Leafs 2 at Penguins 3: Back to Form
After Manchester United slumped to defeat at Anfield two weeks ago on the back of some terrible play, an own goal, and a Ryan Babel winner my cousin turned to me and, summoning up all of his rage, said "Whatever, Manchester United scored two goals today and Liverpool could only get one." While I tried to be the gracious winner I thought I guess that does take some of the sting out of it. So there you go Leafs, you won 4-1! And the rebuild rolls on!
Unfortunately, it was a familiar pattern to last night's game and closer to this recap of Monday night's game than this story. The Leafs once again struggled on special teams. All three goals came while special teams were on the ice. While they passed the puck around more or less nicely on the powerplay they did not create any clear cut chances until late in the third when the game was basically out of reach.
When the teams were at even strength is when it was most apparent that this was the pre-season. Both teams lacked any sort of fire. Even the attempts at creating some fire by Mayers and Newbury fizzled as Bissonette was more interested in smelling Jamal's head and Goligoski was more interested in running away from being held accountable for a hit from behind on Stapleton.
Ultimately, what this game proved was that it is indeed the first week of training camp. As with Monday night's game, while some individual insights can be superficially made any insightful conclusions are a long way from being formed.

The nature of the lineups on both sides meant that there would always be a feeling out process among linemates and opponents. Among the Leafs' aspirants:
- Tim Stapleton might want to look into changing his cursed number since he did a lot to remind viewers of Kyle Wellwood from taking dumb penalties to being mostly invisible.
- Bom-Bom did chip in an assist but it will not do much to change the overall conclusion that in this game at least he looked woefully out of place.
- Frogren eagerly took the body but it cost him a penalty early since it took him out of position. He might want to look at changing from 24 just because of the connotations.
- Stralman might be feeling the knee a bit more than is being let on. He lost his edge pretty easily and had a little less jump than usual. He did however look good blasting some shots on the PP.
- Van Ryn looked good after making a poor clearance on the backhand prior to the first goal.
- Pierre Maguire loved John Mitchell but other than a pretty good shift on the powerplay in the third it seemed like more of a case of not bringing attention to oneself for good or bad reasons.
- Jiri Tlusty showed a few times that he might have found that extra half-stride that he needs. He steamed in shorthanded and set up Mayers nicely although I would have rather seen him take it to the net.
- Ponikarovski did what he needs to do on the PP and that's be annoying in front of the net. It was a nice deflection that got the Leafs on the board.
- Mikhail Grabovski potted a beauty with eleven seconds but he was really struggling to find his rhythm tonight.
- Most importantly, other than when his teammates were channeling the spirit of their departed teammate or abandoning him completely Justin Pogge, the goalie of February, looked very good once again. It was limited action but he was comfortable and his large frame takes away a lot of the net.
All in all, what was on display, as I mentioned, was the process of developing chemistry between linemates. If not for the bad bounces against the Leafs this game would have been 0-0 heading into the third. The team did look more confident in their defensive system but they were not put under nearly the same amount of pressure as the Sabres put on them under.
It will be interesting to see what the papers will say tomorrow because this is definitely a case where people cannot get too low and draw too many broad conclusions from the game. It was one more step in developing the roster and getting all of the new pieces on the same page. At this stage in training camp that's more important than the score and on that note it was a success.
Once again, thanks to the following for participating in the game thread tonight. As the season progresses this will hopefully grow as everything else here has over the past few months. The bigger the group the better the therapy.
| Name | # of Posts |
|---|---|
| Chemmy | 29 |
| koopa kid | 19 |
| eyebleaf | 7 |
| PPP | 6 |
| wrap around curl | 5 |
| blurr1974 | 3 |
| Down Goes Brown | 3 |
| FrankD | 2 |
| leosc | 2 |
| Coach Dunbar | 1 |
Comments
Hmmm
I am guessing some of you are wondering why the comments suddenly closed on the game thread. I am trying to close the comments after the recap post goes up. Let me know how that works.
Pension Plan Puppets: A Toronto Maple Leafs blog and a group therapy session.
by PPP on
Sep 24, 2008 11:08 PM EDT
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Closing threads
That’s actually a pretty good idea. Sorry for not being there but I’m saving my best stuff for the real season—wouldn’t want to hurt myself or anything
Making stuff up since real Leafs news is far too depressing
by loser domi on
Sep 25, 2008 8:48 AM EDT
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Remember you can check out the Leafs Game in Six Minutes at http://mapleleafs.nhl.tv/team/console.jsp
They already have tonight’s game up for anyone who didn’t see Grabovski’s goal.
Pension Plan Puppets*
* Blog contains less than 2% puppet content by weight.
by Chemmy on
Sep 24, 2008 11:09 PM EDT
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Good Call
Marvel at the potential. Curse at the deflected goals.
Pension Plan Puppets: A Toronto Maple Leafs blog and a group therapy session.
by PPP on
Sep 24, 2008 11:10 PM EDT
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Stralman made a good case to start the year on the Marlies tonight, unfortunately.
Pension Plan Puppets*
* Blog contains less than 2% puppet content by weight.
by Chemmy on
Sep 24, 2008 11:11 PM EDT
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Yeah
Not his best game. Losing that edge was a tough break. Without that it’s just “Oh, well he didn’t have the same jump” but now you can add “way to blow a tire and gift them a goal”
Pension Plan Puppets: A Toronto Maple Leafs blog and a group therapy session.
by PPP on
Sep 24, 2008 11:11 PM EDT
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Solid Rebound
Atrocious first few periods, but Pogge settled in and the Leafs seemed to find their groove a wee bit.
A few thoughts about tonight:
Stajan is the anchor of this team. You really miss his forechecking when he’s not in the line-up. The team felt frantic tonight for 60 minutes and I think a shift or two pinning Pittsburgh in their own end would have had a calming effect.
Grabovski’s goal was a beauty, but Gamanche had a few of those last year in the pre-season and where is he now? I’ll believe it when I see a few more games. Same with Kulemin.
Ponikorovsky. I can’t figure this guy out. How he can be so invisible for 59:30 minutes and still come away with a goal? I wonder, could he be the surprise “goner” come final cuts? I wonder.
Schenn. Wow. What can I say? This kid looks like a 5 year vet out there. It’s ridiculous. If this is what drafting high gets you than maybe losing a lot is a good thing?
Kaberle. is it just me or does he come out and lay a big egg his first pre-season game every year? If he was an unknown rookie out there tonight I wouldn’t blink when he got cut tomorrow. Looking forward to the real Thomas sometime later in the week.
by The Muppet on
Sep 24, 2008 11:58 PM EDT
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Kaberle didn’t look comfortable out there, but in general the team was just in disarray. Nobody could hold the blueline, passes were jumping all over the place, poor decisions being made all round. We’ll see, it was a combination of misfortune and sloppiness that lead to all three goals, once the guys get some games under them hopefully we won’t see too much play like this again.
by koopa kid on
Sep 25, 2008 12:44 AM EDT
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Once the scrubs are cut the team can focus on getting to know each other and then we’ll start to see what real progress is being made.
Pension Plan Puppets: A Toronto Maple Leafs blog and a group therapy session.
by PPP on
Sep 25, 2008 8:48 AM EDT
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“Stajan is the anchor of this team.”
WHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAT?????
if that’s the case, Lord help us all
A Toronto sports blog, where we unequivocally and unapologetically support the home team...
by eyebleaf on
Sep 25, 2008 10:45 AM EDT
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My view on why the team looked like shit is this: you’ve got guys like Kaberle, Antropov, etc. that are guaranteed to make the team. They’re not going to give two shits about the preseason.
The squad against Buffalo had far fewer “certainties” on it, and that’s why you saw them come out breathing fire.
Pension Plan Puppets*
* Blog contains less than 2% puppet content by weight.
by Chemmy on
Sep 25, 2008 8:59 AM EDT
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Agreed. The first game the Leafs seemed much more aggressive going after the puck. For the guys on the bubble, pre-season is the Big Show, and a lot depends on how they perform right away. For guys like Antro, Poni, Kaberle, pre-season games are just a warm-up – light-stretching, a little exercise to get into game shape, and not much more. Nothing to worry about, unless your name is Anton Stralman.
by general borschevsky on
Sep 25, 2008 10:03 AM EDT
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I like that theory. But for guys like Grabovski and Kulemin, I’m still left wanting. Both had flashes of offensive so far, but there hasn’t been a rhythm yet.
That said, even if you are one of the “safe” guys, if it were me, I’d be a little sick of losing all the time and may actually have a bit of a fire under my posterior.
Anybody throws me against the boards I'm gonna piss all over myself.
by blurr1974 on
Sep 25, 2008 10:29 AM EDT
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But for guys like Grabovski and Kulemin, I’m still left wanting. Both had flashes of offensive so far, but there hasn’t been a rhythm yet.
That’ll come and probably take a bit longer than even the seven remaining playoff games. At least they are putting it together for some shifts which means that they have the skills but it’s a matter of consistency. The good news is that they’ll get the chance.
Pension Plan Puppets: A Toronto Maple Leafs blog and a group therapy session.
by PPP on
Sep 25, 2008 10:36 AM EDT
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ppp’s right. we must exercise some serious patience this season and next…and probably the next 5 after that
A Toronto sports blog, where we unequivocally and unapologetically support the home team...
by eyebleaf on
Sep 25, 2008 10:46 AM EDT
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You would sing a completely different tune if Antropov seperated his shoulder taking a hard hit going for the puck.
Pension Plan Puppets*
* Blog contains less than 2% puppet content by weight.
by Chemmy on
Sep 25, 2008 10:52 AM EDT
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I’d be thinking “There’s the real Antropov!”
Anybody throws me against the boards I'm gonna piss all over myself.
by blurr1974 on
Sep 25, 2008 10:54 AM EDT
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I’d cry.
Pension Plan Puppets: A Toronto Maple Leafs blog and a group therapy session.
by PPP on
Sep 25, 2008 10:54 AM EDT
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I was laughing last year in my fantasy league when all the notes about Antropov were:
he’s playing well, but don’t expect the offense or his health to hold up for too long
he’s on a hot streak right now, but can his knees take it?
yup, any day now
HAH! 7 games with a knee injury at the end of the season dude I SO told you.
by koopa kid on
Sep 25, 2008 1:54 PM EDT
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