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Maple Leafs vs. Rangers observations: Auston Matthews scores twice in unlucky loss

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The New York Rangers got their revenge, defeating the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-2 and ending their nine-game point streak that started at the end of November against the Florida Panthers.

Not only were the results different between this game and last week’s 7-3 victory, but the style and flavour of the night were unique as well. It had a slower start as it seemed like both teams were figuring each other out before the scoring chances began. Unfortunately for the Leafs, the scoring chances they gave the Rangers were far more frequent, and maybe that’s who the hockey gods decided would get all the luck Tuesday night.

The game wasn’t going to be easy. The Rangers are the top team in the East (now with 45 points) and are putting wins together after a pair of lopsided losses to the Washington Capitals and Ottawa Senators. Given the goals against, I think this is a night where you look at some of the things that can be tweaked and chalk the rest to it just not being your night. And if you don’t believe me, look at the Rangers’ goals.

Three stars

1. Auston Matthews 

The team’s only goal scorer of the night tied the score at one in the first period and at two in the opening minutes of the second. He’s now up to 25 goals on the year.

2. Martin Jones 

Ignore the save percentage. I know that screams “moving the goal posts” (pun intended), but three of those four goals can’t be held on Jones. A lot of the Rangers’ legitimate scoring chances from the hash marks and point-blank in front of the net didn’t cross the goal line thanks to him.

3. Tyler Bertuzzi

Bertuzzi put together another great performance for the Leafs. He was around the net the majority of the game making plays and trying to convert on them himself. He also led the entire team in expected goals for in all situations (87.3 percent).

Quick shoutout

John Tavares

He was honoured ahead of the game with a silver stick for his 1.000th point and threw five shots on goal. His most dangerous came from Mitch Marner who found him alone in the slot.

Gotta be good to be lucky 

Three of the Rangers’ four goals came from an unseen force. The first goal against was your usual player deflection. Alexis Lafrenière ripped a shot, which looked as if it was going wide, and it went off Morgan Rielly’s arm. Jones had his glove up tracking the shot, and instead, it beat him through the five-hole.

Artemi Panarin got his revenge on Jones for that glove save after his power-play goal. His initial shot went off Timothy Liljegren’s skate to William Lagesson and in off his skate.

The first goal is something you throw your hands up at and laugh at. It took at least three separate bounces, with Mika Zibanejad getting the eventual credit for the goal.

Turning in neutral

We can’t completely discredit the Rangers. Their forecheck was strong, and they made it difficult for the Leafs to string together shift after shift in the offensive zone. The Matthews and Tavares line had a few shifts at 30-plus seconds moving the puck around with a few flurries, but the Rangers kept them to the outside for the most part.

There were times when the Leafs made the Rangers’ job of stopping their transition and offensive generation easier. There were three separate turnovers in the neutral and defensive zones that sent the puck right back into the Leafs’ end. Conor Timmins, Nick Robertson and Rielly had noticeable ones and thankfully Jones stopped them. The last one was in the final minute of the period, and Rielly did a good job getting back for some extra pressure on Jonny Brodzinski. Braden Schneider was also a pest on the blue line and stopped at least three Leaf clearing attempts.

Matthews’ two goals

The Leafs benefitted from their D playing lower in the zone on both of Matthews’ goals.

The first started with Bertuzzi getting an underrated second assist as he banked the puck off the boards and into the neutral zone after an extended shift. Rielly quickly transitions from covering the slot to getting the puck from Matthews and skating into the offensive zone. Three Rangers — including the top pair of Ryan Lindgren and Adam Fox — focus on him instead of Matthews. Lindgren thinks he has body and stick position on Matthews but he receives the pass and fires a shot past Igor Shesterkin.

The second goal started with Jake McCabe who is low in the offensive zone along the boards. The Rangers don’t pressure him, so he waits with the puck as Lindgren, Zibanejad and Chris Kreider watch him instead of paying attention to Matthews. Kreider misses the stick lift, McCabe finds Matthews and he beats Shesterkin’s glove side for the second time.

Poor reads don’t pay off

The blue line got the green light to pinch and join the rush to create offence. It worked for the most part, and there were some moments where it cost them. Schneider had an open path to the net ahead of his goal after McCabe set up a pick at the defensive blue line against Blake Wheeler. T.J. Brodie was also caught deep in the Leafs’ end and was a bit late getting back before Zibanejad’s blooper reel opening goal went in.

Game scorecard


Final grade: B+

The Leafs and Rangers were relatively evenly matched at five-on-five, although the latter was the better team overall after the first. Scoring chances were fairly even in magnitude and location, with the Leafs getting a few more low-danger chances by the crease. The puck was on New York’s side and the Leafs didn’t score on the gifts and opportunities they got. The highest danger shot was Barclay Goodrow’s rebound chance from the first period that Jones stopped with his stick. William Nylander had a few chances to score including a sequence where he couldn’t control the bouncing puck and tuck it behind Shesterkin. Tavares had a look that was stopped by Shesterkin’s blocker, Marner had a shot go just wide of the far post, and Bertuzzi should’ve had at least two the way he was playing.

They weren’t dominated, shown up, or run out of the building. The Leafs didn’t get the bounces — or calls — made a few mistakes and lost the game.

Next for the Leafs

The Leafs are in Buffalo on Thursday (7 p.m. ET).

 

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Jays reliever Green and Canadian slugger O’Neill nominated for comeback player award

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NEW YORK – Toronto Blue Jays reliever Chad Green and Canadian slugger Tyler O’Neill of the Boston Red Sox were named finalists for the Major League Baseball Players’ Association’s American League comeback player award on Monday.

Chicago White Sox left-hander Garrett Crochet was the other nominee.

New York Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge, Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani and Kansas City Royals shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. were named player of the year finalists.

The award winners, selected via player voting, will be named Saturday before Game 2 of the World Series.

Green, who missed most of the 2022 and ’23 seasons after undergoing Tommy John surgery, was a high-leverage option for the Blue Jays this past season and filled in at closer over the second half of the campaign.

The right-hander converted his first 16 save opportunities and finished the year with a 4-6 record, 17 saves and a 3.21 earned-run average over 53 appearances.

O’Neill, a native of Burnaby, B.C., also endured back-to-back injury-plagued seasons in ’22 and ’23.

After being traded to the Red Sox in the off-season, O’Neill set an MLB record by hitting a homer in his fifth straight Opening Day. He finished with 31 homers on the year and had an OPS of .847.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 21, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Duke’s Cooper Flagg makes preseason AP All-America team as ACC, Big 12, SEC each place 2 players

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Alabama’s Mark Sears and North Carolina‘s RJ Davis looked into the possibility of leaving for the NBA before deciding to return for another college season.

Their decisions helped their teams earn top-10 rankings in the AP Top 25 and earned both players some preseason honors, too.

Sears was a near-unanimous selection for The Associated Press preseason All-America men’s basketball team released Monday, earning all but one vote from a 55-person national media panel. Davis was right behind him, nabbing 51 votes.

They were joined by Kansas big man Hunter Dickinson, Auburn forward Johni Broome, Arizona guard Caleb Love and Duke freshman Cooper Flagg. Love and Flagg tied for the final spot, creating a six-man team that includes only the ACC, Big 12 and SEC.

Alabama twin bill

Sears was a key cog in the Crimson Tide’s first trip to the Final Four a year ago, orchestrating one of college basketball’s highest-scoring teams.

The 6-foot-1 guard was named a second-team AP All-America after averaging 21.5 points, 4.2 rebounds and 4.0 assists. He was the first Division I player in 31 years to have 795 points, 150 rebounds, 145 assists and 95 three-pointers in a single season while breaking the Alabama single-season record with 26 games with at least 20 points.

Sears worked out for NBA scouts during the offseason before deciding to return to Alabama, earning the Crimson Tide a No. 2 ranking in the preseason AP Top 25.

“I saw the team that we had and I wanted to be a part of it, and bring home Alabama’s first national championship in basketball,” Sears said.

Across the state at rival Auburn, Broome made a quick decision about his future, announcing in April that he would be back for a fifth season.

The 6-10 forward was a third-team AP All-American last season after averaging 16.5 points and 8.5 rebounds while shooting nearly 55% from the floor. With an eye on an NBA future, Broome worked hard on his perimeter shooting during the offseason and his return earned Auburn a No. 11 preseason ranking.

“My main goal is a team goal, which is to win the national championship, to make it as far as I can in March Madness,” Broome said. “When a team shines, everyone shines individually.”

Along Tobacco Road

Like Sears, Davis has similar aspirations after opting to return for his fifth season at North Carolina.

The 6-foot guard was an AP All-American last season and the ACC player of the year after averaging 21.1 points, 3.6 rebounds and 3.5 assists on a team that reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. Davis enters this year within reach of former North Carolina big man Tyler Hansbrough’s all-time ACC scoring record.

“I know there’s more work to be done,” Davis said. “I know my jersey’s not going up until I leave. So there’s some more records to break and some more work to be done. I’m satisfied but I’m not satisfied, if that makes sense.”

Up the road at Duke, Flagg was the only underclassman on the preseason All-America team after arriving with tons of hype. The 6-9 swingman was the No. 1-rated high school recruit out of Newport, Maine and has been projected as the No. 1 overall pick in the NBA draft.

Flagg has the skills of a guard, but can also play inside and has worked hard on his perimeter shooting, giving him the potential to be one of college basketball’s most versatile players. He’s part of a stellar recruiting class that has No. 7 Duke eyeing a deep March run.

Big 12 duo

Dickinson was the biggest move in the transfer portal last spring after leaving Michigan for Kansas. The 7-2 center lived up to the billing, averaging 17.9 points and 10.9 rebounds while leading the Jayhawks back to the NCAA Tournament.

With Dickinson’s return and an influx of talented transfers, Kansas is ranked No. 1 going into the season that begins Nov. 4.

Love’s decision to return for a second season at No. 10 Arizona has ratcheted up expectations in the desert for the Big 12 rival of Kansas.

The athletic 6-4 guard had a high-scoring career at North Carolina and continued it after transferring to Arizona last season. He was the Pac-12 player of the year and a third-team All-American after averaging 18 points per game and making 92 3-pointers.

Love tested the NBA waters this summer before deciding to return.

“He’s had a very successful college career thus far,” Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd said. “He’s kind of this last generation of player that’s going to get better with this extra year, and so I just encourage him to take advantage of it.”

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Browns QB Deshaun Watson ruptured his Achilles tendon and is out for the season, AP source says

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CLEVELAND (AP) — Browns quarterback Deshaun Watson will miss the rest of Cleveland‘s season after rupturing his right Achilles tendon on Sunday against Cincinnati, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press on Monday.

Watson was injured on a non-contact play in the second quarter of Cleveland’s 21-14 loss to the Bengals.

Watson will soon undergo surgery, said the person who spoke on condition of anonymity because the team has not announced the results of imaging tests taken on his leg.

It’s the second significant injury in two seasons for Watson, who broke the glenoid (socket) bone in his throwing shoulder last year.

The 29-year-old Watson went down without being touched on a draw play late in the first half. His right leg buckled and Watson collapsed to the turf. TV replays showed his calf rippling, consistent with an Achilles injury.

As he laid on the ground, there was cheering by some Cleveland fans, leading to some of Watson’s teammates criticizing that behavior during the team’s fifth straight loss.

The injury is yet another twist in Watson’s divisive stay with the Browns.

Cleveland traded three first-round draft picks to Houston and signed him to a fully guaranteed $230 million in 2022. The deal came amid Watson being accused by more than two dozen women of sexual assault and harassment during massage therapy sessions. He settled civil lawsuits in all but one of those cases.

Watson was suspended by the NFL for his first 11 games with the Browns and then made just six starts last season before hurting his shoulder.

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