The Kids Show Up in Toronto… Just Not the Leafs

by on December 2, 2010 in Uncategorized - 614 Comments

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The Toronto Maple Leafs had one day to stir over their frustrating overtime loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning and were hoping to turn the page and move forward as they welcomed the Edmonton Oilers to the Air Canada Centre. With the Oilers in town, fans were treated to a battle between two of the league’s youngest and quickest teams. Unfortunately for both organizations it seems the inexperience is keeping them among the bottom of the NHL Standings and in most statistical categories. On this night, that youth and excitement was one sided as the Oilers counter attacked their way to a 5-0 victory.

The Leafs came out with a few positives early, most notably a strong defensive effort by Mike Komisarek in preventing an Oiler breakaway chance. Shortly after that, Jordan Eberle, an important piece to the Edmonton puzzle, took advantage of an early opportunity and slipped a shot passed Jonas Gustavsson. The Leafs kept moving their feet and showed no panic. With the focus on each teams ability to skate, the Leafs displayed theirs, forcing the Oilers to take a few penalties. Like a nightmare on repeat, Toronto power play was unable to erase the early lead, generating chances but failing to capitalize. Phil Kessel was close to lifting his team off the goose egg, but the solid and steady play of Nikolai Khabibulin kept the Oilers ahead into the first intermission.

It is always exciting when young NHL stars make the trip to Toronto and the Oilers showed that in tonight’s game to the Leafs’ dismay. After a quick goal in the first period by Jordan Eberle, it was first overall pick Taylor Hall’s time to shine early in the second. Hall used his speed to skate past his check and nicely back-handed the puck past Gustavsson, ending his night. The two curious goals allowed was enough evidence for Ron Wilson to pull Gustavsson and send in the returning J.S. Giguere. Expecting to back-up Gustavsson in his first game since a groin injury sidelined him, Gigeure had to be involved early and settled in for the remainder of the second period. Gigeure’s counterpart Nikolai Khabibulin continued his excellent play and robbed the Leafs of a few chances to get into the game. Preventing Nazem Kadri from scoring his first NHL goal on a nice wrap-around, Khabibulin went post to post and somehow stopped the puck from crossing the line. The sturdy performance from their goaltender gave the Oilers some confidence to press offensively. With 2.2 seconds on the clock, Sam Gagner crashed the net hard and gave his team the 3-0 lead, and sent the Leafs off the ice to a chorus of boos from the home crowd.

The third period saw the frustration continue for the Leafs as Khabibulin shut the door on a few early chances. The confidence on the Leafs bench decreased rather quickly, and without support from the hostile Toronto crowd, the atmosphere turned on them and seemed to swallow up their pace, eliminating any momentum for a comeback. The offense became easily contained and the Oilers took full advantage of the vulnerable Leaf team. Completing a strong night, Taylor Hall scored his second of the game on a nice redirect from a Jordan Eberle pass. The Oilers seized the toxic environment and finished off the Leafs with a Ryan Jones breakaway goal. With just 19 shots on goal, the Oilers completed a perfect Eastern road trip with the 5-0 win.

Quality chances for the Leafs offense were more readily available tonight than in recent times. But with the two goals Ron Wilson referred to as “bad” putting the Leafs in catch-up mode, the offence again didn’t produce the final product needed. After the game Wilson spoke of his decision to pull Jonas Gustavsson from the game.

“I wanted to give our team some momentum. Two bad goals and I think Monster would agree to that. Giggy was ready so I decided to put him in.”

Evident that players were left gripping their sticks a little tight, the offensive dearth was worsened by the steady Nikolai Khabibulin. The tension set in quickly and with the fans impatience grabbing hold, the Leafs attack was smothered with frustration.

“We start the third period and a young team is going to be frustrated. Its the cliche where being scored on in the last minute hurts. We tried to do too much with the crowd stirred. It became one on one and they buried us at that point.”

The cliches have become the norm with this Maple Leafs team. While they are relevant, the fact that players and coaches alike are left without excuses to give speaks to the critically bad position this team is in. The question coming into the season was whether or not the offense could put the puck in the net, and by now this has surely been emphatically answered. Dropping sixteen of their last twenty and being shut out in six games thus far has visibly collapsed the emotion in nearly all Leafs players and the dressing room seems lost on Wilson. The team can no longer hold onto their steady goaltending and improved defensive play as positives. The efforts in both categories are spoiled consistently by an inability to generate offense. Brian Burke is at the mercy of any rival GM interested in movement right now and unless his struggling team can find its own way out of this tailspin, little is likely to change on that front. Only time will tell if Burke is able to fix his team and rescue the season. The lifelines inside the Leafs locker room appear non existent.

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  • FlappyPaddle
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  • reenergized
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  • reenergized

    wiski wrote:

    should really try this
    Kadri-Bozak-MacArthur or Kadri-Bozak-Versteeg.

    I think Bozi between Colby and Chris might be a good line also …

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  • Cameron

    @ reenergized:
    -
    How does that make any sense at all? Boston was over the cap without Kessel on the payroll. They would have liked to move Bergeron at the time, but he was considered to be highly damaged goods after suffering back-to-back concussions that kept him out almost a year. It was a simple numbers game. Chia had locked up too many big contracts before Kessel had his 36 goal campaign, and didn’t see Kessel’s break-out coming. The fact that Boston finished last in scoring without Kessel (after being first with him) demonstrates pretty clearly what he meant to the team. Hardly a cast off. What a joke.
    -
    Dion Phaneuf was traded – not cast aside. His brand of leadership didn’t gel with Iginla annd Regehr, and eventually the dressing room situation came to a head. At the end of the day, it was just easier to move Dion than Iginla and Regehr because he didn’t have a NTC like the other two, and the team had an unmovable anchor in Bouwmeester they were stuck with on their backend anyways. Cast off implies that the team just gave him away, but several GMs expressed their displeasure that they weren’t offer the chance to offer more Phaneuf. And as is, he returned a 2nd line center, a top six winger and a top 4 defensemen – pretty substantial.
    -
    Anyone who thinks Chicago wanted to get rid of any of their talent after they won the Cup is pretty much just kidding themselves for the sake of trying to take a dump on the Leafs while they’re down. Versteeg has the personal endorsement of Jonathan Toews, and we all saw what he is capable of. He is not a castoff by any stretch of the imagination. Seriously, how anyone could even make that assumption is just very foolish, and extremely naive.

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  • wiski

    Does anyone think Phil volunteered to stay away from Chara. Guy’s not stupid. Hard to see it as a long-term move.

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  • wiski

    kabs on 640am

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  • Andrew R

    well – one thing is certain.. if the pending sale of MLSE to Rogers is legitimate (which I think it is) – Burke just bought himself some serious job security – at least until that transaction is completed (which could take several years).. so, he has 2nd life here and a chance to prove to the fans, and the new owners that he can turn this program around. I also think the pressure to succeed now is reduced with this pending transaction – so, all he needs to do is have a winning program by the time the transaction is completed in order to justify his existence and approach with the new owners. maybe Burke can align his approach to be more inline with what Rogers wants vs what current MLSE wants. Unfortunately for Burke and us Leaf fans – he may have just handed Boston divisional dominance for the next decade – and I am not sure that is something which can be overcome… time will tell I guess

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  • Cameron

    @ Andrew R:
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    You give Boston too much credit. Even with our help, they’ll find a way to mess it up.

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  • FlappyPaddle

    New post up!

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  • Penthouse

    i really hope that beauch for Seto shit does really happen when phanuef comes back. it would be a beautiful thing for both sides

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  • reenergized

    Penthouse wrote:

    i really hope that beauch for Seto shit does really happen when phanuef comes back. it would be a beautiful thing for both sides

    Not sure why we would need to wait? we have enough depth to cover Beauch’s departure

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  • reenergized

    Cameron wrote:

    @ reenergized:
    -
    How does …. Blah Blah Blah … Seriously, how anyone could even make that assumption is just very foolish, and extremely naive.

    Really?? well fuck you too … The bottom line is that their respective teams choose them to unload versus other players. That is undeniable regarless of how you sugar coat it. It doesn’t mean that Chicago wanted to unload all those players sure … but they needed to and choose the 4-5 players that for them were “cast offs” etc etc …

    So forgive me if I don’t buy into your verbal diarrhea but also don’t misunderstand my post. I am pleased we have Dion and Colby … still OK with Kessel and Chris even though the sheen is wearing off a bit. Somebody’s “cast off” is another mans treasure …

    Of course that is only my opinion.

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