Better… but not enough

by on November 14, 2010 in Uncategorized - 403 Comments

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Frank Gunn/Canadian Press

Mired in a 7 game losing skid, the Toronto Maple Leafs turned to two young rookies as they looked to spark a surge back into the win column. Summoned by GM Brian Burke on Friday, Nazem Kadri and Keith Aulie   debut on the grand stage and spotlight of hockey Night In Canada for a game against the Vancouver Canucks.

In Kadri the young draft pick will be looked upon to give the sputtering Leafs offence a much needed boost, while playing on a line with Tyler Bozak and Nikolai Kulemin. Head Coach Ron Wilson touched on Kadri’s capabilities and what he expects from the London Ontario native.

“We want to surround Nazzy with detail [oriented] people so that he can show us what he can do offensively with the puck,” Wilson told reporters. “So hopefully that line is able to click. And you’ve got to remember that they’ve only played one practice together but in theory I think it can work.

“Nazzy has the skills that our power play needs and if he does here what he’s been doing in the AHL on the power play then it will pick up some steam I think.”

Necessary to ease the tension, the Leafs came out with a jump and were able to secure the all important first goal. Francois Beauchemin snapped a shot, deflecting off Frederik Sjostrom and passed Roberto Luongo. The early goal lifted the Leafs bench, leading to a Phil Kessel power play goal, ending his 7 game point slump and sending the Leafs to a 2-0 lead.

Looking to find a way back into the game, Christian Ehroff exaggerated the effects of a John Mitchell hit, sending the Canucks to the power play. Causing an uproar on the Leafs bench, Daniel Sedin slid one passed J.S. Gigeure, putting his team on the board. Late in the first period with the Canucks pressing, the Leafs found themselves scrambling in their own end before a wide open Ryan Kesler beat Gigeure with a one-time shot, tying the game at 2.

In a second period filled with strange and theatrical calls, the Canucks ended up on a power play and Ryan Kesler made it 3-2 on his second goal of the game. Maintaining their compete level, the Leafs were able to generate momentum, leading to a Mikhail Grabovski goal and tying the game at 3.

The third period revealed an exciting back and forth affair with both teams trading chances and each goaltender equally up to the task. Poised and on his game, Roberto Luongo gave his team the confidence they needed with many great saves, keeping the Leafs from taking the lead. J.S. Gigeure played a solid game and turned in what was a great performance until he was handcuffed by a Mason Raymond shot, giving the Canucks a 4-3 lead and the eventual game winner. The goal deflated a fragile Leafs group and with the net empty, Dan Hamhuis recorded his first goal as a Canuck, sealing the 5-3 victory.

Although they once again were unable to pull from their losing skid, the Leafs showed signs of life and dictated the play throughout most of the game. Skating well and moving the puck, the line of Tyler Bozak, Nazem Kadri, and Nikolai Kulemin created many chances but could not beat Roberto Luongo, who was the Canucks best player on the night. Kadri who looked tentative to begin the game, eased his way into the action and set up a few chances for his line-mates, while registering 1 shot on goal. Perhaps not the breakout performance he would have preferred, Kadri can look to this game and build from it while making a case to remain with the Leafs.

With a chance for a much needed point, perhaps even two, the game seemed destined for overtime. The soft goal on J.S. Gigeure took the life from the Leafs, and after the game Head Coach Ron Wilson touched on the play.

“We could have had one point, maybe two. The third period was our best period in two or three weeks. The circumstances of the winning goal weren’t very good. Giggy played great all night but we needed a stop there. He would be the first to tell you he had to have that shot. But we kept pushing and we had some great opportunities. I thought our young guys played well, but when it mattered Luongo made some great saves to keep his team in the lead.”

With the strong effort and visibly improved play aside, the Leafs losing streak stretches to eight games and have only 1 win in their last 12 outings. Perhaps a fun and relaxed atmosphere can remove the sting of this loss as the group is scheduled to showcase their talents at the teams Skills Competition on Sunday. Their performance in this game should result in Ron Wilson keeping his lineup in tact as they prepare to host the Nashville Predators on Tuesday. While it is tough to take pride when losing, remaining positive is a must for this team in order to find its way out of a very tough situation.

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  • http://cartika.com Andrew R
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  • Uncle Otis
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  • Mortar

    I just heard that Nazem Kadri has an attitude problem and a right of entitlement issue. That was the “little junior” thing that Ron Wilson was talking about prior to the start of the season. Also, he is not well liked by the senior players on the team because of this attitude. I hope this is not true. If so, he could be gone from the team far sooner than we had hoped.

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  • http://cartika.com Andrew R
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  • Uncle Otis

    @ Andrew R:
    Antropov leaves lots to be desired as a `power forward`but he is the big body in front of the net we need with superb hands.
    I just don`t understand why Burke trades him off then signs or trades for shiny, quick little people.
    We need his original vision..yet to see it for whatever reason.

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  • http://www.mapleleafshotstove.com Schenn

    Mortar wrote:

    I hope this is not true. If so, he could be gone from the team far sooner than we had hoped.

    I don’t think any of us have hoped that he’d be gone from the team!

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  • Mortar

    @ Schenn:
    Yes you’re right. There are some though that want him to develop on the Marlies. I just mean if he has an attitude he may find himself with a different organization. Which would be hard to swallow.

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  • http://cartika.com Andrew R

    leafs_17 wrote:

    @ Uncle Otis:
    first off i know what the word means i was asking what you where referring it to
    cap space means nothing if there is nothing to spend it on

    holy cow people – and I am sorry to quote you specifically.. but honestly, seriously?? I need to defend the fact that cap space, in a hard cap economic system is an important asset – and especially for a team that placed 29th? come on people.. this is getting absurd.. I figured Cameron was just spouting off BS – but, people actually listen to this crap?

    There is an asset life cycle – and escalating cost for assets that you need to keep, an escalating cost for acquisition as time goes on. If you are spending the full cap amount and finish 29th? you are screwed people – and then, not only do you finish 29th, but, you dont own your 1st round pick? holy cow.. the scary thing is I am the one defending myself here..

    ok folks… being a fan is one thing… this is something completely different…

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  • Black_Hawk

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4tIMjB0Xbc
    Love it!Soon they will make one of these for him except in a Leafs Jearshy.

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  • Uncle Otis
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  • Irishfanman
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  • leafs_17

    we can offer sheet Stamkos if Burke for whatever reason decided too? couldn’t we?

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  • Uncle Otis
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  • Uncle Otis

    on a happy note…
    ARRRRRRRRRRRRRGOOOOOOOOOOOOSSS

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  • leafs_17

    @ Uncle Otis:
    ya bosh and company didn’t take a pay cut to do so the heat just had lots of space and by time he becomes UFA he will likely be signed long term making it that much harder

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  • Cameron

    @ Uncle Otis:
    -
    You’re right though, the guilt trip is what does it. Nash couldn’t do it, because he knows that franchise will collapse if he leaves. Tampa is a little different story though. Lecavalier will never waive, and they don’t really have the fanbase to justify spending to the cap. That is something that is going to addressed in the next CBA. Teams like Toronto and Montreal are probably getting sick of teams like Tampa spending nearly to the cap, and then claiming their portion of the equality money (or whatever the hell they call it). Either you’re a sunbelt team and you need help paying the bills, or you’re a contributer, and you can pay your own player wages. I don’t think you should get to stack your team with elite talent you can’t afford and mail the check to Toronto, New York and Montreal….

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  • leafs_17

    @ Uncle Otis:
    well at least we know Kaberle wants to stay ;-)

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  • leafs_17

    @ Cameron:
    thats been my biggest complaint about the new CBA the whole time
    the collective bargaining rights i think its called

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  • Uncle Otis
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  • Gucci Little Piggy

    not a good time in Leaf land

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  • leafs_17

    @ Uncle Otis:
    This is what i found
    http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?story_id=9147

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  • leafs_17

    sorry its revenue sharing lol

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  • Uncle Otis

    leafs_17 wrote:

    @ Uncle Otis:
    This is what i found
    http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?story_id=9147

    Ya,I could live on that.
    Something about franchise players and max money re; home teams,but you are right…they didn`t leave THAT much on the table.

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  • leafs_17

    my guess is bosh gets trade by next season
    some how lol good luck

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  • Uncle Otis
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