"We have to go out and prove it,"
Maple Leafs coach Randy
Carlyle said "Just because we've added some people it
doesn't make the statement that it's this type of club or that type
of club. I think Dave Clarkson made a mistake. Now we pay for it. We
think both of these players, Clarkson and Bolland, bring elements to
the game that are important for our young players. They're veteran
guys. They've scored big goals in playoff games."
"A lot has been made of the grit and
toughness and obviously that's a big part of how Randy likes his team
to play, but we want to make sure that we're not one-dimensional,
that we have the ability to play a skill game, a grinding game,"
Nonis said. "We want to be able to play regardless of the
opposition.
SUMMER MOVES
IN:
David Clarkson, RW (free agent, Devils); Dave Bolland, C (trade,
Blackhawks); Jonathan Bernier, G (trade, Kings); Paul Ranger, D (free
agent); Trevor Smith, C (free agent, Penguins); T.J. Brennan, D (free
agent, Panthers); Mason Raymond, LW (free agent, Canucks)
OUT: Ben Scrivens, G (trade, Kings); Matt Frattin (trade, Kings); Mikhail Grabovski, C (free agent, Capitals); Mike Komisarek, D (free agent, Hurricanes); Leo Komarov, RW (free agent, Dynamo Moskva, KHL); Ryan O'Byrne, D (free agent, HC Lev Praha, KHL); Clarke MacArthur, LW (free agent, Senators); Michael Kostka, D (free agent, Blackhawks); Ryan Hamilton, C (free agent, Oilers)
OUT: Ben Scrivens, G (trade, Kings); Matt Frattin (trade, Kings); Mikhail Grabovski, C (free agent, Capitals); Mike Komisarek, D (free agent, Hurricanes); Leo Komarov, RW (free agent, Dynamo Moskva, KHL); Ryan O'Byrne, D (free agent, HC Lev Praha, KHL); Clarke MacArthur, LW (free agent, Senators); Michael Kostka, D (free agent, Blackhawks); Ryan Hamilton, C (free agent, Oilers)
Prior to Clarkson's suspension, the likely
scenario for Toronto's top two lines to start the season had Bozak
with Kessel and James
van Riemsdyk on the top line and Kadri with Clarkson and Joffrey
Lupul on the second line. However, Clarkson's early-season
absence means Carlyle will have to adjust. He can use Nikolai
Kulemin in Clarkson's spot or potentially Mason
Raymond, who earned his one-year contract after coming to
training camp on a professional tryout agreement. Even though Carlyle
and Nonis think Bolland has an offensive upside that he hasn't shown
on a consistent basis in his NHL career, he figures to center the
third line. It won't necessarily be a checking line, though, because
when the Maple Leafs are whole again with Clarkson back, Bolland
could have Kulemin on his right wing and Raymond on his left. Nor do
the Maple Leafs see Kulemin as a checker, but his offense has tapered
dramatically the past two seasons after he scored 30 goals in
2010-11. He had seven goals in 2011-12 and seven in 48 games last
season. A serious back injury has limited Raymond the past two
seasons, but he has shown no ill-effects in training camp. Even the
Maple Leafs' fourth line can be dangerous if Joe
Colborne proves he can make the jump. He's 6-foot-5, 213 pounds
and more of a center than a wing, but Colborne will have to make the
team as a winger because Jay
McClement isn't moving positions. He's too important to the team
in the middle, especially because Carlyle uses him for defensive-zone
faceoffs and as the lead forward on the penalty kill. Toronto should
get added toughness and grit from Colton
Orr and Frazer
McLaren. Carter
Ashton and Trevor
Smith are pushing for spots.
"Obviously he's had success at the NHL
level in a checking role, but he also scored a lot of points in his
junior career playing with Corey
Perry," Carlyle said of Bolland. "He has some
crazy stats. The one thing we feel is if you put him with skill
players he can get them the puck and he's around the net, involved.
We don't just deem him a checker; that's not how we view him at all."
"Based on Mason's play in the preseason,
we feel he fits in well with our group and will have a significant
role on our team," Nonis said.
"[Colborne] has had ebbs and flows and
some of them are related to injury, some of them are related to
growing into a big body and some are related to just getting used to
playing at a high level on a consistent basis," Maple Leafs
vice-president of hockey operations Dave Poulin told NHL.com. "We've
seen the flashes of it, but at this level it has to be all the time."
Dion
Phaneuf and Gunnarsson should start the season as Toronto's top
defense pair. They were the top per-game ice-time earners among
Toronto's defensemen last season and are expected to be again.
Carlyle leans heavily on them, especially Phaneuf, who routinely
averages more than 25 minutes per game. He's also in a contract year
and said he would be willing to negotiate throughout the season to
stay in Toronto. Nonis appears to have further bolstered his blue
line as reports emerged Thursday that he inked restricted free agent
Cody Franson to a one-year deal worth $2 million. Franson, 26, is
coming off the best season of his career, when he had 29 points,
including 25 assists. He's a natural second-pair partner for Jake
Gardiner, who could be primed for a breakout season. Ranger has
the most interesting story of all players in Toronto's training camp.
He left the NHL for personal reasons early in the 2009-10 season and
is trying to make a comeback. He played well enough last season with
the Toronto Marlies, the Maple Leafs' American Hockey League
affiliate, to earn another chance in the NHL. Ranger formerly was a
top defenseman for the Tampa
Bay Lightning. It would be a coup for the Maple Leafs if he could
regain the form he had from 2006-08, when he combined for 59 points
in 144 games. Franson's absence briefly opened the door for
19-year-old prospect Morgan
Rielly, Toronto's first-round pick in 2011 (No. 5). It's possible
the Maple Leafs keep Rielly at the start of the season to give them
more time to evaluate him before deciding if he should return to the
Moose Jaw Warriors of the Western Hockey League. Toronto also has
Korbinian
Holzer and TJ
Brennan.
"I really like where our team is at and
where we're going," Phaneuf told NHL.com. "We made
some real good additions this year and obviously we played some real
good hockey last year. I love playing in Toronto. We've got
unbelievable fans. Ever since I got here I've really enjoyed the city
and playing in front of the fans here. He's a big guy that skates
very well and moves the puck well. He sees the ice extremely well.
He's got a real good stick defensively and he's just a well-rounded
defensemen. He has a real good offensive side to him, a real heavy
slap shot. He shoots the puck hard, but he's a real good defender as
well. He's a big addition."
Just when Reimer thought he might have some
assurances after a successful season as Toronto's No. 1 goalie, Nonis
acquired Bernier to compete for the No. 1 job. Reimer helped the
Maple Leafs get to the playoffs last season with 19 wins, a 2.46
goals-against average and .924 save percentage, but now he has to win
back his job from a goalie who finally is getting a legitimate shot
to show he can also be a No. 1 in the NHL. Bernier wasn't going to
get that in Los Angeles, where Jonathan
Quick is entrenched as the starting goalie. He has the chance in
Toronto and the Maple Leafs are hoping it sets up as a promising
situation and the exact type of dilemma Carlyle wants to have. Drew
MacIntyre, a 30-year-old AHL veteran, is behind Bernier and
Reimer. The Maple Leafs would love it if he played the entire season
with the Marlies.
"Reims [Reimer] had a pretty solid year,
but it was only half a season," Carlyle said. "He's
a young goaltender still cutting his teeth, finding a way to become a
No. 1. The addition of Bernier solidifies our position. If we can
create a competition between the two of them, if you win you're in,
we think that's healthy for our group."
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