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Jason Botterill’s best and worst moves as Buffalo Sabres GM – Sportsnet.ca

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Jason Botterill was given a vote of confidence in late May by Buffalo Sabres president and co-owner Kim Pegula – even though she acknowledged it might not be the most popular choice among the fan base – yet on Tuesday the general manager was relieved of his duties.

“The decision was made after many candid discussions with Jason during a full review of our hockey operations,” Pegula said in a joint statement with her husband Terry. “We recognized we have philosophical differences regarding how best to put ourselves in a position to compete for a Stanley Cup.”

The Sabres have the seventh-best odds at winning the 2020 NHL Draft Lottery, which is scheduled to take place later this month, and regardless of where they end up it’ll be new GM Kevyn Adams making the decisions from here on out as Botterill’s assistant GMs Randy Sexton and Steve Greeley were also let go.

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Buffalo went 88-115-30 in three seasons under Botterill’s control and missed the playoffs each year — even with the announced expanded 24-team playoff format this year.

A couple days after Pegula said of Botterill, “He’s our GM. Our plan is to continue with him,” Sabres captain Jack Eichel spoke candidly with reporters and said he was frustrated and “fed up with the losing.” Teammates including Rasmus Dahlin, Rasmus Ristolainen, Jeff Skinner and others all echoed those sentiments.

Hockey Central

Hockey Central breaks down Sabres’ decision to part ways with Botterill

June 16 2020

Botterill was ultimately fired because of a lack of results, not complacency. In fact, since being hired in May of 2017 he was among the more active GMs in the league.

Some of his moves were good, some puzzling, while others clearly didn’t work out in his team’s favour.

With that in mind, here’s a look at Botterill’s most notable transactions as Sabres GM.

Traded Ryan O’Reilly, who had immediate impact in St. Louis

Following a 25-45-12 season in 2017-18 that saw them finish dead last in the NHL, the Sabres were bound to shake up their roster in the off-season. On the first day of free agency, four days after acquiring Matt Hunwick and Conor Sheary from the Pittsburgh Penguins, Botterill pulled off a far more impactful trade by sending Ryan O’Reilly to the St. Louis Blues. The Sabres got Vladimir Sobotka, Patrik Berglund, Tage Thompson plus first- and second-round draft picks in return. The Blues also paid a $7.5-million bonus O’Reilly was owed so making the move when they did saved the Sabres some cash.

Sobotka’s best days were behind him and he wasn’t very productive, while Berglund left the team for personal reasons after suiting up for only 23 games. Thompson, 22, was a first-round pick in 2016 and remains an intriguing prospect with high upside, however a shoulder injury and subsequent surgery derailed his 2019-20 campaign. The first-round pick was used to select mobile American defenceman Ryan Johnson and the second-rounder helped them acquire a solid defenceman in Colin Miller.

Of course, O’Reilly led the Blues to that franchise’s first Stanley Cup championship in his first season with the team, putting up career-high 77 points and earning both the Selke Trophy and the Conn Smythe Trophy for his efforts.

Traded Evander Kane’s expiring contract to San Jose

Evander Kane had just four goals and one assist in his final 21 games with the Sabres and was a pending unrestricted free agent, so it wasn’t a surprise Botterill wanted to get something for him prior to the 2018 trade deadline. Botterill sent Kane to the San Jose Sharks in exchange for a conditional first-round pick, a conditional fourth-round pick and prospect Danny O’Regan.

The first-rounder Buffalo received was later used to acquire Brandon Montour from the Anaheim Ducks. Montour was a solid addition and fits in well on Buffalo’s blue line but he ultimately doesn’t have the same type of impact as a 30-goal scorer like Kane, who signed a seven-year, $49-million contract with San Jose three months after the trade. Only 24 players have scored more total goals in the past two seasons than Kane.

Signed Jack Eichel, Jeff Skinner to max extensions

Eichel inked an eight-year, $80-million extension a year before his entry-level deal expired. This was a no-brainer as Eichel is an elite talent and one of the emerging faces of the game. On some nights that $10-million annual price tag looks like a bargain. Eichel has improved year-over-year despite not always being surrounded by consistent supporting talent.

Botterill only gave out two contracts that were longer than three years during his tenure in Buffalo. Eichel’s and the eight-year deal he awarded Jeff Skinner after Skinner’s impressive 2018-19. Botterill traded for Skinner a month after the O’Reilly move and Skinner’s first season made Botterill look smart when the former Hurricanes star posted a career- and team-high 40 goals.

While Eichel’s extension was a safe bet and an easy investment decision, Skinner’s $9-million annual salary cap hit seemingly has the potential to be worrisome if the 28-year-old can’t continue producing at a high level. Through 59 games in 2019-20, Skinner only had 14 goals and nine assists to go with a minus-22 rating.

Drafted Rasmus Dahlin with top pick in 2018

The one silver lining of an embarrassing 2017-18 season was the Sabres wound up winning the draft lottery. Rasmus Dahlin was the consensus top prospect and Botterill did the right thing by not overthinking it and not trading away the pick. Dahlin had 44 points as a rookie blueliner, finished third in Calder votes and had begun establishing himself as one of the league’s best young defencemen in 2019-20 despite his team’s subpar play.

Besides Dahlin, it’s simply too early to pass judgement on most of the players Botterill and his staff selected in the 2017, 2018 and 2019 drafts. However, players like Dylan Cozens and Casey Mittlestadt have high-end offensive potential and Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen is thought to possibly be a franchise goaltender in the making.

Pinder & Steinberg

The Opener: Thoughts on the Sabres firing Jason Botterill

June 16 2020

Re-acquired a former captain

Botterill’s first real significant trade was when he sent Tyler Ennis, Marcus Foligno and a third-round pick (which was used to select Jack McBain) to the Minnesota Wild in exchange for former Sabres captain Jason Pominville, Marco Scandella and a fourth-round pick (Linus Lindstrand Cronholm) in a deal that added nearly $7 million to Buffalo’s cap.

Pominville had back-to-back 16-goal seasons in his second stint with the Sabres but wasn’t re-signed after 2018-19. Scandella was flipped to the Montreal Canadiens in January for a 2020 fourth-rounder. Meanwhile, Foligno has been a quality role player with Minnesota and Ennis went on to have success with the Maple Leafs and Senators and now finds himself in a top-six role on the playoff-bound Oilers.

Traded for Jimmy Vesey

The high-profile Harvard University star and 2016 Hobey Baker Award winner was coming off three decent seasons with the Rangers averaging just under 17 goals per year, so Botterill sent a third-round pick to New York for Vesey who had one year remaining on his contract. Once in Buffalo, the winger wasn’t as effective, his numbers dipped and now he’s a pending UFA.

Added rental players like Wayne Simmonds, Michael Frolik to no avail

The Sabres began the 2019-20 season going 8-1-1 but the team eventually returned to their losing ways and by the turn of the calendar were back to being no better than a .500 team. So that’s why adding veteran rental players like Michael Frolik in January and Wayne Simmonds on trade deadline day were sort of head-scratchers.

They had lost seven of eight when they added Frolik but were still in the hunt and management was making a concerted effort to snap a nine-year playoff drought. Adding Simmonds didn’t help either, as the team lost six in a row after the trade deadline which saw them fall well behind the pack and basically dashed any remote playoff hopes. In theory, the Sabres should’ve been adding youth and shedding expiring contracts (like they did by getting Dominik Kahun from Pittsburgh) but instead these two futile moves cost them money and a pair of draft picks.

Fired Phil Housley, hired Ralph Krueger

Besides perhaps the Eichel contract and drafting Dahlin, hiring Ralph Krueger could be the Botterill move that ends up having the longest-lasting impact on the Sabres.

Botterill hired Hall of Fame defenceman Phil Housley to be the bench boss in 2017, but besides an improbable 10-game winning streak in November of 2018 the Sabres never really clicked under Housley. They finished the 2018-19 season on a 3-13-2 skid and Housley finished with an overall record of 58-84-22 as Buffalo’s coach before being dismissed.

Although the team missed out on the post-season in 2020, Krueger immediately gained the respect of his players and was 30-31-8 in the 69 games they played prior to the coronavirus shutdown in his inaugural season.

“It’s definitely a different environment (under Krueger),” Eichel told ESPN in October. “He does a really good job with the guys in the room. Our opinions really matter to him. When you do that and you incorporate everyone into your decision making, you get a really good response from everyone.”

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Player grades: McDavid passes, Hyman scores, powerplay dominates, Oilers win Game 1 – Edmonton Journal

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Kings 4, Oilers 7

It was a game of big numbers at Rogers Place that featured 82 shots, 72 faceoffs, 112 hits and 11 goals.  Connor McDavid scored 5 points, Zach Hyman and Evan Bouchard 4 each. Adam Henrique scored his first playoff point in 12 years. And the Edmonton Oilers won the opening game of a playoff series on their home ice for the first time in 12,409 days.

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But win it they did, cruising to a 7-4 win over Los Angeles Kings to establish a 1-0 series lead in the 2024 edition of the seemingly annual opening round series between the two.

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It wasn’t always pretty, but several of the goals sure were. The Oilers held the advantage in play, outshooting the Kings 45-37 with an 18-10 advantage in Grade A Shots as recorded by the Cult of Hockey (running count). 8 of those Grade A shots came on a red-hot powerplay that produced 3 goals in a combined time of 4:50.

Player grades

Cult of Hockey game grades player grades

#2 Evan Bouchard, 7. Moved the puck well for the most part and had 4 secondary assists to show for it, not to mention a tertiary that doesn’t show up on the scoresheet. But was among the defensive culprits on both LA goals that cut a 4-0 lead in half before the end of the second period. Way more good than bad on the night. Contributions to Grade A Shots (GAS): Even Strength +3/-2, Special Teams +1/-0.

#5 Cody Ceci, 6. Played a rock solid defensive game, landing 5 hits and winning the lion’s share of battles. Victimized on a couple of unlucky goals against in garbage time, and in the spotlight himself on 1 of them when his stick exploded making a routine D-to-D pass after a won neutral zone faceoff. His 19:00 at even strength led the team. GAS: ES +2/-3; ST +1/-0. 

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#13 Mattias Janmark, 5. Classic Janmark game in which not a whole lot happened during his 10 minutes of action, pro or con. Tagged with an undeserved -1 on the Ceci-stick-explodes goal. GAS: +0/-0; ST 0.

#14 Mattias Ekholm, 6. Solid with a couple of shaky moments. Made a couple of lunging stops on the same dangerous sequence. His neutral zone turnover led to a Viktor Arvidsson breakaway early in the second, then he was unable to contain Adrian Kempe on the 4-2. Delivered a great stretch pass to Hyman for a breakaway chance. Led the D with 2:00 on the penalty kill. GAS: ES +4/-2; ST 0.

Oilers Kings Hyman

#18 Zach Hyman, 9. All over it from the get-go, driving hard to the net time and again. Scored a goal in each period by materializing in a dangerous spot and converting a McDavid pass from close range. Added a primary assist on Henrique’s goal. Took a goalie interference for another net drive gone wrong. Later drew a call the other way. Hit a post in a scramble. Robbed by Talbot’s best save of the game on a breakaway. Took a knock on the continuation of that play and was in pain, but returned for another shift and appeared to be OK. May have set a record for most hats on the ice for a hat trick. 9 shots on net to lead both teams. Also added 5 hits and was a central figure in the battle all night long. GAS: ES +7/-1; ST+3/-0. 

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#19 Adam Henrique, 7. His first playoff game in 6 years and his first playoff win in 12. Won a battle leading to the first Oilers goal, scored the second himself with a strong wrist shot from range, then earned an assist on the third. Made a great aerial deflection of Ceci’s outside shot. Took a penalty. Among those beaten on the first Kings goal. GAS: ES +4/-1; ST +1/-1.

#25 Darnell Nurse, 6. Played a solid 2-way game with 7 shot attempts, 2 blocks, and 6 hits. Won a lot of battles along the way. Pasted Kempe in the early going with a booming open-ice hit. Safe and sound behind his own blueline until the very late going, when a cross-ice pass caught his skate and found the net to make it 6-3. GAS: ES +0/-2; ST 0.

#27 Brett Kulak, 5. Low event game including no goals at either end of the sheet during his 16 minutes. GAS: ES +0/-2; ST 0.

Oilers Kings Draisaitl

#29 Leon Draisaitl, 8. Nearly wrecked himself on his opening shift when he took a run at a King and missed, but thankfully survived. Did his best work on the powerplay, setting up an RNH tally with a brilliant pass and scoring the winning goal himself with a brilliant shot. Also made a superb pass to RNH on an even-strength 2-on-1 that wasn’t converted. Strong defensively. Drew a penalty. Rock solid on the faceoff dot at 15/24=63%. 3 shots at one end, 2 blocks (!) at the other. GAS: ES =0/-0; ST +5/-0.

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#37 Warren Foegele, 6. Mashed Drew Doughty with an excellent hit in the very early going. Played a simple, solid game. Scored the empty netter that finalized the score line, after first stealing the puck in the neutral zone.

#39 Sam Carrick, 5. Played his first career playoff game at age 32 and got the job done. His line with Holloway and Janmark lost the possession battle but held their own on the scoresheet until the late fluke. He did get tagged with a -1 on the 4-2, but his “mistake” there was to do the job hjje was sent out to do and win a d-zone faceoff. 1 shot, 2 blocks, 4 hits, and 10/18=56% on the dot. GAS: +0/-0; ST 0.

#55 Dylan Holloway, 5. Held his own in his second career playoff game. GAS: +0/-0; ST 0.

#71 Ryan McLeod, 6. Played a fine defensive game between the vets Kane and Perry. 2 takeaways, 2 blocked shots. GAS: ES +2/-0; ST 0.

#73 Vincent Desharnais, 6. Rock of Gibraltar on the blue, with 6 hits and 5 shot blocks. On the receiving end of a nasty low-bridge hit by Trevor Moore that left him in obvious pain as the second period wound down, but returned in the third to finish the job. Best of all, the Oil scored the game winner on the resultant powerplay. GAS: +0/-1; ST 0.

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#74 Stu Skinner, 6. Very good in the first half of the game. Contributed the TSN Turning Point when he got a tiny piece of his pad on Viktor Arvidsson’s breakaway shot, with the Oilers subsequently scoring on the continuation. The game that could have been 2-1, was instead 3-0. The back half of the game went less well with 4 official GA and a fifth which was gloved in and correctly called back after a couple of nervous minutes. Struggled a bit with rebound control. 37 shots, 33 saves, .892 save percentage.

#90 Corey Perry, 5. Put the puck in good places, including on Kane’s stick for a couple of great chances in tight. 3 hits, 2 takeaways. GAS: ES +2/-0; ST 0.

#91 Evander Kane, 6. Was visible throughout, mostly in good ways. Fired 6 shots on net including a couple of powerful wristers. nearly squeezing one through Talbot. Did have a couple of issues suppressing outside shots from the point. Led EDM forwards with 15:45 TOI at even strength. GAS: ES +3/-1.

#93 Ryan Nugent Hopkins, 6. Set up perfectly by Draisaitl for what apepared to be a wide open net, but the puck rolled off his stick. Made up for it a few minutes later with a strong goal mouth finish of another sweet Draisaitl feed. 4 shots, 2 blocks, 2 hits, 1 takeaway, and a team-high 2:04 on the 2-for-2 penalty kill. GAS: ES +0/-0; ST +1/-0.

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#97 Connor McDavid, 9. Became just the 15th player in NHL history with 5 (or more) assists in a playoff game, joining dynasty Oilers Wayne Gretzky (2x), Paul Coffey, Glenn Anderson  and 10 others from other teams. 4 of them were primary assists, including all 3 of Hyman’s tallies. Twice McDavid beat defenders with brilliant spin moves before dishing. Threaded a bullet pass through Matt Roy’s skates for Hyman’s hat trick goal. 3 shots, 3 hits, and uncounted passes. GAS: ES +3/-0; ST +6/-0. 

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CANUCKS PREPARE TO WELCOME FANS FOR STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS 'GAME #2' | Vancouver Canucks – NHL.com

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Vancouver, BC – The Vancouver Canucks today announced that Rogers Arena doors will open at 5:30 p.m. PT, for Tuesday’s Stanley Cup Playoff Game #2, 30 minutes earlier than normal. The enthusiasm and passion of fans wanting to arrive early and not miss the Toyota Party on the Plaza as well as the in-arena pre-game show experience, encouraged the team to ensure the bowl is loud and proud when the pre-show begins at 7:00 p.m.

“Our players could not have been clearer after Game #1 that the fans played a huge part of the victory on Sunday night,” said Michael Doyle, President, Canucks Sports & Entertainment, Business Operations. “Our players are feeding off this energy and we want them to feel it from the second they step out of the dressing room.”

“I know the players and there was a lot of ‘wow’ with how loud the crowd was,” said Rick Tocchet, Head Coach. “Some guys told me they got emotional during it. I’m sure the crowd is going to be just as loud (for Game 2).”

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The Toyota Party of the Plaza will open at 4:30 p.m. with a wide range of activities for fans of all ages. From face-painting and ball hockey to the Michelob Ultra beer garden and live music on the Air Canada Stage with The Anthony LaRosa Band, the North Plaza will be the place to be to get ready for Game #2.

The Canucks also announced that a number of tickets and suites have been released and are available to the public at canucks.com/tickets.

We remind our fans to be cautious of fraudulent ticket sites and activities. Only authentic and verified Ticketmaster resale seats are protected. We encourage fans to avoid off-platform sites and purchasing through social media platforms as we cannot validate the legitimacy of tickets purchased outside of our organization or through Ticketmaster directly.

Rogers Arena will host an official ‘Away Game Viewing Party’ for Game #3 of the first round of NHL Playoffs. Presented by Rogers, the Viewing Party will be a ticketed event, costing $15, with proceeds benefiting the Canucks for Kids Fund. Watch the game on one of the biggest and brightest videoboards in the NHL, be entertained throughout the experience, and receive special Rogers Value Menu food and beverage offerings thanks to Rogers. Visit canucks.com/watch to secure your tickets.

Vancouver Canucks playoff merchandise is now available on vanbase.ca. From locker room exclusive items and jerseys, to car flags, player fanchains and Viper sunglasses, we recommend you order quickly or drop by the Canucks Store at Rogers Arena to get playoff ready.

Follow us on social media, download the Canucks App, and stay connected as unique content, contests and more announcements are made.

Media are reminded that any content-gathering on the plaza requires approval from the Vancouver Canucks Communications Team at [email protected]

Go Canucks Go!

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Auston Matthews turns it up with three-point night as Maple Leafs slay Bruins in Game 2 – Toronto Sun

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In his 52nd NHL playoff game, the same amount that vaulted Doug Gilmour to the Maple Leafs’ franchise lead with 77 playoff points, it was high time for Auston Matthews to step up this spring.

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Toronto’s season likely would be toast if it came home trailing 2-0 to playoff nemesis Boston, with faith already shaken outside the room after a Game 1 clunker. Matthews, highest paid of the Core Four forwards at $13.25 million US a season, needed to have a huge presence in a Game 2 that looked at times as it, too, would be fumbled away.

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He embraced his inner Killer and like Gilmour, had significant shifts throughout the 200-foot stage, capped by the 3-2 winner on a full steam breakaway. Matthews’ three-point night tied a career single-game high and though still trailing Gilmour 77-47 in post-season production, Matthews earned himself and his club and extended runway in this series, tied 1-1 heading home.

“Auston’s all over the stat sheet tonight,” head coach Sheldon Keefe praised to media in Boston. “A goal, two assists, but to me it’s the way he worked — hard, physical, winning puck battles all over the ice.”

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Game 3 is Wednesday in Toronto, where the Leafs could get William Nylander back and now have a very confident Ilya Samsonov in net after Boston chose to take Leaf nemesis Jereny Swayman out Monday for Linus Ullmark.

In the teeth of the Bruins’ TD Garden den, Matthews played a team-high 23 minutes and 24 seconds, had eight shots on Ullmark and delivered six hits. After labouring in vain to reach his 70th goal in the last three regular season games, he finally nailed it in style, one-handing a long aerial bomb from Max Domi at the Boston line away from the flailing stick of Charlie McAvoy, settling the disc and deking Ullmark.

“It’s all about just trying to get to the net,” Matthews said. “It’s a battle at the net fronts out there, and I guess on the goal, just a flip out of the zone and just try to anticipate and time it well.”

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With less than eight minutes to go, it was Toronto’s first lead on Boston in six games all season. Matthews then helped kill the final seconds with Ullmark on the bench, after Tyler Bertuzzi served a potentially devasting penalty.

“There is just a lot of belief and trust in that room in one another,” captain John Tavares told Sportsnet. “A lot of guys have been in different situations over the years. We just continued to stay with it and got rewarded.

“Good for the power play to come through (1-for-16 against Boston this season coming in) and anytime you give No, 34 a look like that, he’s obviously a special player who made a good play.

“The way the guys were blocking shots, closing time and space, Sammy being big and seeing pucks and guys battling hard for him, it was a hard-fought win.’

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The Leafs had lost the previous eight to Boston going back to last year and in their previous eight playoff game versus Tampa, Florida and Boston, had not scored more than two.

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  1. Tyler Bertuzzi #59 of the Toronto Maple Leafs grabs the face of Charlie McAvoy #73 of the Boston Bruins as McAvoy is checked by Auston Matthews #34 during the second period in Game 2 in Boston on Monday night.

    Maple Leafs take historical view of opening defeat with William Nylander status uncertain for Game 2

  2. David Pastrnak #88 of the Boston Bruins and Pontus Holmberg #29 of the Toronto Maple Leafs skate for positioning to the puck during the third period in Game One of the First Round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden on April 20, 2024 in Boston, Massachusetts.

    What we learned in Game 1 between the Maple Leafs and Bruins

 

 

GAME ON

At times Keefe flipped Domi and Mitch Marner on Matthews’ right side to put Marner with his long-time centre. It’s just as important to give Marner some jump, too, especially with William Nylander missing a second game with an undisclosed injury … Tavares’s goal when Matthews found him alone in the slot was preceded by two power play video reviews that went against the Leafs, which Keefe cited in saying he “loved the resolve” of the Leafs. Calle Jarnkrok’s shot that Ullmark gloved was inconclusively not over the goal line, and a Bertuzzi’s mid-air bat looked low enough until the cameras zoomed in … As in Game 1, a good Leaf start came undone trying to show Boston they wouldn’t be intimidated on Causeway Street. Jake McCabe cross-checked Jakub Lauko after a whistle and Boston capitalized, Jake DeBrusk adding to his productive Game 1 setting up Morgan Geekie after David Kampf and Timothy Liljegren got confused on who should make an easy clear.

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Kudos to the Leafs for coming right back 14 seconds later, Matthews corralling a high puck, firing it off of the crossbar, with Domi following up, which made Max and Tie Domi the first Leaf father and son with Toronto playoff goals … The fourth line of Ryan Reaves, Kampf and Connor Dewar once more out-played Boston’s group, though the Leafs cratered in the last 20 seconds of the first period. Samsonov whiffed on a hand-off to Liljegren, giving Charlie Coyle an extra shot that broke Samsonov’s mask. In the time it took the goalie to get his broken strap fixed, Boston had time to double check a faceoff drill, Pavel Zacha winning it, defenceman Simon Benoit unable to tie up David Pastrnak, who then eluded Marner for his first of the series … Starting Ullmark left Boston cosch Jim Montgomery open to criticism, messing with Jeremy Swayman’s 4-0 record against the Leafs this season with only three goals against the past three in regular season and playoffs. But Montgomery was not going to break up what has been an effective rotation.

Lhornby@postmedia.com 

X: @sunhornby

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