ST.
Troy Aikman Jersey . PAUL, Minn – On many
nights this season, terrific goaltending and special teams lifted the Leafs to
victory where it might not have been deserved. That was nearly the case once
more at Xcel Energy Center on Wednesday night, but, in this instance, a win
slipped away. “We got what we deserved,” said Carl Gunnarsson, bluntly in
conversation with the Leaf Report after a 2-1 shootout loss to the Wild. “I just
mean if you look at the game all over, 65 minutes, we didnt deserve more than
one point.” In a game that saw Nazem Kadri ejected, Jonathan Bernier brilliant
once more and both special teams units back on the mark, the Leafs ultimately
tripped up in the waning moments, their collective ineffectiveness to that point
ultimately bringing about a deserved fate. “Were not happy about it,” Gunnarsson
said of his teams play, “but we couldve had two points. We had the chance and we
didnt take it. But if you look over the whole game, we didnt deserve more.”
Stuck with just one even-strength goal in the past four games, the Leafs failed
to generate much of an attack for the better part of two periods against the
Wild. But with a power-play goal from Mason Raymond in the second, excellence
from Bernier and the penalty kill, they actually led late and appeared on course
for two points. It was then, with less than five minutes, to go that a
Phil Kessel defensive zone giveaway landed in the hands of Charlie Coyle.
Punishing the error, Zach Parise would even the score at one before capping it
with the shootout winner a short while later. “We have the puck under control in
our zone, we cough it up and it ends up in our net,” Randy Carlyle said of the
game-tying goal afterward. Moments earlier, the Leafs had killed off a mammoth
five-minute Wild power-play – Kadri given a match penalty for his hit on
Mikael Granlund (more in Five Points) – with Minnesota managing just a single
shot opposite an aggressive and impactful penalty kill. And so, while not
playing up to their desired standard, the Leafs had put themselves in position
for victory only to fumble it away. “Yeah for sure,” said Raymond. “That stings
a bit.” It was perhaps due karma. Only a month earlier, the Leafs were outshot
37-14 by the Wild at home, escaping with victory on the shoulders of a 36-save
performance from James Reimer, two power-play goals and a near-perfect effort on
the penalty kill. Holding three of his seven career shutouts against the Wild,
Bernier was busy and effective as he has been all season. The 25-year-old
stopped 33 of 34 shots, beaten only by Parise on an unlikely ricochet attempt in
front. Troubling for the Leafs was the amount of time they spent defending
rather than initiating the play as was desired – the Wild out-attempted them by
a 70-43 margin. A focal point of attention for Carlyle in the early weeks this
season and especially the past few days, the short stock of Toronto forwards
(they dressed only 11, lost Kadri and played without Colton Orr and
Carter Ashton in the third) were unable to consistently pressure the Minnesota
defence, rarely generating much offence against Josh Harding, who replaced
Niklas Backstrom early in the first. “We didnt really have that [offensive] zone
time,” Gunnarsson said. “We didnt cycle the puck a whole lot, [we were] kind of
receiving the game. They moved the puck down low on us and played a whole bunch
in our end.” Heroics from the goaltenders and fine special teams play bailed out
those inconsistencies amid a successful start, but not on this night. Five
Points 1. Kadris eventful night Charging hard into the Wild crease early in the
first, Kadri leveled Backstrom with what appeared to be an elbow and was
whistled for the first of three penalties. Soaking up plenty of ice in the
opening 40 minutes – he led Leaf forwards with upwards of 15 minutes – the
23-year-old would get the gate for good midway through the third. Kadri
delivered a crunching hit to Granlund along the boards in the neutral zone for
which he was given a match penalty. “He made initial contact with the shoulder
and the kid had the head down and he didnt have his arms up and he ran into the
player,” said Carlyle, clearly not in agreement with the punishment. For his
collision with Backstrom, Kadri will garner a hearing with the NHLs department
of discipline on Thursday afternoon. At his best on the edge, Kadri may have
crossed a line. “Naz is a very skilled player,” said Dion Phaneuf, “but he plays
with an edge and he plays hard. I think thats a big thing thats unique about him
is that he doesnt just have those very soft hands and playmaking ability, but
hes a physical guy.” Already short Tyler Bozak and Dave Bolland, a suspension to
Kadri would further damage the Leafs down the middle. 2. Five-on-five woes
continue The Leafs were one of the leagues most potent teams at full strength
last season. They scored 105 goals, trailing only the Lightning, Blackhawks and
Penguins. So far this season, however, theyve not been nearly as successful. The
Leafs boast the 20th-ranked five-on-five offence (29 goals,) failing to score an
even-strength goal for the third time in four games against the Wild on
Wednesday night. 3. Clarksons drought The goal drought reached eight games for
David Clarkson. The 29-year-old hasnt scored yet as a Leaf, totaling just one
assist thus far. “I think thats going to start soon,” said Clarkson
optimistically before the game. “Start burning some incense here in my stall.”
The Leafs werent counting exclusively on potent offence from their marquee
offseason addition, but some level of contribution was to be expected for a
player who scored 45 goals over the past two seasons. Clarkson has had
opportunities, including a glorious chance against his former team last week.
But rather than trickle across the goal-line, his attempt on Cory Schneider
wobbled wide right. “I think if youre getting chances and youre getting good
quality chances, then I think youre doing something right,” Clarkson said,
noting the ability to contribute elsewhere if pucks werent finding twine. One
easy cure would be to shoot the puck more often, something the Toronto native
made mention of himself. During his final two seasons in New Jersey, Clarkson
averaged 3.19 shots per game, but in his first eight games as a Leaf, hes down
to just two per game. A primary power-play contributor with the Devils, Clarkson
is additionally beginning to see more time on the man advantage with the Leafs,
with the injuries to Bozak and Bolland opening up opportunity. “Hes had chances
and I think its part of our responsibility to try and support him with some of
the power-play situations, maybe move him up and down in the lineup, play with
more offensive players,” Carlyle said, with Clarkson matched with Nazem Kadri
and Joffrey Lupul against the Wild. “Theres no better cure for a guy that hasnt
scored is to continue to move up the lineup and play with your better players
and get power-play time.” 4. Kadri at even-strength Kadri has interestingly
dipped most in terms of even-strength offence. He accrued 82 per cent of his
offence in such situations last season, his 36 points leading the team. But
after 18 games this fall, his production there has taken nearly a 20 per cent
hit. Kadri has just eight of his 13 points at even-strength (62 per cent) with
the power-play a source of increased productivity. 5. JVR Down the middle
Wednesday marked the third career game at centre for James van Riemsdyk. One
difference in playing down the middle, according to the 24-year-old, is
positioning in transition offensively. “Its a little different,” he said. “When
youre coming on the rush youre usually in the middle versus being on the wall;
youre usually looking to kick it wide and maybe drive or whatever; youre not
usually going to pull up in the middle of the ice and just stop there because
then youll turn it over. “Thats usually why the wingers in general get more
shots than centre iceman do," van Riemsdyk said. After mustering just a single
shot in the previous two games, van Riemsdyk finished with four shots against
the Wild, but remained pointless at centre ice. A temporary stopgap when Bolland
suffered an ankle injury, he may get the move back to wing soon enough. Out
since Oct. 25 with a hamstring injury, Bozak skated for the first time on
Tuesday and could be in line to return in the next couple weeks. The 27-year-old
is eligible to come of long-term injured reserve on Nov. 21. All of that could
change, of course, with a Kadri suspension. Stat-Pack 30 – Faceoffs for
Jerred Smithson against the Wild, winning 53 per cent. 23:27 – Ice-time for
Jay McClement, a season-high. 70-43 – Shot attempts favouring the Wild. 29 –
Total goals for the Leafs at five-on-five. .939 – Save percentage for
Jonathan Bernier after 12 games this season. 15 – Times this season the Leafs
have been outshot by an opponent. Special Teams Capsule PP: 1-3Season: 22.2% PK:
5-5Season: 84.9% Quote of the Night “We got what we deserved.” -Carl Gunnarsson
on the eventual result against the Wild. Up Next The Leafs visit the Sabres on
Friday in the first half of a home and home set.
Morris Claiborne Jersey . -- The St. Johns
IceCaps weathered a wild first period with the help of goaltender Jussi
Olkinuora, before finding offensive inroads in the second.
Demarcus Lawrence Cowboys Jersey . The
Croatian served 21 aces and hit 42 winners against Sijsling, who double-faulted
to give Cilic a 4-3 lead in the deciding set. "All the players, they know me and
they were really happy to see me and they were really happy that this is over
for me," Cilic said.
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. 31, the CFL club announced Monday. The team also has yet to decide on the
future of Doug Berry, who began the season as a consultant to the head coach but
took over the offensive co-ordinators duties in July.PITTSBURGH -- A.J. Burnett
walked into the Pittsburgh Pirates dugout after falling two runs down to the
Cincinnati Reds in the second inning Saturday night when his catcher decided it
was time for a little pep talk. "I told him Thats all were giving up today and
he said Yes sir," Russell Martin said. "Thats his attitude. If you give up a
couple, its not the end of the world. If you give up a couple, youve got to keep
going out there, keep grinding." Something the veteran ace and his resilient
club do better than just about anyone else in baseball. A night after a stunning
ninth-inning collapse, Pittsburgh responded behind Burnett, who scattered four
hits in seven strong innings to lift the Pirates to a 4-2 win and a one-game
lead over the Reds for the top spot in the NL wild-card race. "Go out, its a big
game, its a big series, you want to attack," Burnett said. "We were able to do
that and get through seven somehow. I felt like I got stronger as it went on."
Burnett struck out a season-high 12 against three walks and became the first
right-hander in the 126-year history of the franchise to top 200 strikeouts in a
season when he fanned Joey Votto in the sixth. "I was just focused, I was locked
in," Burnett said. "It was probably the best command of that hook Ive had in a
long time. I had a put-away pitch tonight, and its lot different when you have
those." Jason Grilli worked the ninth for his 31st save, his first since going
to the disabled list with a strained right forearm in July. Martin slugged a
two-run homer, and Jose Tabata added two hits for the Pirates. Zack Cozart hit
his 12th home run of the season for Cincinnati, and Ryan Ludwick added an RBI
but Homer Bailey (11-11) lost his first decision since July 26. "The story of
the game is we didnt score enough runs," Reds manager Dusty Baker said. "We just
couldnt get much going against (Burnett). We got some runs early, then he
settled down." The Reds rallied for a 6-5 win in 10 innings on Friday, turning
three unearned runs in the ninth and Vottos solo homer in the 10th into a tie
with the Pirates in the race for home field in the wild card round. It was the
second gut-punch loss by the Pirates in three days. In danger of falling behind
the Reds in the standings for the first time in since June 20, Pittsburgh
reduced its magic number to three behind Burnett and a bullpen thaat regained
its composure after a pair of potentially confidence-shaking meltdowns.
Travis Frederick Cowboys Jersey. Reliever
Justin Wilson induced a double play to get out of the eighth, and Grilli -- an
All-Star this summer after racking up 29 saves in the seasons first half --
looked like his old self while working around Ludwicks leadoff single in the
ninth. "Im just a competitor," Grilli said. "I want the ball. I want to
participate. Watching these guys do it for so long made me want to come back and
do it with him. It was a big win, obviously, and a lot of fun to be out there."
Bailey wasnt quite as sharp. Making his first start at PNC Park since throwing a
no-hitter at the Pirates last September, Bailey was solid but not spectacular.
An off night by Cincinnatis typically reliable defence didnt help. Alvarez
reached with two outs in the third when Votto mishandled a slow chopper to
first. Martin followed by taking a fastball from Bailey and sending it into the
bleachers in left field to tie it at 2. Pittsburgh broke the tie in the sixth.
Andrew McCutchen walked with one out and sprinted to third when Baileys
attempted pickoff throw slipped past Votto and rolled to the wall.
Justin Morneau walked to put runners on the corners, and Marlon Byrd hit a
sacrifice to deep centre field to give the Pirates the lead. Bailey gave up four
runs, two earned, and three hits with four walks and three strikeouts. "The loss
is on me," Bailey said. "I had the throwing error at first base, I didnt execute
very well, I made a couple of bad pitches. (The offence) gave me a couple of
runs to work with early and I didnt take advantage of it. I gave them all back
and then some." Reliever Zach Duke -- who spent six years in Pittsburgh during
the clubs two-decade losing streak -- came on after Byrds sacrifice fly and
immediately surrendered an RBI single to Alvarez that gave the Pirates a two-run
cushion. NOTES: Cincinnati CF Shin-Soo Choo sat out after injuring his right
hand while sliding into first base on Friday. Baker said he wasnt sure when Choo
will return. ... Cincinnati rookie OF Billy Hamilton will make his second start
of the season on Sunday. The base stealing specialist went 3 for 4 with four
stolen bases in his previous start against Houston on Wednesday. ... The series
concludes on Sunday when Pittsburghs Jeff Locke (10-6, 3.27 ERA) faces
Cincinnatis Bronson Arroyo (13-11, 3.56).
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