.”
He also still has the small plastic trinket the Leafs gave him, stored in a box near his old player-of-the-month trophy. It was not much, but it was more than the Leafs gave Vaive.
“Nothing,” Vaive said with a smile.
No trophy? No letter? No pat on the back from management?
“Not even a congratulations from Mr. Ballard or anything,” Vaive said.
It was not clear what, if anything, the Leafs might have given Andreychuk for reaching 50 goals. Now vice-president of corporate and community affairs for the Tampa Bay Lightning — and also enshrined in the Hockey Hall of Fame — he did not respond to email requests to be interviewed for this story.
If Matthews can stay healthy, Vaive said he suspects the 50-goal club could soon add another member.

“I would expect that he will,” he said. “And hopefully, I’ll be able to be there when he does and congratulate him.”

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Leafs play dead for Hawks





Pathetic, really.
The Maple Leafs slinked into their bye week on Saturday night and said bye-bye to their playoff spot.
The aim for many players as they get away from their livelihoods is to forget about work and relax, but we’re not sure how that can be possible for the Leafs considering their recent play.
Once the Leafs return from the break on Jan. 27 in Nashville to start a two-game trip, they’re going to try to put behind them the first true skid in the Sheldon Keefe era.
The Leafs were on auto pilot before 19,502 at Scotiabank Arena, losing 6-2 against the Chicago Blackhawks.


As such, the Leafs will scatter for warmer climates with just one win in six games, going 1-3-2. This after Toronto won nine of 10.
And worse: The Leafs have fallen out of a playoff spot, sitting in fourth in the Atlantic Division and 10th in the Eastern Conference.
“It’s not a good feeling,” captain John Tavares said. “We have to dig down and ask ourselves where we want to get to and how bad we want to get there.
“Everyone is invested 100%, but when we have games like this, it gets in the way of us building what we want to build.”
The concern around No. 1 goaltender Frederik Andersen continues to grow, and never mind that he’s going to represent the Leafs, along with Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner, at the all-star game in St. Louis.


Andersen has been less-than-average for a while now, allowing at least three goals in 10 of his past 12 starts.
“Myself included, it’s not a time to point fingers,” Andersen said. “Of course, (he and goaltending coach Steve Briere) have to work through it. We have to push forward and try to be better.”
From a team standpoint, the defence has been absent. Since shutting out the New York Islanders two weeks ago, the Leafs have allowed at least four goals in five of their six games. In three of those matches, it has been at least six goals against. One positive is that Keefe said there’s “a chance” defenceman Jake Muzzin will return from a broken right foot to play in Nashville.
Keefe referred after the game to the team’s immaturity, bringing up the lopsided loss in Florida last Sunday as well.

“It’s the discipline, it’s the consistency to be able to (play well) all the time,” Keefe said. “That’s what we’re looking for, and that’s what is reflected in the immaturity of our group.
“It’s a sign of where you are, that you’re not where you want to be. Reality checks come. It’s on me to help bring that (immaturity) out of them. But there’s some reflection (from the players) about what we want to be about.”
Defenceman Timothy Liljegren put his name in the team record book in his National Hockey League debut, becoming the 1,000th player in Leafs franchise history as Keefe went with seven defencemen and 11 forwards.


“Pretty nervous,” said Liljegren, who was paired with Rasmus Sandin. “But after a couple of shifts, you get things going. It was fun being the 1,000th player, but getting that first game feels good, for sure.”
After the game, Liljegren and forward Adam Brooks were returned to the Toronto Marlies.

Michael Hutchinson hears the whispers — that the Leafs are seeking a backup goaltender as the NHL trade deadline of Feb. 24 inches closer.
And specifically, that the Leafs are keen on Alexandar Georgiev of the New York Rangers, though we have not yet read a reasonable explanation as to why the Rangers would be willing to deal the 23-year-old.
“I don’t really follow it, it’s out of my control,” Hutchinson said. “Since training camp, I just show up every day and take it one day at a time.
There is no point losing sleep over it.

“You learn so much over the course of your career and I have been through a lot. You learn to focus on what you can control and showing up and working hard and being a good teammate. What the team decides to do, your playing time and stuff like that is completely out of your control.”
Hutchinson is 3-7-1 with an .885 save percentage in 12 games.

For the fourth time this season, the Leafs allowed at least three goals in the first period as Chicago built a 3-0 lead. Drake Caggiula took a puck off the end boards and bounced it in off Andersen at 21 seconds, and from there it went south, with captain Jonathan Toews dancing past Brooks to beat Andersen between the legs at 5:32 and Brandon Saad firing a shot over Andersen’s right shoulder at 11:02. The goals came on Chicago’s first six shots … William Nylander tied his career high when he scored on a Leafs power play at 25 seconds of the second, giving him 22 goals … Toews restored the three-goal lead at 3:19 and Dominik Kubalik got the fifth Hawks goal at 10:58. On the next routine save, Andersen heard the Bronx cheer from fans … Hawks superstar Patrick Kane had one assist, giving him 999 career points … After a Leafs goal by Alex Kerfoot, Kubalik scored his second. It was a beauty, giving him 20 to lead all NHL freshmen, coming when he batted a Toews pass out of the air and past Andersen while charging to the net late in the second.

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Leafs circling the wagons



The Maple Leafs have quietly put out feelers and investigated options for an upgrade at their backup goalie position over the past few weeks.
How serious those endeavours have been – and will be in the lead up to the Feb. 24 trade deadline – remains to be seen.

But what’s clear is Toronto has inquired multiple times this season about New York Rangers goaltender Alexandar Georgiev, a 23-year-old who has quickly gone from undrafted free agent in 2017 to a promising prospect at the NHL level.
To date, the Rangers’ asking price has been high. They want a quality young player who can play now, not a pick or a prospect, for the young Russian netminder.

The result is a bit of a stalemate, as the Leafs (and other suitors) haven’t been willing to meet that price for a goalie who has only started 60 NHL games.
Under normal circumstances, a rebuilding team like New York wouldn’t want to deal someone like Georgiev. But with 37-year-old franchise icon Henrik Lundqvist still with a year remaining on his contract, and prized prospect Igor Shesterkin putting up sparkling numbers in the AHL and NHL, the Rangers have been carrying three goaltenders closing in on nearly two weeks now.
It’s not a tenable situation long term. Carrying three goalies can be difficult logistically – even when it comes to practices, never mind finding enough starts in games.

And despite a run of strong play of late – and a solid .914 save percentage on the season – Georgiev is obviously the odd-man-out given Lundqvist’s stature in the organization and Shesterkin’s promise as a future No. 1.
Both teams have kept trade talks quiet, so specifics are somewhat lacking. But it’s believed that the Leafs are willing to part with futures – including someone like AHLer Jeremy Bracco – in order to land Georgiev. The Rangers, however, are asking for more established players, presumably, the likes of Leafs forwards Kasperi Kapanen, Andreas Johnsson or Alexander Kerfoot.

That’s going to be a no-go for Toronto, especially in a 1-for-1 scenario. While the Leafs would potentially move a forward like that to upgrade on their blue line in the coming weeks, it doesn’t make much sense for them to give up one of their primary trade chips for a goaltender who may only play a handful of games for them the rest of the season.
That said, there’s still plenty of time for the negotiation to expand to include more pieces, given the Leafs will probably be buying and the Rangers will likely be selling.

The Leafs definitely want to keep starter Frederik Andersen’s workload reasonable, but with few back-to-back games remaining on their schedule, it’s not out of the question he plays 28 of their remaining 34 games as they battle to lock down a playoff spot.
Backup Michael Hutchinson has struggled this season, without question. But he has played better of late, lessening the urgency to get Andersen immediate help.
Where adding Georgiev makes the most sense is as insurance for the future. The Leafs badly need an upgrade at the backup position next season and could also use an alternate option to giving Andersen a massive contract when he becomes a free agent at the end of 2020-21.
Given Toronto’s cap constraints, meeting Andersen’s asking price may not be wise. And he will be 32 years old by the start of the 2021-22 season, when a big new UFA deal would kick in.
It’s way early to try and forecast that Georgiev could replace Andersen, but he would at least give Toronto a viable option to fill some of the void in net if they opt not to re-sign their No. 1 of the past four seasons.
Georgiev is also gaining a reputation around the league as someone worth making an educated bet on.
“He’s intriguing,” said one executive with another team that is monitoring the situation.
What hurts Georgiev’s value for a lot of GMs is the pending Seattle expansion draft in the summer of 2021. Teams will only be permitted to protect one goaltender, which makes a young backup a luxury few clubs want to give up an established player for. Goalies could be in abundance on the trade market in advance of the expansion draft, too, as teams attempt to get assets for players they’d otherwise lose for nothing.
It’s also still unclear what Georgiev’s ceiling is, especially compared to players like Kapanen and Johnsson, who both had 20 goals last season and have spent a lot of time playing in Toronto’s top six the past two years.

My guess is that the Rangers struggle to get anyone to meet their current asking price, which will leave them contemplating either carrying three goalies the rest of the season or accepting more of a futures package.
If they alter their asking price in the coming weeks, Toronto becomes a much more likely destination.
If a potential deal doesn’t subtract from their current roster, the Leafs may well bite on an upgrade at a position that’s been an unwelcome headache the last two seasons.

Friday, January 17, 2020

Flames douse the Leafs flame with stand out goaltending




This was one pretty good preview for a couple of goaltenders headed to the NHL all-star game a week Saturday.
But after more than 80 combined shots on Thursday, it was David Rittich over Frederik Andersen in a 2-1 shootout for the visiting Calgary Flames against the Maple Leafs. Topping 35 regulation/overtime saves, Rittich denied Jason Spezza, Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner in the final tiebreaker. Matthew Tkachuk put the only one past Andersen, whose busiest patch during the game came in the first 2:15 of overtime when the Leafs didn’t touch the puck.
“That’s the way it works out. You get those two going head-to-head and you get a low-scoring affair,” said Toronto coach Sheldon Keefe of the netminders. “We had really good chances that their guy made good on. A few pucks were rolling on us or bouncing over our sticks, but those things will happen.

“That was a big point for us, down in the third period, a big power-play goal (by William Nylander) when we needed it,” he added of holding third place in the division. “I like that within all that tonight, we didn’t lose our defensive structure (halting a four-game leak of at least four goals against).”
Rittich, a replacement for Darcy Kuemper next week at the all-star showcase in St. Louis, won his second game in as many months versus the Leafs and is now 5-0 in shootouts this year. And he faced the full-bore Leafs attack — Marner in a career- high 25:43 of ice time, John Tavares’ second-most minutes at 26:23 and Matthews at 24:11 as part of Toronto’s four power plays and OT shifts. Both he and Andersen are making their first all-star appearances.

“Who would think, four or five years ago I was in the Czech League and never thinking of the NHL,” Rittich said. “Now, I have an opportunity to be with the best players in the world.”
Asked what his best save was, possibly the splits on Matthews off a 2-on-1 late in the game, Rittich quipped: “I don’t know. Ask my groin.
“That’s 5-0 and that’s awesome. You know in the end of the year, five (shootout) points can make a difference.”
The Leafs, racking up at least three goals in 16 of their past 18 games, have now been held to two or less twice by Calgary, going back to the match there in December.
“You’ve got to tip your hat to (Rittich). We were getting Grade A looks,” said Matthews, who has 27 home goals among 34 overall this season and, despite scoring against every team, has still yet to get one on Calgary.

You know it’s a rough night offensively when the Leafs’ vaunted power play was on its way to coming up empty on four chances. But just before the last one expired midway through the third, Tavares spied Nylander with a free stick in the blue paint.
Calgary had taken a 1-0 lead when Derek Ryan got between Rasmus Sandin and Cody Ceci to tip a second-period Travis Hamonic shot past Andersen.
The Leafs had two early injury scares, losing forward Pierre Engvall for most of the first period after a hit and heavy fall to the ice. He came back to start the second period, but Travis Dermott then took a Sean Monahan shot off the instep that needed some time at the bench to be shaken off. Two other D-men, Morgan Rielly and Jake Muzzin, are already out with similar long-term injuries.

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Leafs beat the Devil in the Dark




Morgan Rielly knew something was wrong the instant Florida’s Aleksander Barkov ricocheted a shot off his left foot on Sunday.
“It definitely didn’t feel good, but you don’t know until you take your skate off,” the Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman said a day after learning he had a fracture.

 “You play through it and deal with the consequences afterwards. Unfortunately, it’s a little more severe than I thought.”

The Leafs, who are already without Jake Muzzin on defence, placed Rielly on injured reserve on Monday. He is expected to miss a minimum of eight weeks during the team’s drive toward the postseason.
“I’m not going to be overly dramatic about it,” Rielly said. “It happens to everyone. It is all part of the journey. I am just going to work hard and try to get back. I want to be healthy and help the team.”
Toronto played its first game without him on Tuesday, and fared just fine. Rasmus Sandin, the prized defensive prospect recalled from the American Hockey League to fill in for Rielly, had two assists as the Maple Leafs took a 3-0 lead in the first period en route to a 7-4 victory.

Auston Matthews scored three more and now has more goals at Scotiabank Arena (27) than the Maple Leafs have played home games (23). He has 34 on the season and trails David Pastrnak of Boston by two for the NHL lead.
Blake Coleman scored three times for New Jersey, which also got a late power-play goal from P.K. Subban.
The triumph ended a three-game losing streak in which Toronto lost by a combined 18-11 scoreline. It is 25-16-6 as it heads into a tough home game on Thursday against the Calgary Flames.
“It is a good opportunity for us as a group here,” head coach Sheldon Keefe said following Monday’s morning skate. “When Muzzin initially went out we played some good hockey and found ways to win games. That has gotten away from us [lately] so it is time to reflect on where need to get better and make up for these types of losses.
“Elite teams don’t get fazed by these situations. We believe we are an elite team and have the ability to take big steps as a group.”



The Maple Leafs currently hold down the third playoff position among teams in the NHL’s Atlantic Division. New Jersey dropped to 17-22-7 after back-to-back victories on the weekend over the Washington Capitals and Tampa Bay Lightning. The Devils came in at 8-4-2 over their last 14 games but largely looked like a team that has already traded its best player (Taylor Hall), fired its head coach (John Hynes) and dismissed its general manager (Ray Shero).
Toronto fielded a makeshift defence with Travis Dermott and Justin Holl in the first pairing and Tyson Barrie with Martin Marincin in its second. Cody Ceci and Sandin, who was recently named the top defenceman at the 2020 world juniors tournament, manned the third.
The 19-year-old played in six games for Toronto at the start of the season before he was farmed out to the AHL’s Marlies.
He got his first assist of the night less than six minutes into the game when John Tavares tipped in his wrist shot to give the Maple Leafs a 1-0 lead. Centre Frédérik Gauthier whipped a shot by New Jersey goalie Louis Domingue from in front of the net to make it 2-0 with 8:10 remaining in the first, and then Zach Hyman deflected in a knuckler by Sandin on a power play only three seconds before the first intermission.
The goals were the 18th for Tavares, the sixth for Gauthier and the 12th for Hyman. The left winger began the season on injured reserve after undergoing an operation to fix a knee injury that occurred against Boston during the 2019 playoffs.
Toronto entered the night 12-2-1 when leading after the first 20 minutes and quickly expanded the margin. William Nylander netted his 20th goal with 17:48 remaining in the second period and the rout was on. Nylander, who had seven goals in 54 games after holding out at the start of last season, directed a shot from Pierre Engvall past Domingue to increase the lead to 4-0.
After Coleman tucked a shot around Frederik Andersen to trim the advantage to 4-1, Mitch Marner found Matthews with a soft pass to the right of the net and the all-star centre easily beat Domingue to make it 5-1 with 8:29 left in the second.
That led to Domingue’s exit after being scored upon five times on 19 shots.
The hat trick was Matthews’s first since the first game of his NHL career on Oct. 12, 2016, at Ottawa. That night he scored four times.
“I figured I’d get another one [sometime]," Matthews deadpanned.
It was his 19th multi-goal game of the season, which leads the league, and he now has 39 points on home ice.
Marner found humour in Matthews going four seasons between three-goal games.
“We have talked about it a couple of times,” Marner said. “I’m sure it is a big one to get off his shoulders.”
The Maple Leafs were coming off an 8-4 defeat by the Florida Panthers on Sunday. The bigger loss may have been losing Rielly. He was the team’s top-scoring defenceman with 27 points in 46 games and leads all Toronto players in ice time.
Sandin filled in admirably in his absence, though, and the Maple Leafs buried the Devils with a cascade of goals.
“His game matches ours very well,” Marner said of Sandin. "He was top-notch. He made something happen all over the ice.” Rasmus Sandin is truly a keeper, so someone will have to move or be moved because Sandin is here to stay.

Rasmus Sandin





Monday, January 13, 2020

Too much time at the beach


I guess it comes down to one thing :  Too much time at the beach.

"Okay boys , pick up all your sand toys and head for the rink "



The Leafs definitely just had their extra off-day in Florida taken away for next season after this one. Well rested entering a game that was technically their “biggest of the season” to date based on the standings implications, this was a big letdown.

It was an impossible game to analyze in terms of team play and individual performances — it was simply a non-competitive hockey game. It was one of those nights where it felt like every turnover ended up in the back of the net and every gamble at the offensive blue line led to an odd-man rush (and goal) against.

It was about as bad as their loss in Pittsburgh in November that clinched the Mike Babcock firing; not as bad in terms of the team outright quitting on the game and each other after falling in a huge early hole, but it was actually worse in terms of the number of goals they gave up, so we’ll call it a close second. The team managed the puck terribly throughout this game, couldn’t get a big save anywhere, and it was way too easy for a team with a dangerous Panthers top six. The Leafs also got outscored on their own power-play despite three opportunities.


The focus is better spent on how the team responds to games like this than it is dwelling on the game itself, but if there is a big-picture concern, it’s that the team isn’t playing tidy games against decent offenses frequently enough. While the underlying numbers are definitely trending in the right way, in the past couple of months, they’ve given up big numbers to the Rangers (five), the Panthers (eight), the Penguins (six), the Hurricanes (six), the Oilers (six), the Flyers (six and three), and three to the Jets (x2).

The game against the Jets’ offense last Wednesday was actually a low-event game defensively with very little conceded in the way of odd-man chances against, but it remains too rare of an instance that this team has kept things orderly against a decent offense — there have been too many transition chances against, and teams with elite lines especially are just eating it up.

Goaltending was a significant part of the story tonight — Frederik Andersen needed to make the stop on the back-breaking 4-0 to start the second period, and he could’ve come up with the 3-0 late in the first period where he got beat short side by Mike Hoffman. However, the missed assignment (Kasperi Kapanen) on the 1-0 for the one-time finish from the heart of the slot and Aleksander Barkov going untouched by both Jason Spezza and Tyson Barrie (-3 tonight) for a finish from the top of the crease on the 2-0 goal were defensive breakdowns first and foremost. Auston Matthews’ giveaway and Tyson Barrie’s clumsy effort getting back on the shorthanded 5-1 goal just after the team finally got their feet underneath them with a goal at the other end was officially curtains on the game.

Some of this is the percentages naturally correcting on Andersen after his amazing 12-3-1 stretch, but he’s been under .900 in six of his last eight starts, so the Leafs need him to find his way out of this funk. Even with the major improvements in time of possession and scoring chances, this team as constructed is always going to need him to be better than average. The calculation on his starts for this week has now changed; Michael Hutchinson was likely going to get Tuesday’s game vs. New Jersey, but Andersen was pulled after 21 minutes and the team now needs a response, both from the group as a whole and Andersen specifically.



One positive: A special shout-out to Zach Hyman (1g, 2a), who was the Leafs’ best player by several orders of magnitude. Another positive was that once they were down 5-0 they made a valiant attempt at a comeback, but unfortunately the damage had opened old wounds, and the sloppy play continued.


No one was asking for another day at the beach