“A lot of us have been through this. We understood where we were coming in. We understood today we needed to play our best brand of baseball. And hopefully that was going to be good enough to get a win, and today it was. And then tomorrow it’s just a matter of doing that same thing. Every man in there was aware of where we were and understood that today was an important — to do your job today as well as you could was very important.” — WILL HARRIS

October 25, 2019
Will Harris
Washington, D.C. – postgame 3

Houston – 4, Washington – 1

Q. AJ was just discussing how this reestablishes you guys in the series. From your perspective coming here, down 2-0, losing both those home games in Houston, how does it feel not just to win this, but it’s 2-1 and things can change if you guys carry through this?
WILL HARRIS: Everybody in that clubhouse is well aware of where we were sitting coming here; playing Game 3, down 0-2, losing two games at home. Obviously it’s not the script you’d want to write to start out a World Series.

We believe in each other in there. We know we have obviously a very talented, capable team. It’s just a matter of us finding a way to score more runs than them today.

We played a good brand of baseball today. We made really big pitches when we needed to, flying around the bases, kind of Astros baseball that we’ve all become accustomed to watching. It was a lot of fun. A lot of energy in our dugout today. And we expect to carry that over to tomorrow.

Q. You guys clearly recalibrated. Can you kind of take us through the players-only meeting, who called it, and what it accomplished for you guys?
WILL HARRIS: Yeah, I mean, I got asked about it today. I don’t really like to talk about that kind of stuff. It was some guys said some things that, you know, I think a lot of us maybe were thinking in our head but it’s sometimes nice to hear them out loud.

And the biggest thing was we didn’t want anybody feeling sorry for themselves coming here, because that’s not going to accomplish anything. That was the message.

And we showed up today and from the get we were putting a lot of pressure on them. And we kept it going for nine innings, so it was good.

Q. They’ve scored throughout this postseason so many runs, say, seventh, seventh inning on. How much of a factor was tonight in not allowing that to happen? Does that bode well for you guys going forward?
WILL HARRIS: Well, I wasn’t aware of that, that a lot of their runs were being scored during that portion of the game. I know in Game 2 obviously it kind of got away from us in those innings.

For us it doesn’t change anything. As a bullpen, as a starting rotation, we’re just looking to make pitches, as many as we can in a row, and work our way through a lineup. See what they’re doing, how they’re going to make adjustments.

A seven-game series is a long series to face a team. We’ve done it before, obviously, so we kind of know what to expect.

They’re a really talented team. Their lineup does a lot of different things. They’re very athletic. Those first two guys in their lineup really set the tone for them. And it’s a matter of keeping those guys off base and making your pitches to the middle part of that lineup because they can obviously hurt you.

Q. With the players-only meeting, just the players in general, did you guys view what happened with Brandon Taubman and all the fallout from that as an obstacle or hurdle that you had to push aside and overcome?
WILL HARRIS: No, I specifically haven’t talked to anybody about that. That has nothing to do with really anybody in our clubhouse. That was a completely isolated incident that didn’t involve a player or anything like that.

So none of us are, from my point of view, are really concerned with any of that kind of stuff.

Q. With the longer outing for you tonight, was there anything in particular you used to grind through one plus like that, and was there anything that that changes for you tomorrow?
WILL HARRIS: Yeah, it’s difficult. I mean, the postseason, like, you kind of know that those are coming. I knew in Game 6 against the Yankees that I was going to have one plus that day.

When Zack’s pitch count was kind of getting a little up there, I pretty much figured today was going to be another one of those days. In a must-win situation, AJ was going to lean on some guys. And so I wasn’t caught off guard by it.

I got a little TLC after my outing, I’ll get some more before I get out of here. Get a good night’s sleep, get here early tomorrow, and do what I need to do to be ready to pitch tomorrow.

Q. Bullpens are funny, because they’re always sort of changing and there’s a ebb and flow through the season. AJ was just talking about how right now it’s kind of reached a point where he can throw a different look at different parts of the game with everybody throwing well. Do you guys in the bullpen sort of hit that stride where you kind of realize where everybody is playing off of each other and things are going well?
WILL HARRIS: Yeah, I think that’s kind of been a mark of us since I’ve been here. We’ve always carried a lot of guys that do a lot of different things and gives a lot of different looks. And this year is no different. We’ve got guys that can throw 98. We have guys that throw 88. We have guys that cut it, sink it, we’ve got guys with big curveballs, we’ve got Peacock throwing a slider.

I think it allows AJ to kind of mix and match how he sees fit, and knows that we’re not just carbon copies of one another that are kind of rolling out there. I think that helps. I think when you’ve got me throwing cutters and curveballs followed up by Joe Smith, a completely different arm angle and stuff like that, I know people talk about us not having a left-handed reliever, but I think that variety he has allows us to do that.

Q. Congratulations on the win. I got here late, but I want to know, do you feel the team felt pressure? Did the team understand the historic aspect of falling behind 3-0? Was that part of the mindset?
WILL HARRIS: Yeah, I mean, “pressure” is I don’t think the right — we understood the situation we were in, obviously. This is postseason baseball. A lot of guys in that clubhouse have been here. A lot of us were in that series when we went and got swept in New York in 2017 and came back home and knew we had to win two. Game 7 in Dodger Stadium in ’17.

A lot of us have been through this. We understood where we were coming in. We understood today we needed to play our best brand of baseball. And hopefully that was going to be good enough to get a win, and today it was. And then tomorrow it’s just a matter of doing that same thing.

Every man in there was aware of where we were and understood that today was an important — to do your job today as well as you could was very important.

FastScripts Transcript by ASAP Sports




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WORLD SERIES GAME 3: ASTROS 4, NATS 1. The Astros are trying to become the 14th team all-time to come back from an 0-2 hole in a best-of-seven postseason series, and the first to do so in the World Series since the 1996 Yankees. In all postseason series with the current 2-3-2 format, teams that have taken Game 3 after falling behind 2-0 have come back to win the series 12 of 43 times (28 percent).

“Morgan Rielly scored Toronto’s second goal of the night at 14:31 of the third period. Rielly has three goals over his last four games. He has recorded nine (3-6-9) of his 12 points on home ice this season. The Maple Leafs are 5-0-1 when he records a point in 2019-20.”

SAN JOSE SHARKS (4-6-1 – 9 Points) 1 vs. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (6-4-2 – 14 Points) 4

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 2019

1 2 3 OT FINAL SAN JOSE 1 0 0 – 1 TORONTO 0 1 3 – 4

ON THE SCORESHEET

  • Jake Muzzin put the Maple Leafs on the board at 19:58 of the second period. Muzzin has five points (1-4-5) over his last five games.
  • Morgan Rielly scored Toronto’s second goal of the night at 14:31 of the third period. Rielly has three goals over his last four games. He has recorded nine (3-6-9) of his 12 points on home ice this season. The Maple Leafs are 5-0-1 when he records a point in 2019-20.
  • Ilya Mikheyev collected the secondary assist on Muzzin’s second period goal and later scored the third Toronto goal into an empty net at 19:11 of the third period. Mikheyev has recorded four of his five assists on home ice this season. He leads NHL rookies in even-strength points (3-5-8). Tonight’s game is his third multi-point performance of the season.
  • Auston Matthews scored the fourth Maple Leafs goal of the game at 19:30 of the third period. Matthews led the Maple Leafs in shots on goal (6). He has recorded six or more shots on goal on four occasions this season and has recorded five goals in those games.
  • Jason Spezza registered the primary assist on Muzzin’s second period goal. Spezza has two assists over six games played this season. Both assists have come on home ice.
  • William Nylander had the lone assist on Rielly’s third period goal. Nylander has recorded at least one point in eight of Toronto’s 12 games this season. He has six assists in five career games against San Jose.
  • Mitch Marner recorded the lone assist on Mikheyev’s third period goal and later had the lone assist on Matthews’ third period goal. Marner has five assists over his last four games. Tonight’s game is his third multi-assist and fourth multi-point game of the season.
  • Frederik Andersen stopped 15 shots to earn the victory.

SHOTS ON GOAL (5-on-5 in brackets) 1st 2nd 3rd OT TOTAL SAN JOSE 7 (7) 3 (3) 6 (4) – 16 (14) TORONTO 8 (7) 8 (7) 10 (8) – 27 (22)

SHOT ATTEMPTS (5-on-5 in brackets) 1st 2nd 3rd OT TOTAL SAN JOSE 12 (11) 8 (8) 14 (10) – 34 (29) TORONTO 18 (15) 18 (13) 22 (16) – 58 (44)

NO PLACE LIKE HOME

Record at Home 4-2-2 (8 Games)
All-Time Record vs. San Jose 24-21-5-2 (52 Games)
All-Time Record vs. San Jose at Home 15-9-2-2 (28 Games)
Record vs. Western Conference 2-1-0 (3 Games)
Record vs. Pacific Division 1-0-0 (1 Game)
Tonight’s attendance 19,102

MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS
Shots 6 (Matthews)
Shot Attempts 8 (Muzzin)
Faceoff Wins 8 (Nylander)
Faceoff Win Percentage 89% (Nylander – 8 won, 1 lost)
Hits 2 (Ceci, Holl, Kapanen)
Blocked Shots 5 (Rielly)
Takeaways 2 (Marner)
TOI 26:02 (Rielly)
Power Play TOI 5:51 (Marner)
Shorthanded TOI 1:07 (Kapanen, Rielly)
Shifts 29 (Ceci, Muzzin, Rielly)
5-on-5 Shot Attempt Percentage 78.6% (Marner – 11 for, 3 against)

RECORD WHEN…
Opponent scores first 4-2-2
Trail after 1 3-3-0
Tied after 2 1-2-0
Do not score on the powerplay 3-2-1
Do not allow a powerplay goal 4-1-0
Outshooting opponent 4-1-0
Friday 2-0-0

OF NOTE…

  • The Maple Leafs went 1-for-1 on the penalty kill and 0-for-5 on the power play tonight.
  • – Toronto’s line of Frederik Gauthier, Nick Shore and Dmytro Timashov started 25.0 percent of their 5-on-5 shifts in the offensive zone, which was the lowest mark among Maple Leafs skaters.
  • Auston Matthews and William Nylander were on the ice for a team-high 23 Toronto shot attempts for at 5-on-5. Matthews finished the game with a 5-on-5 shot attempt percentage of 69.7 percent (23 for, 10 against), while Nylander had a 5-on-5 shot attempt percentage of 76.7 percent (23 for, 7 against).
  • William Nylander was 6-for-6 (100%) in the faceoff circle when taking offensive zone draws.
    UPCOMING GAMES:
  • Saturday, October 26, 7:00 p.m. at Montreal Canadiens (Sportsnet, TSN 1050)
  • – Tuesday, October 29, 7:00 p.m. vs. Washington Capitals (TSN4, TSN 1050)
  • – Saturday, November 2, 7:00 p.m. at Philadelphia Flyers (Sportsnet, FAN 590)
  • – Tuesday, November 5, 7:30 p.m. vs. Los Angeles Kings (TSN4, TSN 1050) – Thursday, November 7, 7:30 p.m. vs. Vegas Golden Knights (Sportsnet Ontario, FAN 590)

MAPLE LEAFS 4, SHARKS 1: “A lot of times you look at scores after games you think a team blew another team out, it’s 4-1. Well, you’re at the game – everyone gets their points, just stay patient, just do your thing. You get an empty-netter, you get another one, everything’s good. You get what you wanted, points-wise and then you get to score a goal and get an assist as well. So, I thought it was a good lesson for us tonight and I thought our guys did a good job.” — MIKE BABCOCK.

HEAD COACH MIKE BABCOCK

On tonight’s win: Yeah, I mean, I thought we had a – I mean, our first five minutes was unreal, we could have had four. It was five grade A [scoring chances] in the first and we come away with nothing. What I liked about the game was we had a turnover, they scored, but instead of getting crazy we just stayed with it, stayed with it, stayed with it. We didn’t give up much tonight, which was positive, and stayed the course, got the break there at the end of the period and then just stayed patient in the third too. A lot of times you look at scores after games you think a team blew another team out, it’s 4-1. Well, you’re at the game – everyone gets their points, just stay patient, just do your thing. You get an empty netter, you get another one, everything’s good. You get what you wanted, points-wise and then you get to score a goal and get an assist as well. So, I thought it was a good lesson for us tonight and I thought our guys did a good job.

On what he liked about the win: We just didn’t play as much in our own zone. I mean, you can’t play in your own zone. I don’t care how good you are in there, if you spend too much time there, you take penalties and you get worn out. I thought we had good line changes, I thought we used everybody, I thought our players were engaged. Now, they played last night, you know, so it’s a different program for them too. They won last night, I thought they started real well, we probably got better as the game went on.

On the hit on Matthews in the second period: Yeah, I mean, one thing with that is we’ve got lots of people in League to evaluate it, so I don’t need an opinion.

On if he was concerned Matthews wouldn’t return after the hit: No, I couldn’t understand why he’d leave and then when I saw the hit — because I didn’t see and then I saw the hit in-between periods. So, I said, ‘Okay, I guess that’s why they made him leave.’

On if Dermott or Hyman are available for tomorrow’s game: Not that I know of.

AUSTON MATTHEWS (1 GOAL)

On Muzzin’s equalizer with two seconds left in the second period: That’s huge, gives you momentum going into the [third] period. And, I mean, we felt like we were doing a lot of things right. Obviously, giving up the first goal but, you know, I think we just kept chugging along and obviously a big goal.

On the team believing it would score after generating quality chances: Yeah, we had a lot of good chances, a lot of good looks. I thought our line played pretty well tonight. Great opportunities for the most part, not playing too much D-zone. So that’s always a good sign and when we’re carrying speed and moving the puck together, you know, positive things usually happen.

JAKE MUZZIN (1 GOAL)

On his decision to drive the net at the end of the second period: Yeah, I figured why not? I mean, there’s five seconds left, so, even if they get the puck it’ll be tough to get down the ice and score or have a chance, anyway. So, I just kind of went there and [Spezz] threw it there. It just came to me and sent it in. I mean, kind of lucky, I guess. But yeah, a little time and awareness for the clock and I was allowed to get one. I think it was a big goal for the team to get us going.

On his goal as a relief for the team: I think we felt in here that we had a good period anyways, no matter if we had the goal or not. You know, we did a lot of good things. It was a better game, better start from us, and we built off it so it was nice to – I mean, it’s always nice to score – but I think we were fine in here either way.

MORGAN RIELLY (1 GOAL)

On what the team did well tonight: You know, when we turned the puck over, I thought we did a good job of breaking out, we didn’t spend long periods of time in our D-zone. I thought the forwards did a good job of coming back and, you know, tracking back and not giving up on rushes. Just an all-around group effort. I think it’s important that we focus on that moving forward. And try to do it again.

On Nylander setting up his goal: Yeah, great player. You know, he likes to turn up like that in the offensive zone and he’s got great vision. Great play by Willy.

On the team working to bounce back tonight: Well, I just, you know, I thought that we were motivated. I think that, you know, we wanted to come out and have a good effort. I think when you look back at our past couple games, there’s room for improvement here. And, you know, we’re aware of that, we talked about that and been pretty open about that. I thought we came in and I thought we had a good attitude this morning. You know, lots of energy and I thought it carried over. I thought the guys showed up and did well.

CELTICS 112, RAPTORS 106: “We had 10 offensive fouls tonight. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a game like that before.” –NICK NURSE.

TORONTO: 21/28/33/24=106

BOSTON: 22/28/20/36=112.

Raptors: Pascal Siakam 33 points, eight rebounds; Kyle Lowry 29 points, seven assists; Serge Ibaka 13 points, eight rebounds; OG Anunoby nine points, eight rebounds; Fred VanVleet eight points.

Celtics: Jaylen Brown 25 points, nine rebounds; Jayson Tatum 25 points, nine rebounds, Kemba Walker 22 points; Gordon Hayward 15 points, eight rebounds; Marcus Smart, 10 points.