
The Maple Leafs’ “rock” in net might be chipped. Read More
Andersen hurt in Leafs loss to Panthers — Toronto Sun

The Maple Leafs’ “rock” in net might be chipped. Read More
Andersen hurt in Leafs loss to Panthers — Toronto Sun

HEAD COACH SHELDON KEEFE
On Frederik Andersen’s status:
I guess he’s feeling better. That’s what I’m told. They’re just going to have to give him the night and see how he is in the morning.
On what collision caused the injury:
I don’t know those details.
On if Andersen underwent concussion testing:
He was, he went through that whole process. My understanding is the results were positive on that. Given the nature of the injury, we wanted to take caution and give it time. We’ll give it tonight and see how he is in the morning.
On if he knows whether Andersen will travel to New York tomorrow:
No. We’ll see how he is in the morning and if he’s on the ice for practice and all that kind of stuff. Practice hasn’t been ruled out for tomorrow at this point.


On the team’s play tonight:
I thought we played a really good game. If we play that type of game 100 times, we probably win 99 of them, something in that neighborhood. But you don’t get the points and that hurts. Obviously, we get the 3-1 goal and it should be over from there. We lose our focus a little bit and then we let them get the second one, and we just never really recovered. That was a challenge for us.
On the loss as an example of the team’s immaturity:
Yes and no. The result sucks, right? I don’t think the result is in any way indicative of the way the game went. When you talk about the maturity of our team, a lot of the narrative is how we can’t defend. That’s the best defensive game we’ve played the entire season. I don’t know if we gave up over four scoring chances at even-strength the whole hockey game. That’s the way it goes. We would have liked to have more offence and score more and grow a bigger lead. We had plenty of opportunities to do that and we didn’t. We let them hang around in the game and then, as I said, we did lose composure, I thought. Not composure, but just got distracted by the 3-1 goal and perhaps that’s an area we’d like to have back and do better job of. There’s a lot of things to like about what we did today.
On his level of confidence in Hutchinson if he needs to take over as the starter:
I’m not going to answer that tonight.
On how Hutchinson fared coming into the game after Andersen’s injury:
Obviously, it didn’t go very well but it’s a challenging scenario. He comes in cold and he’s not expecting to play. He goes in the second period and other than a couple of dump-ins, I don’t know if he had any shots. So that’s a tough ask of any goalie. He is part of the team and wants the opportunity and he’s in the net. You’d like to see positive results. I’d take a lot more from the games played for us previous to tonight.
MICHAEL HUTCHINSON (10 SAVES)
On the challenge of coming into a game cold:
It’s definitely difficult. It’s one of those things that you try to do your best to get your body ready and prepared. It’s probably the hardest thing in pro sports as far as going in cold. Baseball players have bullpen, football quarterbacks going in cold can throw a few balls on the sideline. As a goalie, you go from sitting around to jumping right in the game and being thrown right into it. So I thought our guys did a great job playing the second period and letting me get a chance to get my feet wet.
On when he knew he was going into the game:
A few minutes into the second intermission I got the heads up I was going in.
On his mindset if he needs to play more often going forward:
The same as it has been. Just take it one day at a time. It doesn’t matter if you’re playing every single night or once every two weeks, you have to approach each day. Try and get better and try to take advantage of each day and if I happen to get more starts than that, that’s what it is. Hopefully Freddie is good.
AUSTON MATTHEWS (1 GOAL)
On tonight’s loss:
I think it just got away from us. We played 45 to 50 minutes of really, really good hockey. Some of our best over the last couple weeks and then we had the puck quite a bit, we had plenty of chances. It just got away from us, I think. Just maybe a lack of focus and concentration and obviously we didn’t take advantage. These were valuable points that were on the line for us and we were in a really good spot going into the third.
On the team’s reaction after Andersen didn’t return in the second period:
You’ve still got to play. He’s a big part of this team, obviously, but when he goes down, we’ve got faith in Hutch. We just didn’t play well in front of him for the last 20 minutes.
On the focus shifting back to the week’s upcoming games:
Yeah, absolutely. We have three more games. This is a team that is obviously in our division and these were important points. This one got away from us, move on to Wednesday in New York and make sure it doesn’t happen again.
WILIAM NYLANDER (1 GOAL)
On what happened in the third period following a strong first 40 minutes:
I think we just relaxed a little bit and they capitalized on their chances and that’s obviously something we can’t do.
On how difficult it will be to turn the page after tonight’s loss:
No, it’s fine. We take what we did well from this game and move on. There’s nothing about being upset about this.
JOHN TAVARES (1 GOAL)
On a tough loss tonight:
Yeah, obviously disappointing. It’s not going to be a good feeling leaving the rink, especially I think overall the way we played, we got sloppy early in the third and just didn’t do a good enough job exiting our zone clean at times. That obviously led to some of their opportunities. There’s a lot of hockey left so we just have to turn the page as disappointing as this one is we have to get ready for three more this week.
On making sense of the third period breakdown:
Well we came out really well, got a big goal and, for whatever reason, we just didn’t have a good response, good momentum after that and led to some opportunities and they started to get some belief and some momentum and we weren’t able to do a good enough job the rest of the period.

FLORIDA PANTHERS (29-17-5 – 63 Points) vs.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (28-18-7 – 63 Points)
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 2020
| 1 | 2 | 3 | OT | FINAL | |
| FLORIDA | 1 | 0 | 4 | – | 5 |
| TORONTO | 0 | 2 | 1 | – | 3 |
GAME SUMMARY | EVENT SUMMARY | FACEOFF SUMMARY
ON THE SCORESHEET
SHOTS ON GOAL (5-on-5 in brackets)
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | TOTAL | |
| FLORIDA | 8 (3) | 3 (2) | 11 (9) | – | 22 (14) |
| TORONTO | 13 (13) | 14 (10) | 7 (5) | – | 34 (28) |
SHOT ATTEMPTS (5-on-5 in brackets)
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | TOTAL | |
| FLORIDA | 19 (12) | 7 (6) | 17 (15) | – | 43 (33) |
| TORONTO | 19 (19) | 23 (17) | 12 (7) | – | 55 (44) |
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
| Record at Home | 13-7-7 (27 Games) |
| All-Time Record vs. Florida | 43-35-7-5 (90 Games) |
| All-Time Record vs. Florida at Home | 25-16-2-1 (44 Games) |
| Record vs. Eastern Conference | 15-11-5 (31 Games) |
| Record vs. Atlantic Division | 8-7-1 (16 Games) |
| Attendance | 19,156 |
MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS
| Shots | 8 (Matthews) |
| Shot Attempts | 12 (Matthews) |
| Faceoff Wins | 11 (Tavares) |
| Faceoff Win Percentage | 100% (Kerfoot – 1 won, 0 lost) |
| Hits | 2 (Ceci, Engvall) |
| Blocked Shots | 4 (Barrie) |
| Takeaways | 2 (Dermott, Matthews) |
| TOI | 26:45 (Barrie) |
| Power Play TOI | 4:32 (Nylander) |
| Shorthanded TOI | 1:32 (Ceci) |
| Shifts | 25 (Holl, Hyman) |
| 5-on-5 Shot Attempt Percentage | 78.6% (Muzzin – 22 for, 6 against) |
RECORD WHEN…
| Opponent scores first | 9-15-6 |
| Trail after 1 | 3-11-3 |
| Lead after 2 | 20-2-2 |
| Score one power play goal | 9-6-4 |
| Allow one power play goal | 12-9-3 |
| Outshoot opponent | 13-7-3 |
| Monday | 2-3-1 |
OF NOTE…
UPCOMING GAMES:

https://www.instagram.com/p/B8C87c0pqay/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link Read More
Contrite Kapanen back for Leafs tonight — Toronto Sun
By LANCE HORNBY
On a day the Maple Leafs brought the mentors in their lives to town, Kasperi Kapanen shifted uncomfortably in the spotlight of his one-game team suspension.
After 48 hours to think about missing the start of Friday’s practice which he over-slept for — coach Sheldon Keefe called it “a pattern” of such incidents — Kapanen faced the media Monday morning before returning to the lineup against the Florida Panthers.
“It’s not me not caring,” Kapanen said. “It’s just an honest mistake and it happens. I just have to own up to it. It (being forced to watch Saturday’s win over Ottawa from the press box) is something I deserved.
“I just overslept. Obviously, I don’t want my teammates to think that I’m not serious about this or what not, and they sat me out, and that’s that.”
Kapanen admitted the same practice tardiness happened once with the Marlies, and though his old farm coach Keefe could not recall the specific incident, the latter was more concerned that it’s happened a couple of times at the NHL level.

FLORIDA PANTHERS (28-17-5 – 61 Points) vs.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (28-17-7 – 63 Points)
FEBRUARY 3, 2020 ▪ 7:00 PM EST
SCOTIABANK ARENA (TORONTO, ON) ▪
TV: TSN4 ▪ RADIO: SPORTSNET 590 THE FAN
MAPLE LEAFS HISTORY versus FLORIDA
| ALL-TIME RECORD: | 43-34-7-5 (89 Games) |
| ALL-TIME AT HOME: | 25-15-2-1 (43 Games) |
| 2019-20: | 0-1-0 |
| LAST FIVE: | 2-1-1 |
| LAST 10: | 5-2-3 |
MAPLE LEAFS CAREER LEADERS versus FLORIDA
| GAMES PLAYED: | Jason Spezza (49), John Tavares (33), Morgan Rielly (26) |
| GOALS: | John Tavares (20), Jason Spezza (11), Mitch Marner (7) |
| ASSISTS: | Jason Spezza (27), Morgan Rielly (17), John Tavares (10) |
| POINTS: | Jason Spezza (38), John Tavares (30), Morgan Rielly (18) |
| PENALTY MINUTES: | Jason Spezza (20), John Tavares (12), Tyson Barrie (10), William Nylander (10) |
MAPLE LEAFS – PANTHERS TEAM STATS
| TORONTO | FLORIDA | |
| GOALS FOR (Rank): | 187 (2nd) | 180 (5th) |
| GOALS AGAINST (Rank): | 167 (25th) | 164 (22nd) |
| POWER PLAY [%] (Rank): | 35/142 [24.6%] (4th) | 38/161 [23.6%] (6th) |
| PENALTY KILL [%] (Rank): | 113/146 [77.4%] (25th) | 108/139 [77.7%] (24th) |
| SHOTS (Rank): | 1751 (4th) | 1660 (12th) |
| 5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPTS FOR (Rank): | 2646 (3rd) | 2235 (t-22nd) |
| 5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPT % (Rank): | 52.6% (5th) | 49.8% (16th) |
| FACEOFF % (Rank): | 52.9% (3rd) | 50.2% (13th) |
MAPLE LEAFS – PANTHERS NOTES
| FIRST MATCHUP BETWEEN CLUBS: | October 21, 1993 (Toronto 4, Florida 3 OT) |
| ALL-TIME RECORD: | 43-34-7-5 (89 Games) |
| ALL-TIME RECORD AT HOME: | 25-15-2-1 (43 Games) |
| ALL-TIME RECORD ON THE ROAD: | 18-19-5-4 (46 Games) |
| LAST WIN VS. OPPONENT ON THE ROAD: | March 25, 2019 (Toronto 7, Florida 5) |
MAPLE LEAFS MILESTONES vs. PANTHERS
| Michael Hutchinson | Appeared in four games for Florida during the 2018-19 season. |
| Zach Hyman | Selected by Florida in the fifth round (123rd overall) of the 2010 NHL Entry Draft. |
| Mitch Marner | 100th NHL game (Nov. 22, 2017 at FLA) |
| John Tavares | 500th NHL point (Jan. 13, 2017 (NYI) at FLA) |
MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS
| CATEGORY | LEADER |
| GOALS | 36 (Matthews) |
| ASSISTS | 37 (Marner) |
| POINTS | 61 (Matthews) |
| POWER PLAY POINTS | 18 (Marner, Matthews) |
| SHORTHANDED POINTS | 2 (Engvall, Kapanen) |
| PIMs | 34 (Muzzin) |
| SHOTS | 205 (Matthews) |
| FACEOFF WIN% | 57.9% (Gauthier) |
| 5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPT % | 55.4% (Nylander) |
| BLOCKED SHOTS | 76 (Muzzin) |
| TAKEAWAYS | 55 (Matthews) |
| HITS | 92 (Muzzin) |
| TOI PER GAME | 24:15 (Rielly) |
| PP TOI PER GAME | 3:06 (Marner) |
| SH TOI PER GAME | 2:52 (Ceci) |
MAPLE LEAFS PLAYER NOTES
| Frederik Andersen | – Is 10-5-6 at home this season with a 3.16 goals-against average and a .901 save percentage. – Second in the NHL in wins (24).- Has recorded a save percentage over .900 in 24 of his starts, which is tied for fourth-most starts with a save percentage of .900 or higher. |
| Tyson Barrie | – Has five multi-assist games, which is tied for ninth-most among NHL defencemen.- Tied for sixth among NHL defencemen in multi-point games (9). – Has been on the ice for 53 Toronto goals at even-strength, which is tied for 13th among NHL defencemen in on-ice goals for at even-strength.- Leads the Maple Leafs in slap shots taken (43). Lone Toronto skater to have taken over 30 slap shots. |
| Cody Ceci | – One of 19 NHL defencemen to appear in at least 40 games and maintain a 5-on-5 on-ice goals-for percentage over 52 percent (52.3%) while starting fewer than 48 percent of his 5-on-5 shifts in the offensive zone (47%).- One of two Maple Leaf defencemen (Jake Muzzin) to have appeared in 40 games and average at least four hits per 60 minutes of ice time (4.70) and four blocked shots per 60 minutes of ice time (4.15). |
| Pierre Engvall | – Has started 40.5 percent of his 5-on-5 shifts in the offensive zone, which is the fourth lowest percentage among NHL rookies.- Is the lone Maple Leaf to average at least 1:00 per game in shorthanded ice time (1:09) and be even in on-ice goals while shorthanded (2 SHGF, 2 PPGA). |
| Justin Holl | – One of 24 right-handed defencemen in the NHL to have an on-ice goals-for percentage of at least 53 percent (53.9%) at even-strength.- Has the highest unblocked shot attempt percentage at 5-on-5 (52.6%) among right-handed defencemen to have started fewer than 45 percent (44.9%) of their shifts in the offensive zone. |
| Michael Hutchinson | – Has a 3-1-1 record with a 2.02 goals-against average and a .934 save percentage on home ice this season. |
| Zach Hyman | – Fourth among Toronto skaters in points since January 1 (5-5-10; 11 GP).- Has eight points (3-5-8) in seven games against Atlantic Division opponents this season.- Ranks fifth among Maple Leafs skaters in points per game (0.76). |
| Andreas Johnsson | – Has registered 44 (21 goals, 23 assists) of his 64 career points in 62 games at Scotiabank Arena.- Averages 2.00 shots per game, which ranks seventh among Toronto forwards.- Has drawn 11 penalties this season, which is tied for third-most among Toronto skaters. |
| Kasperi Kapanen | – Fifth among Toronto skaters in even-strength points (8-15-23).- Has been on the ice for four of Toronto’s five shorthanded goals this season.- Has 10 points (3-7-10) in 14 games against Atlantic Division opponents. |
| Alex Kerfoot | – Tied for seventh among Maple Leafs in even-strength goals (7). – 10th among Maple Leafs in even-strength points (7-11-18).- Has eight points (4 goals, 7 assists) in 12 games against Atlantic Division teams. |
| Mitch Marner | – Has 10 multi-assist games, which is tied for the sixth-most among NHL skaters.- Averaging 1.24 points per game, which is the 11th-highest average in the NHL.- Averaging 1.49 primary assists per 60 minutes of ice time at 5-on-5, which ranks second among NHLers who have appeared in at least 30 games.- Ninth in the NHL in primary assists (25). His 25 primary assists are the most among NHLers who have appeared in 45 or fewer games.- Ranks fifth among NHL right wingers in shorthanded ice time per game (2:14). |
| Auston Matthews | – Third among NHL skaters in goals (36).- Leads the League with 27 even-strength goals.- Leads the NHL in goals scored at 5-on-5 (22).- Tied for the NHL lead in wrist shot goals (23).- Second in the NHL in multi-goal games (9).- Tied for 11th among NHL skaters in points (36-25-61).- Fifth in the NHL with 205 shots on goal. |
| William Nylander | – Ranks first in goals (24) and second in points (24-23-47) among Swedish skaters this season.- Tied for the Maple Leaf lead in game-winning goals (4).- Has scored the first goal of the game three times for the Maple Leafs, which is tied for the most first goals among Toronto skaters.- One of 11 NHLers to average at least 14:00 minutes per game at 5-on-5 (14:34) while maintaining a goal per 60-minute rate of at least 1.20 (1.27). |
| Jason Spezza | – Averaging 2.08 points per 60 minutes of ice time at 5-on-5 this season, which is the fifth-highest average among Toronto skaters who have appeared in at least 20 games.- Averaging 1.12 assists per 60 minutes of ice time at 5-on-5 this season, which is tied for fourth among Maple Leafs who have appeared in at least 20 games. |
| John Tavares | – Tied for 25th among NHL skaters in multi-point games (13).- Has 12 points (6 goals, 6 assists) in 12 games against Atlantic Division opponents this season.- Has won 58.0 percent (235 won, 170 lost) of his faceoffs on home ice this season, which ranks seventh among NHL skaters who have taken 300 draws at home.- Has an on-ice shot attempt percentage of 54.8 percent at 5-on-5 when the Maple Leafs are leading in games, which is the highest percentage when leading among NHL forwards who have appeared in at least 40 games and average 15 minutes per game in 5-on-5 ice time (15:43).- Has drawn a team-high 14 penalties this season. |
CURRENT POINT STREAKS
| Zach Hyman | Has points (2-2-4) in three consecutive games. |
| Mitch Marner | Has points (1-4-5) in four consecutive games. |
| Auston Matthews | Has assists (2) and points (2-2-4) in three consecutive games. |
| William Nylander | Has points (5-4-9) in seven consecutive games. |
UPCOMING MILESTONES
| Jason Spezza | Five assists from 600 assists |
| John Tavares | Four games from 800 games |
RECENT MILESTONES
| Rasmus Sandin | First NHL goal (January 27 at Nashville) |
INJURY REPORT
| Travis Dermott (Illness) | Did not play on February 1 vs. Ottawa. |
| Ilya Mikheyev (Wrist Laceration) | On injured reserve. |
| Morgan Rielly (Foot) | On injured reserve. |
| Man Games Lost: 126 |
RECENT TRANSACTIONS
| January 31 | Loaned defenceman Kevin Gravel to the Toronto Marlies (AHL). |
| January 31 | Recalled defenceman Kevin Gravel from the Toronto Marlies (AHL). |
| January 30 | Loaned forward Tyler Gaudet to the Toronto Marlies (AHL). |

Barely into the month of February and already the Maple Leafs find themselves in a must-win situation. Correct? Well, that might be overstating it to a degree. No question, however, the Leafs would feel a lot better about their place in the standings if they beat the Florida Panthers on Monday night at Scotiabank Arena. […]
Crucial test against Panthers awaits as Leafs try to keep place in playoff race — Toronto Sun

HEAD COACH SHELDON KEEFE
On tonight’s win:
I thought we stayed with it. We knew it was going to be a really hard game and it was. They played hard, credit to them. Credit to the plan to the plan they put in place, credit to how they stuck with it and how hard they competed here on a back-to-back game for them. It was clear that this game was important to that group in how they played. It was important to us as well. I thought we stayed with it. It wasn’t an easy day for us. Ultimately found a way to make sure we got the one point and then in overtime, being what it is, a bit of an adventure, but I thought that our special teams — both in regulation and in overtime, obviously — were very good. So hats off to them. Hats off to [assistant coaches] Dave Hakstol and Paul McFarland for what they did in our timeouts to get our team set. Really good in that sense that we were able to get two points we really needed.
On why Kapanen was scratched tonight:
Internal accountability is really what it is. You guys will get a chance to talk to him when we get together again on Monday.
On if the scratch was a one-time event:
One-time thing.
On how they came to a decision to scratch him:
We had chatted about it yesterday a little bit and then made our decision. I wanted to sleep on it, we talked with Kappy this morning and made a decision and went from there.
On if Kapanen was late for a meeting:
You guys will get a chance to talk with Kappy on Monday.
On how Kapanen took the news:
I think you guys will get a chance to talk about it. We’ll work our way through it. We’ll try to keep the focus on the game tonight.
On Spezza’s play tonight:
I thought he was excellent. He probably had a little extra jump here today; it was a big time goal that he scored. He got an opportunity there; it was clear he wasn’t going to miss on that one. So that was really good to see, and he had some other chances, he had a lot of jump, I was really happy with how he responded to that opportunity.
On tonight’s win as a step in Hutchinson’s progression:
Yeah, I would say that, absolutely. Sharp, confident, we had breakdowns today and he was there even sometimes when they had a couple looks — whether it was getting behind us on a breakaway or 2-on-1 and they didn’t quite get a shot off — but he was out, he was at the top of his crease, he was confident, he was aggressive. He just looked like he was out there to win the game for us and that’s what you want to see.
On the importance of tonight’s win coupled with a Florida loss:
There is a lot of hockey to be played so I think it’s a little early for us to be focusing much of what’s happening outside of our building, but they’re going to be coming in here on Monday and we certainly know we didn’t like the way that we played and the result we got when we were out there. We know we have to be a whole lot better here Monday and we’re excited for a chance to play for us a really important game.
On Marner’s awareness to take the shot in overtime:
Yeah it says a lot. It was also part of the plan that [McFarland] put in place to be honest. We knew they were going to make things pretty hard on our shooters, on Willy and Matty on the sides so we thought there might be a lane there for Mitch to shoot or to look for John at the bottom. He had the lane and made good on it so probably caught them off guard a little bit.
MICHAEL HUTCHINSON (24 SAVES)
On playing in the Battle of Ontario:
It was cool, it was a little extra added atmosphere. It’s also cool having Spezza on our side of Ontario now. I grew up watching him on the other side of it, so he always has some pretty funny stories about the Battle of Ontario back then. To be a part of it was pretty cool.
On having his confidence back:
It’s one of those things where I feel like I’ve been positive all year even at the start of the year when things weren’t going well. Just kept working hard and now that bounces are going our way a little bit and the team is playing great, we have a lot of confidence and our whole team has that swagger back. Especially after the break or the last three games we’ve played really solid games and really good games so hopefully we can keep it going.
MITCH MARNER (OVERTIME WINNER)
On Hutchinson’s play tonight:
Hutch has been huge for us the last couple times he’s been in that net. A couple of those saves were huge for us and kept us in that game. It’s a big win.
On his overtime winner:
I don’t think anyone really thinks I’m going to shoot that. So first two I got I looked at the net and saw a little bit of a lane and the third one came back and decided to try and get it to the net with [Tavares] crossing in front and luckily it went in.
JASON SPEZZA (1 GOAL)
On his game tonight:
I felt good and it was a tight game, so it was good to make some plays and I thought our line had some good chances. We could have given ourselves the lead there a few times but good to contribute.
On his end-to-end rush in the first period:
Yeah it opened up and got a good look at the net but then I muffed the rebound. I was kind of upset because if I get it up it’s in the net. The seas parted for me a little bit and would have liked to put that it.
On trying to use his shot more and his goal tonight:
I shot it more than I’ve shot it in weeks so maybe we should talk about it more. My whole life I’ve been told I’ve got to shoot the puck more. You know you take what’s there and they shaded off me there and got a good look and Sandin did a good job getting it over to me quick.
JOHN TAVARES (17:52 TOI)
On winning a tightly contested game against Ottawa:
Yeah, I think we had a good idea of what they were going to throw at us. They do a pretty good job in the neutral zone. I think we knew that prescouting coming in. They force a lot of dumps and challenge teams at their own line. They get good transition either way, obviously some guys that can hurt you in those opportunities, so we just tried to stay patient. Obviously we’d love to have gotten a few more but you’ve just got to stay with it. We earned our opportunities and a couple big power play goals.
On the importance of winning one-goal games:
Yeah, I think we obviously just want to continue to build on the way we responded after the break. Just the attention to detail consistently over 60 minutes without the puck and especially being smart at the right times in the right areas. Still wanting to obviously be dynamic, control possession and create opportunity. There’s going to be nights where it’s tighter and there’s not as much going on or pucks just aren’t sliding or they’re bouncing at times and playing a team that’s really trying to frustrate you and slow you down. Just good to stay composed and stay with it and whatever’s thrown our way, I think we want to find a way to handle it, especially with 30 games left.

Sheldon Keefe knows what Mitch Marner is thinking when the Maple Leafs’ star winger makes eye contact on the bench. Read More
Leafs’ Marner and coach Keefe seeing eye to eye, positives result — Toronto Sun
Sheldon Keefe knows what Mitch Marner is thinking when the Maple Leafs’ star winger makes eye contact on the bench.
“He gives you a little look over his shoulder wondering if he’s next or if he’s not, a ‘Why-aren’t-I’ kind of thing,” Keefe, the Leafs coach, said on Friday. “Those are the cues you look for from players, especially your best guys. You’re trying to gauge whether they are tired. Sometimes if they’re tired, they don’t want the next shift and they’re telling you by not giving you the eye contact, that they need a little bit more of a breather.
“When a players give you the eyes he’s telling you ‘I’m ready, so don’t slow this down anymore. Let’s get this going.’”

DALLAS — Leading the NHL in road goals, perhaps the Maple Leafs thought another night out of town would mean sweet dreams of sustaining that scoring at home. Actually, the rare decision to extend their stay here after a win over the Stars on Wednesday night was made in part by the team’s sports science […]
Can the Maple Leafs bring road magic home? — Toronto Sun.

HEAD COACH SHELDON KEEFE
On the team improving to 20-1-2 when leading after two periods tonight:
I thought we had a real good period there, a good process. Obviously, wouldn’t like to give them a goal back like we did but I thought we started really well, we generated a number of really good scoring chances ourselves and maybe we could have had even more goals, especially early there. And then I just liked how we battled. Getting wins like this on the road, late penalty kill, goalie’s out for a long period of time there like this. Those are tough, tough sequences. You’re relying on a small number of guys to get that done. The guys just found a way.
On the team improving at defending late leads with more experience doing it:
Well, I think that’s part of it, for sure. We’d rather not be in that position. We had a two-goal lead and that’s where we would rather be. You score the first goal in the third period and that puts you in an even better spot. But certainly, if you give it back, then you’ve got to just battle and find a way and limit what you give up on the inside and know that they’re going to have a push, but try to keep it from stuff on the outside that you can block or Freddie can see.
On what he has seen from Matthews of late:
I don’t need to tell you that Auston is a very talented player. He puts himself in good spots. Obviously, today Mitch gave him a puck in a great spot and that’s a world class finish. We’ve become accustomed to seeing that and that’s what he’s capable of doing. When he’s really playing and really skating and when he’s engaged in the game he’s hard to stop.
FREDERIK ANDERSEN (31 SAVES)
On how it feels to put two wins together coming out of the All-Star break:
It’s nice. It’s always fun to win. I think we’ve been doing a lot of good things. We’ll look to continue to build on that and keep working at it and, like I said, build off of it.
On what exactly the team has done well these past two games:
Just playing as a group and playing smarter hockey. I think we’ve been good at not giving up too much and controlling the play a lot, going to the net hard and getting some good goals there at big times.
ZACH HYMAN (1 GOAL, 1 ASSIST)
On tonight’s game and the importance of each remaining game:
It was good. We knew we need to start getting on the right side of games. Especially coming off of the break, this was a hard-fought win. We really had to earn this one so it’s big.
On their success getting the first goal of the game on the road:
I think it just happens sometimes like that. We’ve definitely been starting strong on the road these past couple games. It’s important when you start a period you want to start ahead. Usually when you score the first goal more often than not you win the game, so the first goal is big.
AUSTON MATTHEWS (1 GOAL, 1 ASSIST)
On picking up an important two points:
All these games matter. It doesn’t really matter if it’s Western Conference, our conference or our division, all these points matter. They all add up, so we’ve got to make sure we’re taking advantage of these games.
On what he attributes his consistent scoring to:
My linemates. I think we’re just trying to stay consistent each night, just compete out there. We work off each other, make plays and obviously play as much offense as we can. We just want to continue that.
WILLIAM NYLANDER (1 GOAL)
On the team’s staying aggressive on offence against a tough defensive team:
Yeah, for sure. We need to keep doing it. We’re chasing in the standings here so we kind of have a playoff push right now. We’ve got to be sharp every game.
On how they generated five goals against the team with the fewest goals against:
I think we play that kind of game where we’re kind of unpredictable. We were able to create a lot of good, solid quality scoring chances, which eventually lead to goals.
On the play that led to Hyman’s goal:
Yeah, that was just a beautiful hockey goal. We were just smiling on the bench when we saw that goal, it was beautiful.

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (27-17-7 – 61 Points) vs.
NASHVILLE PREDATORS (22-19-7 – 51 Points)
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29, 2020
| 1 | 2 | 3 | OT | FINAL | |
| TORONTO | 1 | 2 | 2 | – | 5 |
| DALLAS | 1 | 1 | 1 | – | 3 |
GAME SUMMARY | EVENT SUMMARY | FACEOFF SUMMARY
ON THE SCORESHEET
SHOTS ON GOAL (5-on-5 in brackets)
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | TOTAL | |
| TORONTO | 12 (12) | 8 (7) | 14 (10) | – | 34 (29) |
| DALLAS | 10 (10) | 15 (13) | 9 (6) | – | 34 (29) |
SHOT ATTEMPTS (5-on-5 in brackets)
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | TOTAL | |
| TORONTO | 21 (21) | 15 (12) | 18 (14) | – | 54 (47) |
| DALLAS | 22 (22) | 28 (24) | 21 (14) | – | 71 (60) |
ON THE ROAD AGAIN
| Record on the Road | 15-11-0 (26 Games) |
| All-Time Record vs. Dallas | 97-91-28-1 (217 Games) |
| All-Time Record vs. Dallas on the Road | 42-53-11-1 (107 Games) |
| Record vs. Western Conference | 13-7-2 (22 Games) |
| Record vs. Central Division | 7-4-1 (12 Games) |
MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS
| Shots | 5 (Muzzin) |
| Shot Attempts | 7 (Holl) |
| Faceoff Wins | 11 (Matthews) |
| Faceoff Win Percentage | 67% (Tavares – 8 won, 4 lost) |
| Hits | 5 (Hyman) |
| Blocked Shots | 5 (Muzzin, Sandin) |
| Takeaways | 1 (Five players tied) |
| TOI | 22:18 (Muzzin) |
| Power Play TOI | 1:29 (Barrie) |
| Shorthanded TOI | 3:16 (Muzzin) |
| Shifts | 28 (Muzzin) |
| 5-on-5 Shot Attempt Percentage | 57.1% (Muzzin – 20 for, 15 against; Spezza – 4 for, 3 against) |
RECORD WHEN…
| Scoring first | 19-3-1 |
| Tied after 1 | 10-5-3 |
| Lead after 2 | 20-1-2 |
| Do not score a power play goal | 11-11-3 |
| Do not allow a power play goal | 14-6-3 |
| Even shots with opponent | 2-1-1 |
| Wednesday | 3-3-1 |
OF NOTE…
UPCOMING GAMES:

DALLAS — Rick Bowness brought out some old Toronto bling for some reverse luck against the high-scoring Maple Leafs. The interim coach of the Dallas Stars showed off the 1938 gold NHL all-star ring that belonged to Gordie Drillon, the Leafs’ last scoring champion in 1937-38, a gift to Bowness’s father Bob from when the […]
Stars interim coach Rick Bowness hopes lucky ring can help beat Maple Leafs — Toronto Sun