TORONTO -- T.
Donald Brown Jersey .J. Brennan couldnt have
asked for a better debut with the Toronto Marlies. The 24-year-old defenceman
scored his first-career hat trick and set up Trevor Smiths overtime goal as
Toronto edged the visiting Grand Rapids Griffins 4-3 on Saturday in American
Hockey League action. Brennan, who has three two-goal performances in 226 AHL
games, was acquired in the off-season by Toronto for his offensive capabilities,
but even he was surprised by his performance. "I think thats a first for me
there," said Brennan about his hat trick. "I just wanted to start the season off
simple. You throw it to the net and good things can happen. I got a couple lucky
bounces." The Marlies (1-0-0) caught a break in overtime when Griffins
defenceman Brennan Evans was penalized for closing his hand on the puck in the
crease. While leading the 4-on-3 power play, Brennan spotted Smith with a pass,
who one-timed it past goaltender Jared Coreau off the post and in at 2:59. "We
got better as the game went on but theyre a quick transition team and you have
to play good smart hockey," Brennan said about the 2013 Calder Cup champions.
"We did a good job for the most part." David Broll chipped in two assists for
Toronto while Smith added an assist for a two-point outing. Mitch Callahan,
Riley Sheahan and Tomas Jurco supplied the offence for the Griffins (1-0-1), who
opened their season Friday with an 8-1 win over the Rochester Americans. Drew
MacIntyre stopped 27 shots for the win as Coreau made 22 saves in defeat.
Brennan opened the scoring with a wrist shot from the slot at 5:25 of the first
period, but Jurco and Sheehan scored less than two minutes apart to put Grand
Rapids up 2-1 after 20 minutes of play. Brennan tied it with a power-play goal
at 12:19 of the second period, and then put the Marlies ahead a little over
three minutes later with another point shot. Toronto couldnt hold the lead,
though, as Callahan redirected a no-look backhand pass from Jurco to tie the
game 3-3 less than five minutes into the third period. "Theyre opportunistic and
we turned over pucks in the neutral zone and they made us pay for it," said
Marlies coach Steve Spott. The Marlies had to overcome a lack of discipline late
in the third just to force overtime as Brad Ross picked up back-to-back minor
penalties, followed by Andrew MacWilliam, who was served a five-minute major and
game misconduct for boarding. "Im really proud of our team for killing that off
at that moment of the game," said Brennan. Brennan was paired all game with NHL
veteran John-Michael Liles, who was playing in his first AHL game since being
demoted by the Maple Leafs last Sunday. While Liles didnt show up on the score
sheet, Spott was more than pleased with what he brought to the lineup. "Hes
always talking on the bench and calming guys down on the back end," said Spott.
"His experience is invaluable to us right now." Toronto went 2-for-8 on the
power play while Grand Rapids failed to score on six chances with the man
advantage. The Marlies will host the Lake Erie Monsters on Sunday.
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. The Redskins announced Monday that the quarterback who led the team to the
Super Bowl championship in the 1987 season will serve as a personnel
executive.TORONTO – Peter Holland was riding the GO train just a couple days
after he was traded to play for his hometown Maple Leafs when he was recognized
by a fan. It was the kind of surreal moment that made life playing at home all
the more real. "That never wouldve happened in Anaheim, California," Holland, a
native of Caledon, told the Leaf Report with a chuckle. "That was pretty cool."
No longer on the west coast with the Ducks, the 22-year-old enjoyed the biggest
night of his NHL career in front of the hometown crowd on the Saturday night
stage. With his parents and childhood skills coach (Joey Simon from Powerhouse
Hockey) in the stands, Holland scored twice and added a helper as Toronto
stunned the defending champion Chicago Blackhawks 7-3 at the ACC. It was the
clubs first win in regulation since Nov. 19 and third in the past 20 games.
Moved up in the lineup onto a unit with Joffrey Lupul and Mason Raymond –
David Clarkson was serving the first of a two-game suspension – Holland scored
his fourth this season and first of the game on an early power-play, notching
his second on a tic-tac-toe feed from Lupul and Raymond. He would add an assist
on the second of two goals from Lupul. "Theyve given me a good opportunity here
and I think that as long as Im playing my game I think I have the ability to
play at this level," said Holland, acquired from Anaheim in mid-November.
"Obviously playing with guys like Lupul and Raymond is going to help me stick
around too." A first round pick of the Ducks in 2009, Holland nearly doubled his
season output with the standout performance against Chicago, now at five goals
and seven points in 16 games this season. With injuries plaguing the Leafs at
centre ice – Dave Bolland and Tyler Bozak are both sidelined – opportunity is
there for someone like Holland to grab hold of. To this point, he had offered
only brief glimpses of the skill his pedigree would infer. But with more
opportunity – a career-high of over 19 minutes – he was able to show it off in a
big way against the Blackhawks. "Im just kind of approaching it like its a job
and it is a job," Holland said. As to the chance to play at home, after bouncing
between outposts in Syracuse, Norfolk and Anaheim, Holland said its been more
comfort than distraction. "If anything I think it almost relieves pressure," he
said. "Youve got more of a support network around you. Its a thrill to play in
front of them every night. Going back to minor hockey when your parents came to
every game, driving you there and stuff, and now they can come to every home
game here. Its a good feeling." Five Points 1. Response from St. Louis Only two
days before shocking the Blackhawks at home, the Leafs were embarrassed on the
road by the Blues. It was their eighth loss in 10 games and among the worst
efforts of the year. "Off our performance in St. Louis we could not have
anything close to that again," said Randy Carlyle following the win against
Chicago, the leagues top team again this season. "They werent very proud of our
performance. They knew that we didnt do a lot of things that we set out to do.
"I thought that our hockey club responded the way they needed to respond," he
continued. "They took responsibility for our actions and thats a good sign. But
the most encouraging thing for us tonight was our work ethic and we stuck to our
system and played it." Trekking through their most arduous portion of the
schedule – which has included the Sharks, Bruins, Kings, Blues, and Blackhawks –
the Leafs now face another top team in Pittsburgh on Monday. "It doesnt get any
easier," said Lupul, who had four points on Saturday, "but certainly winning a
game against the top team in the league gives you a little bit of confidence so
hopefully we can run with it." 2. Cycle Offence Though they generated the bulk
of their offence off the rush, the Leafs did manage to sustain bursts of the
cycle game Carlyle has been pleading for. The fourth goal of the evening, and
fourth this season from Nik Kulemin, found its way into the back of the net off
such an attack. "Weve been striving for that," said Carlyle. "And in the games
that we are effective it seems that we have more of that in the hockey game.
Thats really what were trying to do is were trying to eliminate a
one-dimensional rush team." That rush game was certainly effective, notably the
line of Holland, Lupul and Raymond. "When you start to wear teams down, if you
play more in their zone, your rush game becomes more effective," Carlyle said.
"The players will tell you, they never get tired playing in that zone. Theyre
not receiving the game. When youre attacking and youre creating more offensive
zone time its a better feeling." The Leafs also benefited on this night from
scoring beyond their top unit. Phil Kessel would score the seventh and final
Toronto goal, his 17th this season, but the remainder of the offence came from
the second and third lines. Pegged to slow down the Blackhawks imposing top trio
of Patrickk Sharp, Jonathan Toews, and Marian Hossa, the third line of Kulemin,
Jerry DAmigo, and Jay McClement scored twice while holding their opponents off
the scoresheet.
Nate Solder Patriots Jersey. "They did a heck
of a job for us," said Carlyle. 3. Playing at Home In addition to the unlikely
meet and greet with the fan on the GO Train, Holland said the second surreal
moment of playing at home came when he put on the Leafs jersey for the first
time, one he wore as a fan growing up. "I kind of let that sink in for a couple
seconds there because that was a dream come true for sure," he said. Holland
often made it down to Leafs games as a kid, mostly at the old Maple Leaf
Gardens. "Some of my fondest memories were actually at the Garden," said
Holland. "I was in there bleeding blue and white with the fans growing up." 4.
Defensive Confusion A frequent frustration for Carlyle in recent weeks has been
the rising tide of goals scored against from the critical areas or the zone
surrounding the goal. "Its taking care of the front of your net before anywhere
else," John-Michael Liles said of such improvement, prior to Saturdays game.
"Ultimately, most teams are trying to draw you out of those critical areas so
they can get the puck into those critical areas. Its no different than any other
sport." Liles compared the tactic to soccer or basketball (where quality outside
shooters draw defenders from the basket), noting the desire of an offence to
space the defence out and away from the respective goal. "Its that movement (of)
trying to confuse," he said. Defensive improvement stands high atop the Leafs
priorities. During their ongoing struggle, theyve allowed three goals or more in
13 of 20 games, losing all but two of those games (including on Saturday). "Were
trying to implement a defensive zone coverage that we can hang our hat on," said
Carlyle. "Once you play better defensively then you start to become more of a
team that (attacks) versus receiving the game. Thats really what has happened
with our hockey club, I would say specifically in the last 15 games, is weve
been receiving more than weve been attacking." 5. Shake-Up For the first time
all season neither Paul Ranger nor Mark Fraser was in the lineup for the Leafs.
A new-look third pairing of some speed and some skill saw John-Michael Liles
paired with Morgan Rielly. The adjustment appeared an early success. "I thought
they did a good job from a standpoint of we played our system and we moved the
puck pretty much worrisome-free other than about five or six minutes in the
second period," said Carlyle of the group. The Toronto defence has been a source
of instability all season. Only one pairing has remained a constant from start
to present: Carl Gunnarsson and Dion Phaneuf (save for Phaneufs recent two-game
suspension). Asked prior to Saturdays game if he would consider splitting the
two as he did last season – and thus balancing the group –Carlyle said no. "Its
been an experiment that we felt it failed," said Carlyle. "We werent happy with
that. I would say at this point we think that theyre our go-to pair. Right now,
I dont think thats a possibility for us … But coaches change their minds."
Searching for balance, Carlyle split Gunnarsson and Phaneuf for the first 28
games last season with Phaneuf playing alongside Korbinian Holzer and current
Blackhawk Michael Kostka. By mid-March though he abandoned the plan and
reconnected the teams usual top pairing. Bonus Point – Bolland Update A bit of
positive news amid a difficult stretch for the Leafs saw Dave Bolland off
crutches this week and walking around the Air Canada Centre on Saturday morning.
"The update is that hes progressing along at the expected rate," said Carlyle
without offering any concrete timeline. "Theres no great difference in where hes
at versus where we thought he was going to be. Hes not ahead of schedule, hes
right on schedule right now." Stats-Pack 7 - Goals for the Leafs against
Chicago, a season-high. 3 - Points from Peter Holland, a career-high. 4 –
Assists for Mason Raymond against Chicago, a career-high. Raymond also surpassed
the 22 points he had in 46 games last season. He now has 24 points in 34 games.
19:22 – Ice-time for Holland, also a career-high. 5 – Points for Jake Gardiner
in December. He had six points combined in October and November. 1 - Career NHL
goal for Jerry DAmigo. DAmigo also added an assist against the Blackhawks. 2 -
Goals from the Leafs third line, who also held Chicagos top unit scoreless. 9 –
Games without a goal for Joffrey Lupul prior to a two-goal outing on Saturday.
Lupul hadnt scored since Nov. 9 in Boston. Special Teams Capsule PP: 2-4Season:
24.3% (3rd) PK: 1-2Season: 76.7% (27th) Quote of the Night "You guys cant see
it, but Im just going crazy inside right now." -Jerry DAmigo, moments after
scoring his first career NHL goal. Up Next The Leafs travel to Pittsburgh for a
Monday date with the Penguins.
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