Tuesday, May 9, 2023

Do or Die: It's time to BeLeaf



A lot can change in 8 days. On Saturday April 29th the Toronto Maple Leafs finally slayed the 19-year-old 1stround curse by defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning in 6 games. Fast forward just over a week and the Maple Leafs find themselves in a strangle hold down 0-3 to the Florida Panthers. There are a plethora of reasons on why Leafs Nation believes they’re in this situation ranging from the resurgence of Sergei Bobrovsky, the disappearance of the core 4 in the second round and the biased officiating/supplementary discipline from the league. So, how did we get here? 

 


Game 1: 


Toronto started off the first game of round 2 flying, and they looked like the better team hands down through the beginning of the game with 2 dominant power plays where the completely dictated the play and pace. A Nick Cousins goal mid-way through the first took the wind out of Toronto’s sails. Followed by a deflection off Matthew Knies put the Leafs down 2-0 midway through the 2nd frame. Knies would score his first goal of the playoffs along with a Michael Bunting marker to draw the game even at 2 a piece. A bad pinch sent Verhaeghe on a breakaway late in the period gave the Panthers a lead they would not relinquish. Brandon Montour put one more past Sammy for a 4-2 final. The Leafs peppered Bobrovsky throughout this game along with a few unlucky shots off the post gave Florida the 1-0 series lead.

 

Game 2: 


Once again Toronto came out with the pedal down early with Kerfoot and O’Reilly goals putting the Buds up to an early 2-0 lead. Florida did chip away and make the game 2-1 going into the 1st intermission. The start of the second period was disastrous, I think it’s fair to say that in game 2 overall Toronto was the better team. But a bad 47 seconds where Nylander and then Matthews/Marner all had horrendous turnovers near their own blue line which immediately were put into the back of their net. Nylander did go on to elevate his play from that point on, but a combination of big saves by Bobrovsky and ill-timed posts hit left Toronto trailing until the final whistles. These first 2 games were statistically Bobrovsky’s best 2 game stretch of hockey since joint Florida 4 years ago. 

 

An underlying storyline through this contest was the completely legal and un-suspend able play of Sam Bennett. Bennett took an intentional cross check to the chin/neck of Michael Bunting in front of the net, then followed that up with a downward cross check onto Bunting’s Lower back (2:00 Cross Checking) (Far more dangerous and intentional than the Matthews Cross Check on Dahlin which was a 2-game suspension, but Bennett gets the $5,000 fine). Later in the game Bennett would sweep the feet out from 20-year-old Matthew Knies and drive his head into the ice removing the impactful rookie from the series with a concussion. No suspension, No Penalty & No fine. I personally hate to be a fan who complains about officiating, even when I do feel it happens against my team, but George Parros and the department of player safety have time and again shown a bias against the Leafs every chance they get. I feel Parros is unfit in the position he is in and constantly disgraces the league with his decision making due to some weird personal vendetta against the team that accidentally ended his career (Orr v Parros fight https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YL6Z31dVdcA). George, you rarely were able to positively impact a game when you were on the ice, please stop trying to do it from the press box.


 


Bennett's blatant and malicious Cross Check on Bunting



Bennett slamming Knies into the ice
(Puck is nowhere in sight also)


Game 3: 


This felt like a must win game, Toronto needed to take 2 on the road to head home in a best of 3 series. Toronto received an early depth goal from recently scratched Sam Lafferty to give the Leafs an early 1-0 lead. An accidental Verhaeghe collision after a Luke Schenn trip saw Leafs star goalie Ilya Samsonov leave the game with an injury. Joseph Will got his second taste of playoff hockey in relief of Sammy only to have an Anthony Duclair breakaway with 1 minute remaining on the power play knot the game at 1 a piece. 7th defenseman Erik Gustafsson gave the Maple Leafs the lead back after an own goal deflection by Marc Staal. The Leafs again forfeited the lead with a Radko Gudas deflection off Verhaeghe for a tie game. The Leafs were outplayed for the remainder of the period and overtime leading to the Sam Reinhart dagger that gave the Cats a 3-0 series lead.

 

 Other than the disappointing result, a lot of leaf fans were salivating at the tease of Wayne Simmonds making his 2023 playoff debut and responding to the Bennett antics, Wayne was a late warmup healthy scratch so that dream ended before it began. Leafs Nation was “embarrassed” by a lack of a response to Bennett, and while I’m not defending them doing nothing, I wonder if the quiet game was a by-product of having Wes McAuley as one of the officials in the game. Maybe Keefe delivered a message to “leave it alone” as Wes would be keener to penalize or eject Leafs players for this premeditated behavior and Keefe thought it would’ve taken away his clubs’ chances to win the game all together. That being said the penalty count was 2-0 in favor of Florida and it’s hard to believe that the Panthers (2nd in the regular season for penalties taken with 388, behind only Ottawa who took 389) committed 0 infractions through 3 periods and overtime. 


The Mountain in Front of Us

 

It may be an unpopular opinion to say this as this series feels so far out of grasp at the moment, but the Leafs have played well enough that this series could have been 2-1 for either team. Credit to the Florida Panthers who after knocking off the record setting Bruins, continued to roll that momentum into the 2nd round and have given themselves a comfortable 3-0 series lead. Only four teams in NHL history have comeback from a 3-0 series deficit to advance to the next round (1942 Toronto Maple Leafs, 1975 New York Islanders, 2010 Philadelphia Flyers & 2014 Los Angeles Kings). So, with the table set for a choke that would discredit the Leafs round 1 victory or a comeback that has only happened 4 times in the league’s 106-year history, the Leafs are officially fighting for their playoff lives. In the Matthews era, the Leafs have a had a very impressive record when it comes to games where they’re the only team facing elimination 3-0 and usually had their trouble closing out games where they could eliminate their opponent. I wouldn’t be surprised if this team flips a switch and holds onto this series for dear life to force a game 7.

 

If Toronto has any hope to pull of this miracle, it needs to be done by committee. Toronto has had their depth chip into the minimal offence they’ve generated through 3 games, but some key depth players from the regular season/first round have been quite underwhelming against the Panthers; O’Reilly, Accari, McCabe, Giordano, Brodie & Jarnkrok being the most notable in having their play drop off in round 2 when we tend to expect more out of these individuals. I will say right now that the play from Knies preinjury, Schenn and Rielly have greatly exceeded the expectations set on them prior to the playoffs. The elephant in the room is the complete non-factor the “Core 4” have been to different extents throughout these playoffs; I’m choosing to address them in the order of least disappointing to most for this post season. 

 

4.  John Tavares - This player has been the best of the core 4 through the 9 playoff games this year. While John isn’t driving the play consistently and putting up points in mass, he has shown up for the team in big moments to got them into the 2nd round (Game 6 OT winner). Also, John’s play (turnovers and bad decision making) has negatively impacted the Leafs the least. Tavares definitely can/needs to step his game up if he wants to lead his club to the eastern conference finals, but he’s got the smallest step to take of the core 4.

 

3.  Auston Matthews - This one was a toss-up between Auston and the 2nd most disappointing member of the core 4. I chose to give the edge to Matthews solely off the effort and impact he had against the Lighting. Auston had 2 big goals against Tampa in game 4 which sparked the comeback to eventually win that game in overtime and then scored another big goal in game 6 to help the Leafs advance. 34 has been a non-factor offensively in this series, failing to produce and drive the play. His defensive game has been good despite being one of the two costly turnovers in that horrible 47 seconds in game 2. Matthews had a down year, but that began to look up leading into the post season, if he has any aspirations of being a top 3 player in the league, these are the moments he needs to show up. Matthews has all the talent, ability, and drive to elevate his game and drag the Leafs back into this series, the question is will he. 

 

2. William Nylander - There was a razor thin margin for error when it came to who was 2nd and 3rd most disappointing through these playoffs between Willie and Auston. Auston got the edge because the league consensus is goal scoring is valued over all else, despite Willie having assists on both of Matthews big goals in game 4 against Tampa. Willie has arguably been the Leafs most consistent playoff producer over his tenure with the Leafs, pair that with Willie setting a career high this year and notching 40 goals I had extremely high expectations for him against Tampa. He was not bad against the Bolts by any means, but he was just okay. Being okay isn’t bad when your team goes on to win the series, but it was an underwhelming first round for Willie. In round 2 Willie has undoubtedly been the best of the core 4 at driving play, but still hasn’t been able to produce much offence against the Panthers despite his strong play. Willie looked off for game 1, especially when he claimed Marc Staal’s ankles and sent him sliding into the corner giving Nylander a clear lane to drive the net. Willie looked confused and made a standing still pass that didn’t generate anything and that play felt like the turning point for game 1. Willie was part of the other awful 47 seconds where he turned the puck over to Sasha Barkov who went on to score (In Willie’s defense, this is a shot you’d expect your goalie to stop). Willie has all the tools to steal this series for the Leafs, if he continues to drive the play like he has for this series, he is a prime candidate to break through and turn the momentum for the Leafs in game 4. 

 

1.  Mitch Marner - If you looked at Marner’s total points without watching the games you’d think he was driving the play every night. This is unfortunately not the case. Marner might be the most frustrating of the core 4 these playoffs, as he was having a career year and was one of the Leafs better and most consistent players all season. Add a Selke nomination to the mix and you’d think Mitch would be a slam dunk to be the difference maker for the Leafs. Marner has 12 points in 9 games in this year’s playoffs, but 6 of those points came in the first 2 games against Tampa. Marner has only managed to put up 2 assists since game 5 against the Lightning.  Mitch put Matthews in an awkward spot in game 2 which should credit him with half of that costly turnover that cost the Leafs the game, but that’s not why Marner has been the most disappointing of the core 4. Mitch produced one of the most frustrating games I have ever watched in game 3; he was slow and careless with the puck; he was giving away possession out of fear either by a straight turnover or dumping the puck in without chasing it and failed to have any positive impact in one of the biggest games of the season. Marner played game 3 with the worst case of nerves I’ve ever seen. Marner NEEDS to wake up and embrace the physicality and chaos that is playoff hockey, that old time hockey phrase “Take a hit to make a play” has never been more needed in a player’s game after watching how Marner played in game 3. Simply put, Mitch Marner is a hometown kid who wants to win with his childhood team. But the style of game he’s brought these playoffs is just not good enough for a player of his caliber. I like to play devil’s advocate in most conversations about the Leafs as I do love the players we have and want them all to succeed, win and stay in Toronto. But Mitch’s performance in game 3 left me unable to defend this player any further, if this is how he performs in the “Big games”. Mitch, prove me wrong! Prove every fan and reporter saying you’re nothing but a regular season performer wrong. You are one of the most skilled and talented players in the NHL, and the team you grew up loving needs you in game 4 more than ever, it’s time to change the narrative Mitch. 


What to BeLeaf In

 

The Leafs have a big mountain to climb if they want to extend their 2023 post season. On TSN Overdrive the panel was joined by Mr. Game 7 himself Justin Williams who was a part of the most recent 0-3 series deficit comeback with the LA Kings in 2014. On his radio hit he had this to say “You win 1 game and then being down 3-1 doesn’t look so bad. Then a little bit of pressure shifts on them, you battle out another game then its totally turned. The pressure was on you, now it’s all on them.” While the eastern conference finals may feel lightyears away now, 4 games stand between the Maple Leafs and history. Bryan O’Reilly (Father of Ryan O’Reilly) who is a motivational coach had this to say going into game 4 “There is a great feeling cheering for the Leafs that they will come back from this 3-game deficit and win the series. It just feels good to cheer for a team that can do the impossible.” These are just quotes, and in the grand scheme of things really mean nothing if the players don’t show up in game 4. 

 

The ”I Cant’s”

 

I can’t ask you to let these players off the hook if our season ends this week.

I can’t tell you that the management and coaching staff will be back next year.

I can’t guarantee the Leafs play game 1 of next year with the same core of players.

I can’t promise you the Leafs comeback to win this series.

I can’t even promise they will win game 4.

But I can ask you to Be Leaf in this team one more time. It may be the last, but Leafs Nation, it’s all we can do. 

 

Be Leaf in the comeback, Be Leaf in the players and Belief in the process. 

Monday, May 1, 2023

Pushing Past the Perennial Pest: Leafs vs Panthers Preview




How we got here


This weekend we witnessed some monumental moments in the 2023 Playoffs. We witnessed the “Best team ever” and the defending Stanley cup champions be eliminated in their respective game 7’s. In the Boston series the Bruin’s fumbled a 3-1 series lead against the Panthers in the overtime of game 7 to put Florida through to the 2nd round. The Avalanche then dropped their contest in regulation 2-1 to the post season debutant Seattle Kraken. All that wildness aside, the most shocking part of this weekend’s game was the Toronto Maple Leafs slaying their first-round demons by defeating the perennial league powerhouse, the Tampa Bag Lighting. A lot of non-Leafs across the league were quick to point out that Tampa was the better team and Toronto is lucky to get past them. As a die-hard Leaf fan myself, I am not too proud to admit that in games 1, 3 and 4 Tampa Bay was the better team for a majority of those games. With that being said, being the better team doesn’t mean a damn thing if you lose. The Maple Leafs were arguably the better team for most of the series last year against the Lightning, the prior year against the Montreal Canadians and in the 2019 clash against the Bruins. But in all those years where you could argue the Leafs were better than their opposition, they failed to capitalize on weaker rosters, show up in big moments and close out a series. Tampa pulled a maneuver Leaf fans are all too familiar with. Get a lead because you’re playing better than your opponents, then attempt to coast off that until the game ends. This showing of complacency bit the Leafs in 2013 (Blowing a 4-1 lead in game 7 with 10 minutes remaining against Boston) and in 2021 (Fumbling a 3-1 series lead against Montreal). Toronto flipped the script in 2023 and decided no matter what the flow of the game was up until that point, they would be battling to win until the very end which inherently stole them games 3 and 4. This year’s team felt different, an old cliche that many Leaf fans repeated every year, but this time it was true. The Leafs had their core of Matthews, Marner, Nylander, Tavares & Rielly put up 42 combined points in 6 games. Rielly and JT both scored an OT winner in Amalie Arena along with Kerfoot. Accari and O’Reilly were the depth contributors this team has lacked in the past in big moments. McCabe and Schenn added an element of physicality that has been nonexistent in the Matthews era and Ilya Samsonov was the goalie we needed to show up in the big moments. With the weight of the world off Toronto’s shoulders, they are in a prime position to ride this momentum past a formidable Panthers team and into the Eastern Conference Final.

 

In my last article (https://takeitorleafit67.blogspot.com/2023/04/mo-tivation-to-close-out-round-1.html) I chose to show some love to the longest tenured Leaf Morgan Rielly, as he was arguably the MVP overall in the first round against the Lightning. For today’s player highlight I don’t think anyone is more deserving of praise than our Captain John Tavares. As a whole Johnny Toronto’s playoffs were good, but not great. That was until overtime of game 6 in Tampa where JT put an end to the 19-year slump that has plagued his hockey club (John also ended his former club the New York Islanders 23-year playoff slump). It’s only fitting that the hometown kid who joined the Leafs amidst a whirlwind of controversy during his free agent period is the one to end the playoff failure streak. John joined the Leafs in 2018 and was part of 4 first round exits in that time. JT had his playoffs cut short against the Montreal Canadians in 2021 where a fluke collision that led to a Corey Perry knee to the face. Tavares suffered a head injury that ended his series just 10 minutes and 29 seconds into that year’s playoffs. The following year John didn’t quite look like his normal self, many members of the fanbase and media questioned if John was “washed” or “if his foot speed would be a hindrance to the Leafs”. After a full and healthy off-season Tavares came out this year in a return to form in preparation to lead his team over the hump of the 1st round. All the hard work John and the boys put in has paid off this year and Toronto is preparing for a 2nd round clash against the Panthers tonight.


Toronto vs Florida Playoff Preview 




The Panthers don’t strike the same level of fear in Leafs nation the way Lightning and the Bruins have, but the Panthers should not be underestimated by any means! Knocking off the best team in the NHL is no small feat and the Leafs should be prepared for a war in the sunshine state for the second straight series. Below are a few players who I think will be potential x-factors that the Leafs should be focused on. 

 

Matthew Tkachuk - If you picked the Hart Memorial Trophy based off the 1st round, Matthew would be a slam dunk. Tkachuk was the catalyst that sparked the comeback from a 3-1 series deficit against the Bruins. Matthew found his way to the Panthers via trade last offseason that saw Jonathon Huberdeau & Mackenzie Weegar sent the other way. Many questioned who won the trade in the moment but looking back the Panthers made out like Bandits. This is undoubtedly the league’s elite pest in the top tier right beside Brad Marchand. This player gets under your skin, finishes his checks, fights, has an insanely underrated playmaking ability and is a prolific goal scorer. This player is the heart and soul of this Panther’s club and shutting him down will be the biggest obstacle between Toronto and the Eastern Conference Finals.

 

Aleksander Barkov - Barkov is a premier two-way center in the NHL. Sasha Barkov is often voted as the league’s “Most Underrated Player” because he doesn’t play in a traditionally big hockey market where he can be properly spot lighted. The lack of hype around many fan bases for this player is unwarranted, Barkov is a yearly candidate for the Selke Trophy and plays a similar shutdown game to previous opponent Anthony Cirelli despite having a much higher ceiling on offence. The Panthers Captain will be tasked with preventing the Leafs core 5 from scoring at the same rate as round 1.

 

Sam Bennett - Long past the days of a top prospect who was unable to do a pull up and being run out of Calgary, Bennet has found his home in Sunrise as an extremely effective middle 6 pest. Bennett has essentially become “Matthew Tkachuk Lite” he can do all the things Matthew does, just at a slightly lower level. This player will be a thorn in the side of the Leafs, it’s Toronto’s job to not take the bait and feed into this trap.

 

Sam Reinhart - Another player whose value was diminished by a poor run with his former club (Buffalo Sabres) before a career rejuvenation down south. Reinhart was another highly touted prospect who struggled to live up to the initial expectations and was the byproduct Buffalo mismanagement. After finding his footing in Florida Sam is beginning to show why he was selected 2nd overall. This is another player who if left unchecked by Toronto can sink their season. 

 

Carter Verhaeghe - Oh the irony that a former Maple Leaf draft pick has the potential to deliver a dagger to his former club is the Leafiest thing I can imagine. Verhaeghe was shipped out to the Islanders by Lou Lamoriello in a 5 for 1 swap the brought Grabner to Toronto which was mainly to clear out NHL contracts (Of the 5 players shipped out, Carter is the only one to continue a fruitful NHL career). Verhaeghe never really got a shot in Long Island and was traded to the Lightning. He started out in Tampa with a very pedestrian output of 13 points in 52 games. Carter joined the Panthers the following year and hit his stride with the Panthers with 36 points in 43 games. Verhaeghe exploded offensively in 2022-23 scoring 42 goals with 31 assists in 81 games. Verhaeghe was the Panthers who delivered the final dagger that sent the Bruins packing in round 1, Toronto should be very mindful that he could do it to them as well.

 

Aaron Ekblad - Ekblad was a 1st overall selection who has managed to live up to that tag when he’s been healthy. Aaron has had some tough luck in his career with the injury bug setting him back, but when healthy he’s a monster for the Panthers. Ekblad has the potential to stifle the Maple Leafs in a similar way to victor Hedman, but with some form a lingering injury suffered during the Bruins series, only time will tell if Ekblad can be a major X-factor.

 

Radko Gudas - Let’s keep this short and sweet, Radko SHOULD NOT be a factor offensively, and honestly isn’t that special defensively. This player is going to take liberties and finish every check he can on the Leafs. Gudas’ primary focus will be wearing down the Leafs stars through the series. He will most likely be the “Pat Maroon type” player in this series.

 

Brandon Montour - After the departure of Mackenzie Weegar, Florida was left wondering who would be picking up the offence in the absence of one of their top scoring defensemen. Montour has had a breakout 2022-23 season putting up 73 points in 80 games. Montour put up a pair of goals in game 7 to push the Bruins to overtime, and this is a player who must be contained if the Leafs have aspirations of extending this playoff run.

 

I have full confidence that the Toronto Maple Leafs can get past the Panthers (and any other club remaining in this year’s playoffs for that matter), but they will have to battle every step of the way to get past the Cats. Toronto has gotten “the monkey off their back” to quote Auston Matthews and are essentially playing with house money. With the weight of the playoff slump off their shoulders, Toronto is in a prime position to ride this momentum into the next round. Panthers-Leafs game 1 is tonight at 7pm, and I for one am eager to finally watch the 2nd round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs with a horse still in the race.

 

 

 

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

MO-tivation to close out Round 1

I'm aware that for today’s blog, posting a summary of the first 4 games may be a bit of a waste as any Leaf fan committed enough to read this blog undoubtedly has watched all the games and experienced the highs and lows that went with them. So far through this series the Maple Leafs big players have been key factors in every victory. Matthews, Marner, Tavares, O'Reilly and Nylander have all shown up through the first 4 games and have made massive impacts to put the Leafs in their current position. Their times for glory and praise will come, but today we are looking at a player who has been a member of the Maple Leafs since the 1st season after the 2013 playoff loss to the Bruins and the impact he's made in the 2023 playoffs.  


Game 1

The Toronto Maple Leafs played their first real game in many fans eye as of April 18th in Game 1 of the Stanley cup playoffs against the Tampa Bay Lightning. Toronto started the postseason off with one of the worst performances in the Matthews era, allowing a goal 1 minute and 19 seconds into the game. This spiraled and the Lightning potted 2 more goals in the opening frame of the series. Starting the 2nd period down 3-0 was in no fans mind when the puck dropped, but that became the bleak reality. Toronto's power play started the foundation for a heroic comeback with 2 goals in quick succession from O'Reilly & Nylander drawing them back within 1. After playoff debutant Jake McCabe laid a bone crunching hit on Mike Eyssimont at the defensive blue line (that ultimately took him out of the following three games) he was pursued by Nick Paul who tracked McCabe down the ice slashing him looking to fight. Seconds later David Kampf was victim to a weak slashing call on Corey Perry putting Toronto on the penalty kill. Tampa scored on the man advantage putting the lead to 4-2 and ending the Leafs comeback effort. Tampa did put three more past Ilya Samsonov while Toronto's Calle Jarnkrok potted a goal in the 3rd period but was too little, too late. The story line from game 1 was a combination of Wes McAuley's questionable refereeing and the fall out of Michael Bunting’s 5 minute major. During the game Michael Bunting threw a questionable hit against Tampa defenceman Erik Cernak. The debate on the hit's dirty-ness to bias of the officials had Leafs Nation split on if he deserved a suspension, the League decided the hit was worth 3 games. This game was disastrous for the buds putting them at an 0-1 series deficit. There were very few bright spots to take from the first contest as few Leafs played well. With the Goliath Lightning team in front of them, The Leafs needed a strong bounce back in game 2. With Toronto down a top 6 winger, they looked to inject rookie Matthew Knies into their lineup in an attempt to swing the momentum back into their favour. 


The Bunting Hit


https://twitter.com/TicTacTOmar/status/1648496226533535744?s=20


Game 2

Along with the roster change of adding Knies, the Leafs needed their stars to step up. In Game 2 we saw exactly that. Within the first 2 Minutes of puck drop Mitch Marner was able to draw a penalty and then proceed to score for the early 1-0 lead.  Captain John Tavares and William Nylander both put pucks past Vasilevskiy in the 1st to give Toronto the 3-0 lead heading into intermission. Along with 3 of Toronto’s “Big Four Forwards” notching goals in the first period, the Leafs longest tenured defenceman Morgan Rielly was the man leading the charge getting 3 primary assists in first period. Tampa got one back midway through the second when an uncovered Ian Cole walked in from the point to slip a loose puck past Sammy. Rielly put up his 4th primary assist shortly after Cole’s goal with a bank pass off Vasi’s pad to captain Johnny Toronto. The Leafs essentially dominated the remainder of the game having Tavares complete his hat trick, Marner getting his 2nd of the night and a hard-working crash the net 4th line goal by Zack Aston-Reese. Perry did manage to get the too little, too late goal for a 7-2 Leafs final and a 1-1 Series tie. Looking to highlight one player’s performance in this one is more difficult as the entire roster had a bounce back night, the easy and most appealing answer is to talk about JT and the first home playoff hat trick since Alexander Mogilny. But doing that just didn’t feel right. The player who I think deserves the love for swinging the series back into Toronto’s favour is Morgan Rielly. Mo was a major subject of controversy through this season, he missed a large portion of games due to a knee injury mid-season and when he returned, he did not look 100%. Fans questioned if he was still injured or if this was the player, they’re tied to for the next 8 years at 7.5 million dollars. The Leafs needed a push back in game 2 and Mo was a key factor in the Leafs gaining and maintaining the lead through the first half of the game. 


Rielly Assist 


https://twitter.com/TicTacTOmar/status/1649196708159447040?s=20


Game 3

 

With the series knotted at 1 game apiece it was time for the buds to travel to Amalie arena for their first road game of the series. Going into this game I was a big believer in “You just need to take 1 game in Tampa and you’re fine. Doesn’t matter if it’s game 3 or 4, but you need to be going back to Toronto even for game 5” The Leafs opened the scoring when rookie Matthew Knies dished off a slick feed to Noel Accari on a 3 on 2 rush. Tampa answered shortly after to make it 1-1 before Auston Matthews deflected home his first of the playoffs. Toronto was looking to take the 2-1 lead into intermission before a scramble in the crease led to Tampa trying the game 2 goals a piece late in the first period. Tampa then proceeded dominate the following 20 minutes, completely out playing Toronto. Despite a whole period of control by Tampa, the Leafs only found themselves down 3-2 in the game. Controversy found the Leafs again as both Rielly and Braydon Point were battling for position on route to a loose puck in the corner. As the two players bumped, Braydon Point lost an edge and went barreling into the corner boards at a high speed. Rielly was immediately grabbed by Lightning forward Nikita Kucherov and slammed to the ice as the melee ensued in the corner. This scrum led to the first fight in Auston Matthews’ NHL career where he was attacked by fellow former 60 goal scorer Steven Stamkos. (This was the first time in NHL history two 60 goal scorers have fought each other). Rielly was off to the Leafs dressing room for repairs for a suspected broken nose when he was assessed a 5-minute major and match penalty for his hit on Point. After Sheldon Keefe’s protest, the hit was reviewed and deemed clean as there was no intent for Mo to send Point into the boards and did his best to limit contact after Point had stumbled. With Rielly back in the game the Leafs got out of that exchange with the man advantage. Toronto spent the remainder of the game trailing the lighting until playoff juggernaut Ryan O’Reilly shoveled a loose puck past Vasilevskiy with 1 minute remaining in regulation. The Lighting spent most of the overtime period out playing the Leafs, but a strong performance from Samsonov had the Leafs holding on and looking to make it to double overtime. With a face off in the Tampa zone and under a minute remaining in overtime, O’Reilly wins a face off clean back to the Left point where Morgan Rielly sends a seeing eye shot past Knies and O’Reilly’s screens for the OT winner (first OT winner by a Leafs defenceman since Thomas Kaberle in 2003). The Leafs took game 3 against all odds thanks to a player who was almost wrongly ejected from the contest. 


The Point Rielly Collision

 


https://twitter.com/TicTacTOmar/status/1649948698086965249?s=20

 


Morgan Rielly OT Winner



https://twitter.com/TicTacTOmar/status/1649948698086965249?s=20



Game 4

 

With a 2-1 series league the Leafs went into game 4 looking to return to Toronto with a strangle hold on the series. The Lightning would be coming out in full force in this game looking to even the series. After getting another early power play, Rielly bobbled a puck at the offensive blueline that led to a trip on Brandon Hagel. This would be Hagel’s first career penalty shot, but thanks to a kick save from Sammy he will be 0 for 1 for the time being. The Lightning managed to put up a power play marker off a slick pass from Kucherov to Killorn in the blue paint (his first playoff goal in 29 games) giving the bolts an early 1-0 lead. Toronto looked to escape the period only down one, but a common theme of allowing goals against in the last 2 minutes of periods saw Milhail Sergachev rip a wrist shot past Samsonov for the 2-0 lead going into the first intermission. In the 2nd period a strong display of work rate off the puck saw the Leafs deadline big fish Ryan O’Reilly battle with four Lightning players before picking Kucherov’s pocket and sending the puck to the point where a Justin Holl shot was deflected past Vasi by fellow Ex-Blues player Noel Accari. Toronto was looking to draw the game even before a Victor Hedman shot deflected of Lightning Captain Steven Stamkos’ toe to restore the 2-goal lead. Tampa delivers the final blow of the period when Alex Killorn rifles a shot off the bar and in to beat Sammy for his second of the game. On intermission Brandon Hagel delivered a quote that aged like milk, “Pretty much doing the same thing, I’m not surprised the score is 4-1 going into the third period. I mean we thought last game we played good enough to win that game, knew we just had to step it up a little bit more and we did that and the result is kinda going our way”. The Lightning did something thing their first-round opponents are all too familiar with, they got complacent with their effort through 2 and didn’t show the “Killer Instinct” to put the game away. To start this 3rd period summary, I must remind everyone that Tampa had the worst lead in hockey 4-1 (A score line that has scarred Leaf fans for nearly 10 years). In shades of Leafs vs, the Bruins circa 2013, Auston Matthews potted his 2nd of the playoffs with a vintage Matthews shot just before the halfway mark of the final period. A little over 3 minutes later Auston struck again with a fly by tip on the man advantage making it 4-3. With 3:56 left in the period a John Tavares & Ryan O'Reilly screen took Vasilevskiy's vision away, letting a Morgan Rielly shot from the point beat him blocker side. #44 ties the game four, 4-4 with just under 4 minutes to go. Rielly once again shows up in a big way in an even bigger moment. Toronto was the team driving the momentum in OT this time as Tampa only had one notable scoring chance when a Steven Stamkos’ shot from the slot knocked Sammy's helmet off. Shortly after Sammy's big save the Leafs found themselves in the offensive zone with the game on William Nylander's stick before Mikhail Sergachev takes his feet out to draw the rare penalty in overtime. Unfortunately, the top power play unit was unable to end the game, which meant the new look second unit consisting of Giordano, Nylander, Jarnkrok, Knies and Kerfoot took the ice. After Kerfoot sends the puck back to the point, he skates himself into Vasi's line of sight. Giordano lets a wrist shot from the point go that is deflected past Vasilevskiy completing the comeback with a 5-4 overtime victory. Toronto takes a 3-1 series lead heading back home to Scotiabank Arena on Thursday, they now have three attempts to take down the 3-time defending Prince of Wales Trophy champions and advance to the second round for the first time in nearly 20 years. 


Hagel Interview



https://twitter.com/TicTacTOmar/status/1650703272523464706?s=20

 

#44 Ties it 4-4



https://twitter.com/TicTacTOmar/status/1650683184823128070?s=20


The 1st Round MVP (So Far)

 

Going into this year’s playoffs many members of Leafs nation were left scratching their heads as it appeared Morgan Rielly would be paired with the returning Luke Schenn. It appeared that Mo and Luke would be a pseudo 3rd pairing in an attempt to shelter both players from tough Tampa matchups. Despite sheltering this pairing’s responsibilities, it has allowed Luke Schenn to be one of the Buds best defencemen analytically thus far in the series. Rielly on the other hand has been the best defenceman statistically, Mo has put up 2 goals and 4 assists in his last 3 games which has him tied with Adam Fox and Miro Heiskanen for 2nd most points by a defenceman in this year’s playoffs (Neal Pionk has 7 points in 4 games and is 1st for NHL points on defence). As for plus minus, Rielly is in a 3-way tie for best plus minus among all players in the post season. The numbers are impressive alone, but the situation where all these points occurred is what's really special. 4 primary assists in a row to start a must win game 2 was the spark that got the ball rolling for the Leafs to get the series tied at 1, he then pots the OT winner in game 3 to put the Leafs ahead in the series before notching the late tying goal in game 4 that led to a second overtime win. Simply put, the Leafs are not in the position they are without Morgan Rielly, plain and simple. This is a redemption ark for a player who was in the fanbases doghouse most of the season, he has returned to form at the most important crossroads this franchise has faced in a long time. With the fate of the core, coaching staff and management depending on the results of this year’s playoffs, Morgan has elevated his play to an elite level and put his club in the best situation for success that he can. While 3-1 is a cushy situation for most teams, Leafs fan are filled with stress on the outcome of the remaining three games. All the magic that has occurred through the series thus far will feel like a waste if the Leafs can't rise to the occasion and close out a playoff round for the first time since defeating the Ottawa Senators in 7 games (April 20th, 2004). This team is different, these players are different and for Leafs Nations ... the outcome WILL be different.




*Once again thank you to @TicTacTomar on Twitter for his amazing work capturing all the key moments of the game*




Do or Die: It's time to BeLeaf

A lot can change in 8 days. On Saturday April 29 th   the Toronto Maple Leafs finally slayed the 19-year-old 1 st round curse by defeating t...