









MCCAW INJURY UPDATE
After a short period of experiencing discomfort in his left knee, Patrick McCaw underwent arthroscopic surgery Wednesday to determine and correct the issue. A benign mass on the back of the knee was removed. The procedure was performed by Dr. Riley Williams at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York.
A timetable for McCaw’s return has not been established. He will be reevaluated in four weeks and his condition will be updated as appropriate. He will not travel with the Raptors as they begin a five-game west coast road swing on Friday.
McCaw has totaled eight points, six rebounds, three assists, three steals and 40 minutes in two games this season.


HEAD COACH MIKE BABCOCK On tonight’s game: We knew as a coaching staff – obviously, we did the pre-scout – we knew what we were in for. We knew it was going to be a grind. After the first period, the teams were on pace for 21-21 in shots. They did a real good job in the neutral zone; they did a real good job in their own zone blocking shots and staying on the inside. They just stayed with it. That’s what they’ve been doing. They’ve got good leadership there. If you look at it, they’ve got stars in three positions in Kopitar, Doughty and then in net [Quick]. So, they’ve got some leadership for the group as they try to build it. Obviously, their coach and their staff did a real good job. They made it hard, there was no free space. It was hard, but I thought it was a really good game for our team to just stay the course, this is where we are, do things right, don’t cheat and you’ll be rewarded in the end.
On Tavares’ return to the lineup: We were just talking about it. It doesn’t matter what you do, how hard you train, what work. He was fine but you’re not playing NHL games. I imagine Hyman is going to go through a stretch too. It’s hard when you’re sitting out and everyone else is practicing no matter who you work with and how good the development team is and all that stuff, it’s still not NHL hockey.
On if Dermott is rounding into his usual form: Yeah, the offensive side. You’ve still got to – you can’t have chances, that’s the key. Chances – you’ve got to be safe. Do all the other stuff and be safe and then you’re like the old guy.
On Petan’s performance tonight: I thought it was good for Petey. He went to work. He went down, went to work, came back and, obviously, there’s a guy for that spot so there’s not going to be a lot of opportunity. [Moore] is a real good hockey player too. It was an opportunity and we wanted to see Pete. Good for him.
On the Matthews line scoring a pair of goals despite few chances: I thought it was a tough night for every line. I thought Kerfoot’s line was real good, but there wasn’t a whole lot. From their end, they didn’t generate anything either. They had to throw it in, couldn’t get it through from the point, the blocked shots. Some people would think it was ugly, I thought it was beautiful.
On what Kerfoot brings to the team: I think Kerf is a good hockey player. A real smart, smart person, a good person, he works hard. He’s greasy, he’s competitive, he knows how to play, he’s just going to get better and better. I think we can have an unbelievable line there with [Mikheyev] and [Kapanen] once we get it organized and they get to know each other and feel good.
On Marner taking shorthanded faceoffs: I forget what happened, it’s just the way it was. Hyman will take those right-handed faceoffs when he’s back. Hyms is good at it, he’ll work at it. [Shore] has done a heck of a job for us there, really good job.
On why he thinks tonight was a beautiful game: We need to go through that. We need to figure out who we are and the harder the game is the better it is for the team. Now, would you like to win by a touchdown and everyone relax and all that? Yeah, but we’re not getting anywhere like that. This is important to do. You give up one goal, you play well without the puck, the goalie makes some saves, we didn’t win it on special teams, we had to grind. It’s good for us.
On the Kings being a different style of team than McLellan’s previous teams: That’s what I said this morning — every team you coach is different. The reason it’s different is you have a different group of guys. That’s how he has to coach to have success with this team. I talked to him for a long time this morning, did the pre-scout, have a pretty good handle on what the program is there. He’s going to do a real nice job
. On if Hyman will be available next game: I don’t know.
ALEX KERFOOT (1 GOAL)
On the hit he received by Jeff Carter in the first period: It was a pretty big hit. He made a good play; I had my head down a little bit and saw him at the last second but couldn’t get out of the way.
On his second period goal: It was good. It was kind of a broken play. There was a good line change by [Moore] and they turned the puck over right at the blue line and I was fortunate enough to be in a good spot and tried to put it on net and it went in.
On what the Kings did well tonight: They play well defensively. They lock it down pretty good, they don’t give up a lot off the rush, they kind of stay back and they’re tough to play against. We played them pretty good, stuck with our game plan and were able to get a couple there at the end.
AUSTON MATTHEWS (1 GOAL, 1 ASSIST)
On the team’s performance tonight: I think we just stayed patient throughout the whole game. Not really much going on, I guess, in the first two periods, but we tried to stay patient and tried to play as little in our zone as we could, just tried to break out fast. Obviously, a tight game there and couple of big goals in the third.
On the challenge of staying patient when the opponent tries to slow the team down: It’s tough, but, I mean, that’s what a lot of teams tend to do, especially against us. We can do a better job of getting through the neutral zone and keeping it a bit more simple so we can get in the offensive zone and play in there. At times, games are going to be like that. Just try to stay patient, work with one another and continue to push through.
JAKE MUZZIN (22:19 TOI)
On playing his former team: It was weird. It was weird. A couple of chirps, a couple of laughs, but, at the end, of the day, you’re still trying to do your job and play hard. I don’t know, some funny moments and some serious ones. It was fun.
On if Kopitar told him to go to the penalty box in the second period: Yeah, I was complaining. It was a penalty, though.
On if he had any fun moments during the game with Doughty: He tripped me one time. I tripped him. A couple of subtle jokes back and forth, nothing crazy. I didn’t get him too fired up
. WILLIAM NYLANDER (1 GOAL, 1 ASSIST)
On what he liked about the team’s effort: I thought we were patient. We didn’t try to force much. We grinded through the game.
On if it’s good to be able to win a tight game like this: Yeah, of course. When it’s 1-1 going into the third, we’ve got to be able to win those games. We’ve been tied going into a lot of third periods and this was a good start in the right direction
JOHN TAVARES (18:00 TOI)
On how it felt to get back into game action: Not bad. Obviously, probably a little bit of rust and just getting back into the rhythm of things. Overall, I think physically I felt pretty good. Certainly, I can play a lot better, but good to get back in it. It was a tight hockey game and just great we came through at the end. Big couple of goals by [Matthews’] line. On missing an open net in the first period: Obviously, I’d love to have it back. I think I had way more time than I thought and knowing the type of goalie Quick is I got underneath it. It is what it is. You just move on and get ready for the next opportunity. Just glad that at the end of the day the result was still two points.








LOS ANGELES KINGS (5-10-0 – 10 Points) vs.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (8-5-3 – 19 Points)
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 2019
| 1 | 2 | 3 | OT | FINAL | |
| LOS ANGELES | 0 | 1 | 0 | – | 1 |
| TORONTO | 0 | 1 | 2 | – | 3 |
GAME SUMMARY | EVENT SUMMARY | FACEOFF SUMMARY
ON THE SCORESHEET
SHOTS ON GOAL (5-on-5 in brackets)
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | TOTAL | |
| LOS ANGELES | 7 (6) | 9 (5) | 9 (5) | – | 25 (16) |
| TORONTO | 7 (6) | 7 (4) | 9 (7) | – | 23 (17) |
SHOT ATTEMPTS (5-on-5 in brackets)
| 1st | 2nd | 3rd | OT | TOTAL | |
| LOS ANGELES | 11 (10) | 17 (11) | 21 (14) | – | 49 (35) |
| TORONTO | 25 (21) | 20 (16) | 17 (9) | – | 62 (46) |
NO PLACE LIKE HOME
| Record on the Road | 5-2-3 (10 Games) |
| All-Time Record vs. Los Angeles | 65-64-21-2 (152 Games) |
| All-Time Record vs. Los Angeles at Home | 40-26-11-1 (78 Games) |
| Record vs. Western Conference | 3-1-0 (4 Games) |
| Record vs. Pacific Division | 2-0-0 (2 Games) |
| Attendance | 19,195 |
MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS
| Shots | 3 (Rielly) |
| Shot Attempts | 7 (Mikheyev) |
| Faceoff Wins | 7 (Kerfoot, Tavares) |
| Faceoff Win Percentage | 67% (Matthews – 6 won, 3 lost) |
| Hits | 4 (Ceci, Muzzin) |
| Blocked Shots | 2 (Five players tied) |
| Takeaways | 5 (Marner) |
| TOI | 24:39 (Rielly) |
| Power Play TOI | 3:24 (Rielly) |
| Shorthanded TOI | 3:05 (Rielly) |
| Shifts | 26 (Barrie) |
| 5-on-5 Shot Attempt Percentage | 72.0% (Tavares – 18 for, 7 against) |
RECORD WHEN…
| Opponent scores first | 5-3-2 |
| Tied after 1 | 3-1-2 |
| Tied after 2 | 3-3-1 |
| Do not score on the powerplay | 5-3-1 |
| Allow 1 powerplay goal | 3-3-2 |
| Outshot by opponent | 3-3-3 |
| Tuesday | 2-1-1 |
OF NOTE…
UPCOMING GAMES:
T



LOS ANGELES KINGS (5-9-0 – 10 Points) vs. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS (7-5-3 – 17 Points)
NOVEMBER 5, 2019 â–ª 7:30 PM EST SCOTIABANK ARENA (TORONTO, ON) â–ª TV: TSN4 â–ª RADIO: TSN 1050
MAPLE LEAFS HISTORY versus LOS ANGELES
ALL-TIME RECORD: 64-64-21-2 (151 Games) ALL-TIME AT HOME: 39-26-11-1 (77 Games) 2018-19: 2-0-0 LAST FIVE: 3-1-1 LAST 10: 5-4-1
MAPLE LEAFS CAREER LEADERS versus LOS ANGELES
GAMES PLAYED: Jason Spezza (24), Tyson Barrie (20), John Tavares (17)
GOALS: John Tavares (4), Tyson Barrie (4), Jason Spezza (4)
ASSISTS: John Tavares (12), Tyson Barrie (10), Jason Spezza (9)
POINTS: John Tavares (16), Tyson Barrie (14), Jason Spezza (13)
PENALTY MINUTES: Jason Spezza (12), Tyson Barrie (10), Mitch Marner (8)
MAPLE LEAFS – KINGS TEAM STATS
TORONTO ,LOS ANGELES GOALS FOR (Rank): 52 (t-3rd) 38 (22nd)
GOALS AGAINST (Rank): 51 (28th) 57 (30th)
POWER PLAY %: 9/48 18.8% 5/55 9.1%
PENALTY KILL %: 41/54 75.9% 33/49 67.3%
SHOTS (Rank): 482 (10th) 520 (t-1st)
5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPTS FOR (Rank): 638 (2nd) 632 (t-4th)
5-on-5 SHOT ATTEMPT % (Rank): 51.9% (10th) 53.8% (3rd)
FACEOFF % (Rank): 52.7% (t-3rd) 50.5% (13th)
MAPLE LEAFS – KINGS NOTES
FIRST MATCHUP BETWEEN CLUBS: Oct. 25, 1967 vs. LAK (Toronto 4, Los Angeles 2)
ALL-TIME RECORD: 64-64-21-2 (151 Games) ALL-TIME RECORD AT HOME: 39-26-11-1 (77 Games) ALL-TIME RECORD ON THE ROAD: 25-38-10-1 (74 Games) LAST WIN VS. OPPONENT AT HOME: October 15, 2018 (Toronto 4, Los Angeles 1)
MAPLE LEAFS MILESTONES vs. KINGS
Alex Kerfoot 100th career NHL game (Nov. 21, 2018 (COL) at LAK) Jake Muzzin Made his NHL debut with LAK (Oct. 9, 2010 at VAN) With LAK: 496 GP, 51 G – 162 A – 213 P Nick Shore Made his NHL debut with LAK (Jan. 17, 2015 vs. ANA) With LAK: 221 GP, 14 G – 35 A – 49 P
MAPLE LEAFS LEADERS
CATEGORY LEADER
GOALS 11 (Matthews)
ASSISTS 13 (Marner)
POINTS 17 (Marner)
POWER PLAY POINTS 7 (Marner)
SHORTHANDED POINTS 2 (Kapanen) PIMs 14 (Kerfoot, Rielly)
SHOTS 58 (Matthews)
FACEOFF WIN% 60.8% (Shore) 5-on-5
SHOT ATTEMPT % 56.4% (Nylander)
BLOCKED SHOTS 31 (Ceci)
TAKEAWAYS 17 (Marner)
HITS 32 (Moore, Timashov)
TOI PER GAME 25:42 (Rielly)
PP TOI PER GAME 3:20 (Matthews, Rielly) SH
TOI PER GAME 3:44 (Ceci)
MAPLE LEAFS NOTABLES
Mitch Marner Has points (1-4-5) in four consecutive games.
Morgan Rielly Has assists (3) in three consecutive games and points (1-3-4) in four consecutive games.
UPCOMING MILESTONES
Tyson Barrie One game from 500 NHL games played.
Michael Hutchinson Four wins from 50 career NHL wins.





| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE TORONTO, ONTARIO NOVEMBER 4, 2019 BLUE JAYS ROSTER MOVES  The TORONTO BLUE JAYS have announced the following roster moves: ·       LHP RYAN BORUCKI, OF LOURDES GURRIEL JR, LHP TIM MAYZA and RHP MATT SHOEMAKER have been reinstated from the 60-day injured list. ·       2B DEVON TRAVIS, LHP BUDDY BOSHERS, RHP BROCK STEWART and RHP RYAN DULL have been outrighted to Triple-A Buffalo. Boshers has elected free agency. ·       RHP RYAN TEPERA has been designated for assignment.  BORUCKI, 25, began the 2019 season on the 10-day injured list with left elbow inflammation and was transferred to the 60-day injured list on April 15 (retroactive to March 25). He made four rehab starts across three levels before being reinstated on July 21. The lefty recorded two starts with Toronto before returning to the injured list on July 31 (retroactive to July 28) with left elbow inflammation for the remainder of the season. He underwent surgery to remove a spur in his left elbow on August 8 with Dr. James Andrews.  GURRIEL, 26, hit .277 (87-for-314) with 19 doubles, two triples, 20 home runs and 50 RBI in 84 games last season. He was optioned to Triple-A Buffalo on April 15 where he hit .276 (34-for-123) in 31 contests for the Bisons and was recalled on May 24. The right-handed hitter was placed on the 10-day injured list with a left quad strain from August 10 to September 13. He then missed the final four games of the season after undergoing an appendectomy and was placed on the 60-day injured list on September 25.  MAYZA, 27, held a 1-3 record with a 4.91 ERA across a team leading 68 relief appearances with Toronto last season. He was placed on the 60-day injured list after undergoing Tommy John surgery on the ulnar collateral ligament in his left elbow on September 18. The lefty holds a 4-3 record with a 4.67 ERA and a 1.40 WHIP over three seasons with Toronto.  SHOEMAKER, 33, made five starts before landing on the 10-day injured list with left knee sprain on April 21. He missed the remainder of the season after undergoing ACL reconstruction and medial meniscus repair on April 30, and was placed on the 60-day injured list on May 15. In his five outings in 2019, the seven-year veteran held a 3-0 record with a 1.57 ERA, nine walks and 24 strikeouts across 28.2 innings. TRAVIS, 28, missed the entire 2019 season after undergoing surgery on his left knee and was placed on the 60-day injured list on March 25. The West Palm Beach, FL, native has a career batting average of .274 with 35 home runs, 153 RBI, and 14 stolen bases in four seasons with Toronto . BOSHERS, 31, held a 0-3 record with a 4.05 ERA across 27 relief appearances with Toronto last season. The 6-3, 222 lb. left-handed pitcher was signed by the Blue Jays as a free agent on May 22 and was assigned to Triple-A Buffalo. He made his first career start on August 30 against the Dodgers and did not allow a run over his last 10 appearances of the season. The Huntsville, AL, native has accumulated a career record of 3-3 with a 4.49 ERA and a 1.32 WHIP over four seasons with three different teams. DULL, 30, was claimed off waivers by Toronto on September 18 and made his only appearance as a Blue Jay on September 27 against the Rays where he struck out three batters in 1.1 innings of relief. The 5-9, 185 lb. right-handed pitcher had played in 10 Major League games for the Athletics and Yankees before joining the Blue Jays, posting a 13.50 ERA with seven walks and 12 strikeouts over 11.1 innings. During his five-year career, the Winston-Salem, NC, native has accumulated an 8-9 record with a 4.31 ERA and a 1.15 WHIP while recording 170 strikeouts across 171.1 innings.  STEWART, 27, recorded a 4-0 record with a 8.31 ERA across 10 relief appearances as a Blue Jay, striking out 16 batters in 21.2 innings pitched. The 6-3, 215 lb. right-handed pitcher was claimed off waivers from the Los Angeles Dodgers on July 31 and assigned to Triple-A Buffalo. Stewart earned a win each of his first three games with the Blue Jays, becoming the seventh player in team history to do so. The Normal, IL, native has pitched in 46 games over the course of four Major League seasons with the Dodgers and Blue Jays, combining for a 6.05 ERA and a 1.59 WHIP with 87 strikeouts in 105.2 innings.  TEPERA, 32, put together a 0-2 record with a 4.98 ERA across 22 relief appearances and one start last season. He started the season on the 10-day injured list with right elbow inflammation and made his season debut on April 18. The righty made 12 appearances before returning to the injured list on May 21 with a right elbow impingement. The Houston, TX, native has a career record of 12-11 with a 3.64 ERA across five seasons with Toronto. |


BLUE JAYS PRESS RELEASE:
BLUE JAYS COMPLETE TRADE WITH BREWERS
The TORONTO BLUE JAYS have acquired RHP CHASE ANDERSON from the MILWAUKEE BREWERS in exchange for INF/OF CHAD SPANBERGER.
ANDERSON, 31, went 8-4 with a 4.21 ERA and 124 strikeouts across 139.0 innings pitched for Milwaukee last season. The Wichita Falls, TX, native made 27 starts and five relief appearances while holding a 1.27 WHIP in 2019. The 6-1, 200 lb. right-handed pitcher has spent six seasons in the Majors with the Diamondbacks and the Brewers, posting a 53-40 record with a 3.94 ERA and a 1.26 WHIP.
SPANBERGER, 24, slashed .237/.308/.399 at Double-A New Hampshire last season with 29 doubles, a triple, 13 home runs, and 59 RBI. The 6-3, 235 lb. Arkansas product was acquired in 2018 from the Colorado Rockies along with OF Forrest Wall in exchange for RHP Seunghwan Oh. The Granite City, IL, native has played three seasons in the Minor Leagues while compiling an .841 OPS, 66 doubles, seven triples and 59 home runs.
Player Profile:
Chase Anderson
https://www.mlb.com/player/chase-anderson-502624
Chad Spanberger