Thursday, 30 November 2017

NHL - Pens Round Up - November 14-18, 2017


Buffalo Sabres @ Penguins 4-5 OT - Tuesday, November 14, 2017


Sidney Crosby scored for the first time in 12 games, and Conor Sheary got his second goal of the game 16 seconds into overtime to help the Pittsburgh Penguins defeat the Buffalo Sabres 5-4 at PPG Paints Arena. Crosby battled with Evander Kane behind the net before feeding Sheary, who sneaked a shot inside the right post. With the Sabres leading 4-3 in the third period, Phil Kessel scored for the fourth consecutive game to tie it. Evgeni Malkin sent a cross-ice pass to Kessel, who dropped to one knee and one-timed a shot past Robin Lehner with 6:11 remaining in the period.
The Penguins (10-7-3) are 12-0-1 against the Sabres (5-9-4) since a 4-1 loss on April 2, 2013. After Crosby tied it 3-3 on a power play with 2:45 remaining in the second period, Benoit Pouliot scored a power-play goal to give Buffalo a 4-3 lead with 6.7 seconds left in the period. The goal was Pouliot's sixth of the season, all in the past 10 games. Crosby ended his 11-game drought by collecting a rebound off a shot from Kessel and shooting past Lehner. He hadn't scored since Oct. 20, in a 4-3 win against the Florida Panthers. The drought ended one game shy of Crosby's NHL career high of 12, from Nov. 23, 2011, to March 22, 2012.
Jack Eichel ended a drought of his own when he scored for the first time in nine games to give the Sabres a 3-1 lead 16 seconds into the second period. Crosby turned the puck over behind the Pittsburgh net, which led to Eichel backhanding a shot around the right post for his first goal since Oct. 21, in a 5-4 win against the Boston Bruins. Eichel wasn't pleased with the Sabres' inability to hold that lead. Sheary made it 3-2 with a wrist shot under Lehner's right pad during a 2-on-1 at 4:28 of the second period.
Buffalo seemed set to carry a 2-0 lead into the first intermission before a gaffe by Lehner led to Pittsburgh's first goal. Lehner fumbled the puck behind his net, which allowed Patric Hornqvist to race down the ice and retrieve it. With the net vacated, Hornqvist shot the puck in off Ryan O'Reilly in front to cut Buffalo's lead to 2-1 with 19 seconds remaining in the period. Kane and Sam Reinhart scored the Sabres' two first-period goals. Kane shot the puck off the left post to score on a 2-on-1, giving Buffalo a 1-0 lead at 3:45. Reinhart scored a power-play goal on a wrist shot, putting the puck between the right post and goalie Matt Murray to make it 2-0 with 3:07 left in the first.
* Sheary's goal 16 seconds into overtime. 
* Murray's save on Eichel at 12:56 of the third period.* Crosby's goal at 17:15 of the second period.* Penguins defenseman Kris Letang had an assist on Sheary's overtime goal for his 400th NHL point in 623 games. … Sabres defenseman Marco Scandella played 26:34 to lead all skaters and had an assist after missing practice Monday with an undisclosed illness.
"I think we've got a character group. They're good people and they care, and they want to win. I think we have to play a little smarter." -- Penguins coach Mike Sullivan"It's good to come from behind and win," Sheary said after the Penguins twice trailed by two. "I know we're resilient like that. … We want to have a better start and maybe come out with a lead right out of the gate."
"You're happy to see it go in the net," Crosby said. "There were some good chances. I think as long as they're there, hopefully they'll start to go in a little bit more."
 
Penguins @ Ottawa Senators 3-1 - Thursday, November 16, 2017


Matt Murray made 21 saves for the Pittsburgh Penguins, and Patric Hornqvist, Jake Guentzel and Riley Sheahan scored in a 3-1 win against the Ottawa Senators at Canadian Tire Centre. The Penguins (11-7-3), who ended a four-game road losing streak (0-2-2), have won consecutive games for the first time since Oct. 24 and 26. Jean-Gabriel Pageau scored, and Craig Anderson made 26 saves for Ottawa (8-4-5), which lost for the first time in three games. Center Matt Duchene had five shots on goal and a minus-1 rating in 17:31 in his home debut with the Senators, who played their first game in North America since defeating the Colorado Avalanche on Friday and Saturday in the 2017 SAP NHL Global Series in Stockholm. Duchene was acquired from the Avalanche on Nov. 5 in a three-team trade that also involved the Nashville Predators.
Murray's best save came against Mike Hoffman during an Ottawa power play at 13:48 of the first period. Hoffman one-timed Mark Stone's no-look, backhand pass across the slot, but Murray stopped it with the palm of his blocker hand as he rolled across the crease to keep it 0-0. Penguins captain Sidney Crosby said it was the turning point of the game. Hornqvist and Guentzel each scored on a deflection late in the second period. At 16:10, Hornqvist redirected a shot by Olli Maatta to give the Penguins a 1-0 lead. It was his seventh goal. Guentzel scored his sixth of the season with nine seconds left in the period when he deflected a Brian Dumoulin shot past Anderson. Pageau skated around Dumoulin and scored his second goal of the season at 10:29 of the third period to make it 2-1. Sheahan scored into an empty net with 31 seconds left to make it 3-1. It was his first goal for Pittsburgh since being acquired in a trade from the Detroit Red Wings on Oct. 21.
* Murray lunged to his left to stop Hoffman at 13:48 of the first period.
* Anderson got his right pad on Bryan Rust's shot at 16:09 of the third period.
* It was the first game between the teams since the Penguins eliminated the Senators from the Stanley Cup Playoffs on a goal by Chris Kunitz in the second overtime in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Final on May 25. … Ottawa defenseman Chris Wideman left the game with 3:41 left in the third period after Penguins center Evgeni Malkin fell on him. There was no update.
"We wanted to build off of last game (a 5-4 overtime win against the Buffalo Sabres on Tuesday) and keep that momentum. It was nice to get a road win." -- Penguins captain Sidney Crosby
"I played [Stone] a little too aggressively on the right side there," Murray said. "I tried to get my stick on the pass and just missed it. I knew Hoffman was over there waiting for a one-timer. He's a lefty. I just tried to kind of barrel-roll over there. I just tried to get whatever I could over there and still track it, still react to it. I was able to get my blocker on it. A bit lucky, but a good battle save, I guess."
"It looks like it's a for-sure goal with the play they made, and he's kind of down and out and finds a way to get his [blocker] on it," Crosby said. "That's a big point in the game. If they score on that, maybe they get some momentum and it's a different outcome. That was a huge save for us. We were able to settle in and generate some chances ourselves."

Blackhawks @ Penguins 2-1 - Saturday, November 18, 2017


Artem Anisimov scored his fifth goal in three games to help the Chicago Blackhawks defeat the Pittsburgh Penguins 2-1 at PPG Paints Arena. Twenty-one seconds after Matt Hunwick tied it 1-1 with a shorthanded goal for Pittsburgh 8:00 into the third period, Anisimov re-established Chicago's lead. A shot attempt from Nick Schmaltz missed the net before Anisimov reached below the goal line to retrieve it and tuck a shot inside the right post for his Blackhawks-leading 10th goal at 8:21.
Chicago (10-8-2) is 3-1-0 since losing five of its previous seven games (2-5-0).

The Penguins (11-8-3) lost in regulation at home for the first time this season. They are 6-1-1 in Pittsburgh. Despite an improved effort compared to their 10-1 loss to the Blackhawks on Oct. 5, Penguins coach Mike Sullivan wasn't pleased.
Jake Guentzel seemed to tie it 2-2 at 11:33 of the third period. The goal was disallowed following a coach's challenge, where it was ruled Olli Maatta interfered with Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford.
Chicago took a 1-0 lead scoring on its second power play. Gustav Forsling scored his second goal of the season at 12:32, after Brandon Saad, Patrick Kane and Anisimov each failed to convert on chances with Matt Murray scrambling in his crease. Murray stopped a wrist shot from Anisimov with 7:35 left to freeze the puck. Jonathan Toews won the face-off and Alex DeBrincat passed to Forsling at the inner edge of the left circle, where he sent a wrist shot past Ian Cole.
Chicago could have had a larger lead in the first period, but couldn't convert on two breakaways. Schmaltz was denied at 1:06, and Toews sent a shot over the net at 12:44. Crawford, who made 35 saves, temporarily left the game after being hit by Evgeni Malkin at 8:43 of the second period. Malkin was called for goaltender interference after running into Crawford's head. Anton Forsberg, who didn't face a shot, replaced Crawford until he returned at 11:35. With the Penguins net empty, Crawford made a save on a wrist shot from Phil Kessel with 19 seconds remaining in the third period. After receiving a pass from Sidney Crosby, Guentzel found Kessel gliding toward the left post. Kessel shot toward a seemingly open left side of the net, but Blackhawks defenseman Brent Seabrook partially blocked his shot before Crawford got his right pad on it and reached back to freeze the puck. Murray made 36 saves.

* Anisimov's goal at 8:21 of the third period.* Crawford stopping Kessel with 19 seconds remaining in the third period. * Hunwick's goal 8:00 into the third period.* Blackhawks defenseman Duncan Keith played after missing practice the previous two days with an undisclosed illness. He had three blocks in 26:56. … Maatta did not participate in Pittsburgh's morning skate Saturday because of an undisclosed illness. He blocked four shots and had one hit in 18:10. … Hunwick returned from missing 15 games with a concussion. … The Blackhawks have won eight consecutive games against the Penguins dating to Jan. 21, 2015, outscoring them 30-10.
Hawks Quotes"I find that we're moving better and skating better. We still think there's better puck management internally, on every single line, and that could make us better. That's where the upside has to come from." -- Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville"[The goal] feels big," Anisimov said. "What happened, happened. We just need to forget it, learn from the mistakes and go forward. Go out there and complete the power play. … I feel nice. Just keep it going and work hard every day, and move forward."

"Both of us just kind of dove over there," Crawford said. "I don't know how it stayed out."
Pens Quotes
"I think it comes down to killing the penalties. Those things happen. Penalties happen. Somebody goes to the box, you just have to make sure you kill the penalty, and right now we're not able to do that. Just have to be better." -- Penguins defenseman Olli Maatta
"I think we see signs that when we play the game the right way, we control territory," Sullivan said. "I also think … there was a lack of attention in the detail and some of the odd-man rushes that we gave up were forcing plays to try to create offense. I don't know if it's maybe because we're pressing because we're chasing the game all night long, but that's a characteristic that we have to get better at if we're going to get to where we're going to go. This team can score goals. We don't have to force plays that aren't there."



NHL - Pens Round Up - November 7-11, 2017


Phoenix Coyotes @ Pens 1-3 - Tuesday, November 07, 2017 
Evgeni Malkin and Phil Kessel have thrived playing alongside one another as the rest of the Penguins forwards have struggled offensively. That continued when Malkin and Kessel each had a goal and two assists to help the Penguins defeat the Coyotes 3-1 at PPG Paints Arena.
Malkin gave Pittsburgh a 2-0 lead 3:07 into the first period after he had an assist on Justin Schultz's goal 59 seconds into the game. He also set up Kessel's power-play goal at 6:06 of the third period.
Malkin said he was satisfied with his line's production, which included an assist for left wing Jake Guentzel, but would like to build on it further.
"It's just one game," said Malkin, whose seven goals lead the Penguins. "We're excited to play together, but we need to understand it's one game. It's important, but now, we need to play [together] more. Next game against Washington, against Nashville, same level.
"We understood each other pretty well tonight, but it's not just one game. We have to play better and better every game."


Kessel's 19 points (five goals, 14 assists) lead the Penguins, who are averaging 2.63 goals per game after finishing No. 1 in the NHL at 3.39 last season.
Pittsburgh (9-6-2), coming off a 1-3-1 road trip, scored more than two goals for the second time in its past nine games. Arizona (2-13-2) is 1-8-1 on the road.
After failing to score more than one even-strength goal in each of their past five games, the Penguins scored two in the first 3:07 of the first period to take a 2-0 lead.
Schultz opened the scoring by one-timing a pass from Malkin below the left face-off circle. The sharp-angled shot deflected off goalie Antti Raanta's right skate and into the net for Schultz's second goal of the season, first since Pittsburgh's season-opening 5-4 overtime loss to the St. Louis Blues on Oct. 4.
Schultz played 20:31 on 24 shifts after missing the previous six games with a concussion sustained Oct. 24 against the Edmonton Oilers. Malkin batted in a rebound off a shot from Kessel to make it 2-0.
"[Scoring 5-on-5] certainly improves your chances of winning exponentially," Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said. "We've put probably four games together now where we've generated a significant amount of chances 5-on-5. So, even tonight, we had a lot of real high-quality chances that we didn't convert on.


"We really liked a lot of our 5-on-5 game. I thought we did a pretty good job controlling territory."
Tobias Rieder cut the Penguins lead to 2-1 when he beat goalie Matt Murray with a snap shot 26 seconds into the third period. He also scored Phoenix's previous goal in Pittsburgh, which came at 18:09 of the third period in a 3-2 loss March 28, 2015. The Penguins had not allowed a goal to the Coyotes at home for 162:17 before Rieder scored. Rieder had one assist in his previous 13 games.
Kessel answered 5:40 later by tapping a rebound off a shot from Malkin past Raanta to extend the lead to 3-1. Murray made 24 saves for Pittsburgh. Raanta had 34.


Goal of the game
Kessel's goal at 6:06 of the third period.
Save of the game
Murray stopping Derek Stepan's backhand at 14:32 of the second period.
Highlight of the game
Malkin's goal at 3:07 of the first period.


They said it
"I felt better as the game went on. It takes a little bit to get up to game speed. You can't train or condition for a game, so it's good to get this one and get back into it." -- Penguins defenseman Justin Schultz on returning after missing six games with a concussion

"Been here a couple months and one thing I noticed, I don't want us to be a perimeter team. You have to go to the net. You have to be good along the walls. That's something that we as an organization, we have to get better at. I have to teach it better because you can't win in this league unless you have people that go to the net or you win battles along the wall." -- Coyotes coach Rick Tocchet


Need to know
Tocchet was coaching against the Penguins for the first time since he was an assistant for their Stanley Cup championship runs the past two seasons. … Pittsburgh forward Riley Sheahan played his 300th NHL game. He has 98 points (38 goals, 60 assists) in seven seasons with the Detroit Red Wings and Penguins. … Penguins center Sidney Crosby hasn't scored a goal in nine games. He has three assists in that span.


Pens @ Washington Capitals 1-4 - Friday, November 10, 2017

Washington Capitals goalie Braden Holtby made 27 saves in his 200th NHL win, 4-1 against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Capital One Arena. Holtby became the second-fastest goalie in NHL history win 200 games, reaching it in 319 games, 10 more than Ken Dryden of the Montreal Canadiens, who earned his 200th win in his 309th game, on Nov. 16, 1977. John Carlson and T.J. Oshie scored on the power play for the Capitals (9-7-1), who have won four of their past five. Chandler Stephenson and Jakub Vrana scored third-period goals.
Phil Kessel scored for the Penguins (9-7-2), and Matt Murray made 27 saves. Pittsburgh has lost two of three. Carlson scored at 14:09 of the first period to put Washington ahead 1-0. He shot from the top of the right circle and beat Murray blocker side with Oshie and Backstrom setting screens in front. Kessel tied it 1-1 at 8:26 of the second period. His pass in front was deflected in by Washington defenseman Dmitry Orlov. The Capitals took a 2-1 lead at 18:09. Penguins defenseman Kris Letang was called for high-sticking and cross-checking Oshie. With one second left on the four-minute power play, Oshie tipped in Carlson's point shot. It was Oshie's seventh goal of the season but first in nine games. He hadn't scored since Oct. 20 against the Detroit Red Wings. 
Backstrom ended a seven-game pointless streak also dating to Oct. 20. He got the primary assist on Stephenson's goal at 13:42 that made it 3-1 of the third with a backhand pass from behind the net with his back to the play. Vrana made it 4-1 at 17:18 with an empty-net goal. Washington's power play was 2-for-6. Pittsburgh was 0-for-4, including consecutive power plays early in the third period.
Holtby is 200-76-31. Dryden was 200-41 with 61 ties. … Capitals forward Jay Beagle won 13 of 17 face-offs (76 percent). He ranks second in the NHL among players with at least 50 taken (62.5 percent), behind Anaheim Ducks forward Antoine Vermette (63.8). … Crosby, who played his 800th NHL game, hasn't scored a goal in 10 games and has three assists during that stretch.

"I thought we had opportunities to shoot the puck. We've been reluctant for whatever reason the last couple of games to shoot the puck, and I think we can generate offense off it. When we have that shot-first mindset, I think the power play's at its best." -- Penguins coach Mike Sullivan
"We did such a good job on different kills, and even that four-minute PK we did a really good job," Pittsburgh center Sidney Crosby said. "Tough to see one go in late in that power play."
"They score late on their power play twice," Hornqvist said. "Those key goals they get there, it's hard to win when they score those kind of goals, at least when our power play gets zero goals. That's the difference of the game."
Pens @ Trashville Predators 4-5 SO - Saturday, November 11, 2017

Kyle Turris had a goal and an assist in his Nashville Predators debut, a 5-4 shootout win against the Pittsburgh Penguins at Bridgestone Arena. Kevin Fiala and Filip Forsberg scored in the shootout for the Predators (9-5-2), who have won four games in a row. Pekka Rinne made 26 saves and denied two of three Penguins in the tiebreaker. The Penguins (9-7-3) are 0-4-2 in the second of back-to-back games.
Brian Dumoulin scored for the Penguins to tie the game 4-4 at 7:43 of the third period on a one-timer from the slot. It was his first goal of the season. Calle Jarnkrok gave the Predators a 4-3 lead at 4:46 of the third when he took a pass from Turris, toe-dragged around defenseman Ian Cole, and beat goalie Tristan Jarry with a wrist shot from the slot. Turris scored the first of three straight goals for Nashville in the second period. Miikka Salomaki passed from the corner to Turris, who beat Jarry with a wrist shot from the slot to tie it 1-1 at 2:01. Turris had two shots on goal and a hit in 21:38 of ice time.
P.K. Subban gave the Predators a 2-1 lead at 3:52 when he scored with a one-timer from above the left face-off circle on the power play. Craig Smith put the Predators ahead 3-1 at 5:29 with a power-play goal. Forsberg took the initial shot from the point, and Smith got to the rebound to beat Jarry.
Phil Kessel scored from the right circle to cut the Predators lead to 3-2 at 12:27 of the second. Jake Guentzel beat Rinne with a backhand on a breakaway to tie it 3-3 at 2:27 of the third period after receiving a pass from Justin Schultz. Bryan Rust scored shorthanded to give the Penguins a 1-0 lead at 11:58 of the first period. Jarry made 24 saves in his second start of the season. He is 0-0-2. Predators forward Scott Hartnell left the game in the first period after three shifts. There was no update on his status.
Crosby has not scored a goal in 11 games. … Kessel has seven points (three goals, four assists) in his past four games. … Smith, who had an assist on Jarnkrok's goal, had eight shot attempts.
"I think for the most part of the game, we were all over them. I think we deserved a better fate. We controlled the entire overtime also. It was one of those games where it didn't bounce our way, but I liked the effort. I liked the way we came back in the game." -- Penguins defenseman Kris Letang
"I liked our team tonight," Pittsburgh coach Mike Sullivan said. "It was a hard-fought game out there. I really liked our response. I liked our resilience. I think if we play hard like that and execute the way we did tonight, we're going to win more games."

Wednesday, 8 November 2017

NHL - Leafs Round Up - October 11-17, 2017


New Jersey @ Leafs 6-3 - Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Listening to the game by radio is never ideal but when you are following the action while travelling by Megabus from Toronto Airport to Kingston, Ontario awaiting one of the most exciting moments of your life it all adds to the drama. As we left the city limits and tried to avoid the notorious Toronto traffic we just about skirted past the ACC and then there was the TSN studios next up as we headed East out of the city. All the while longing to be at the game but also knowing I had something better awaiting. However, the Leafs didn't read the script.
Miles Wood and Pavel Zacha each scored two goals, and Cory Schneider made 47 saves to help the New Jersey Devils remain undefeated with a 6-3 victory against the Toronto Maple Leafs at Air Canada Centre. Brian Gibbons and Blake Coleman each scored, and Adam Henrique and rookie defenseman Will Butcher each had two assists for the Devils, who are 3-0-0 for the first time since 2014-15.
"It's important for us to be able to come in and play a team like this and be able to find a way to win the game," coach John Hynes said. "I think there's lots of lessons to be learned from this game, even though we won it, it's been a different game than our first two. Handling the momentum in certain areas, we didn't handle it as well, but I think it's a confidence-booster for us to be able to come in and play with them. It's much better to learn lessons and get better through winning than losing."


James van Riemsdyk, Dominic Moore and Auston Matthews scored for the Maple Leafs (3-1-0). Frederik Andersen made 25 saves. The Devils scored twice in the second period to break a 2-2 tie. Zacha beat Andersen for a power-play goal at 9:58 for a 3-2 lead. The Maple Leafs got a two-minute 5-on-3 power play after Zacha was called for hooking and defenseman John Moore was called for cross checking at 14:44, but Gibbons scored a shorthanded goal 10 seconds later to give New Jersey a 4-2 lead.
New Jersey killed off the remaining 1:50 of the two-man advantage for Toronto.
Coleman made it 5-2 at 3:35 of the third period when he knocked down Maple Leafs defenseman Calle Rosen's clearing attempt and put a wrist shot past Andersen's glove from the high slot. Matthews scored his third goal on a 5-on-3 power play at 13:34 to get Toronto to within 5-3, but Zacha scored his second of the season at 17:21 to make it 6-3.
"It was 2-2 after one, but that flattered us at the time. We never had any time engaged," Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock said. "We talked quite a bit about this game coming up and how it was going to be. That's exactly what I expected, but I expected us to compete, and that didn't happen. Hockey is fair, you get what you deserve, and that's what we deserved tonight."
Van Riemsdyk scored a power-play goal at 8:33 of the first period to put Toronto up 1-0, but Wood scored twice in 1:38 to give New Jersey the lead.
He deflected a Steven Santini point shot past Andersen at 9:07 to tie the game 1-1 with his first goal of the season. Then, after Rosen turned over the puck at the blue line, Wood beat Andersen with a wrist shot at 10:45 to put the Devils up 2-1. At 13:33 of the first period, Moore deflected a Nikita Zaitsev point shot past Schneider to tie it 2-2.
Goal of the game
Rookie forward Jesper Bratt carried the puck from the blue line to below the goal line in the right corner and passed to Marcus Johansson behind the net. Johansson quickly returned a pass to Bratt, who found Zacha at the top of the crease for a one-timer to put the Devils ahead.
Save of the game
Nazem Kadri set up Patrick Marleau in the slot, but Schneider lifted his right arm to make a save on a shot that was headed for the left corner of the net at 6:03 of the third period.
Highlight of the game
Wood came through the neutral zone with speed and stole the puck from Rosen before skating in alone on Andersen and putting a wrist shot in high to the blocker side for his second goal of the night.
They said it
"I thought Schneider was great and made a lot of really big saves. I think there was a time about halfway into the game where we got a lot of chances and he was making really good saves that helped his team a lot." -- Maple Leafs defenseman Morgan Rielly
Need to know
Gibbons' shorthanded goal was the first at 3-on-5 in Devils history. … The Maple Leafs had a 79-50 advantage in shot attempts in all situations and 49-31 at 5-on-5.

Leafs @ Montreal Canadiens 4-3 OT - Saturday, October 14, 2017
Auston Matthews scored his second goal of the game at 48 seconds of overtime to give the Toronto Maple Leafs a 4-3 win against the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre. Matthews shot past Carey Price on an odd-man rush for his fifth goal to end Toronto's 14-game losing streak (0-9-5) against Montreal. It was the Maple Leafs' first win against the Canadiens since a 5-3 victory at Air Canada Centre on Jan. 18, 2014."It's always a hostile environment when we come in here, and it's obviously a great atmosphere, so to come out with two points, it's what we came here to do and we're going to take it and move on here," said Matthews, who leads Toronto with eight points (five goals, three assists) in five games.
James van Riemsdyk and Patrick Marleau scored for the Maple Leafs (4-1-0), who matched their best start since 2013-14. Frederik Andersen made 31 saves, including 13 in the third period and one in overtime.

"Anytime you come in here you're playing [Price], he's the best there is in the League," Toronto coach Mike Babcock said. "It's great to look down the rink at him and you've got to beat him one on one. You've got to be better than him if you're going to win, so I thought [Andersen] did a good job tonight."
Jonathan Drouin scored his first Montreal goal and had an assist for the first multipoint game by a Canadiens player this season. Jeff Petry and Alex Galchenyuk scored for Montreal (1-3-1), which scored four goals in its first four games and has lost four straight. Price made 18 saves.
"We'll take the point," Drouin said. "We'd rather have two, but I think we're heading in the right direction. Scoring three goals is a good step offensively, but we still have some things to work on."
The Canadiens last started 1-3-1 in 2011-12. Drouin gave Montreal a 3-2 lead at 11:33 of the second period. Marleau tied it at 3-3 with his third goal at 12:40. The goal was initially waved off, but a video review confirmed the puck had crossed the goal line. Petry gave the Canadiens a 1-0 lead at 2:19 of the first period. He skated into the Maple Leafs' zone to take a pass from Drouin at the right point and one-timed a slap shot past Andersen and inside the left post.
Van Riemsdyk drew the Maple Leafs even at 1-1 at 7:32 with his fourth goal, a shot off a faceoff win by Tyler Bozak. Matthews put Toronto ahead 2-1 and extended his point streak to five games with his fourth goal at 8:16. Galchenyuk tied it at 2-2 at 16:49 with Montreal's first power-play goal in 15 opportunities this season.

Goal of the game
Matthews took a pass from William Nylander before going in to score his second overtime goal in three games. "I was kind of contemplating changing but I didn't want to give up a 3-on-2," Matthews said. "So (Andersen) made a huge save and we just kind of turned it back the other way and [Nylander] made an unbelievable pass to me and I was able to sink it in."
Save of the game
Andersen squared himself to make the save on Canadiens center Tomas Plekanec's shot from the left circle at 11:42 of the third period to keep it tied 3-3.
Highlight of the game
Drouin used his backhand to redirect Karl Alzner's slap pass from the left point past Andersen. "It's always a good feeling to score, either on the road or at home, but it doesn't matter as much when you lose the game," Drouin said.
They said it
"I'm so used to it by now. He's so good at finding those seams and making those types of passes, so for myself, I just need to make sure I'm ready because I know the puck's coming." -- Maple Leafs center Auston Matthews about William Nylander's pass to set up his overtime goal
Need to know
It was the Maple Leafs' first victory in Montreal in four years. Toronto was 0-6-2 in its previous eight games at Bell Centre since a 4-3 win on Oct. 1, 2013. ... Matthews had a goal waved off 19 seconds before Drouin scored. A video review confirmed that he made contact with the puck with a high stick. ... Maple Leafs defenseman Connor Carrick returned after missing two games because of an upper-body injury. ... Montreal was 1-for-2 on the power play, and is 1-for-16 through five games.



Leafs @ Washington Capitals 2-0 - Tuesday, October 17, 2017
Frederik Andersen made 30 saves for the Toronto Maple Leafs in a 2-0 win against the Washington Capitals at Capital One Arena. Connor Brown scored at 5:53 of the third period to give Toronto a 1-0 lead, poking the rebound of a Morgan Rielly point shot past goalie Braden Holtby. Nazem Kadri scored into an empty net with 22 seconds left to make it 2-0.
"Obviously, you don't mind the shutouts," said Andersen, who earned his first of the season and the 11th of his NHL career. "It's fun for the team and myself to have a game where pucks don't go in."

Toronto (5-1-0) was allowing 3.80 goals per game. The Maple Leafs, who entered with the best power play in the League (30.8 percent), were 0-for-2 on the man-advantage with three shots on goal. Holtby made 28 saves for the Capitals (3-3-0).
"[Andersen] was great and so was Holtby," Brown said. "I think we gave up more than we'd like, but we did a lot of good things to get through the neutral zone and hang on to pucks. It was good to find one there."
Washington forward Tyler Graovac, in the lineup to replace center Lars Eller (illness), left the game in the first period with an upper-body injury after he was hit by Toronto forward Matt Martin on two shifts. Graovac is expected to miss some time, Capitals coach Barry Trotz said. It was the first game between the Maple Leafs and Capitals since Washington won in six games in the 2017 Eastern Conference First Round.
"When it's crunch time and you're getting close to the end of the year like we were last year, you look back on these kind of close games and think about the value that's in these points," Rielly said. "To get these ones and get rolling a little bit is a great feeling. But it's only six games."
The Capitals pulled Holtby with 2:06 remaining but had one shot on goal before Kadri scored. Washington was 0-for-3 on the power play. There was some consolation for the Capitals in an improved defensive effort from their 8-2 loss at the Philadelphia Flyers on Saturday.

Goal of the game
Brown snuck behind the Washington defense and got into a perfect position after a turnover at the blue line. Holtby stopped a soft shot by Rielly, but before he could gather the rebound, Brown lifted the goalie's stick and tapped in the puck.
Save of the game
With the Capitals on the power play, Andersen dove headfirst to challenge Evgeny Kuznetsov at the bottom of the left face-off circle and used his stick to knock away the shot with 5:06 left in the second period.
Highlight of the game
With Holtby pulled for an extra attacker and the Maple Leafs under pressure in the final minute, Toronto left wing Zach Hyman won a board battle and tapped the puck back to Rielly, whose quick pass to Kadri led to a zone exit. Kadri deked Ovechkin, beat him down the ice and scored despite the Capitals captain hooking him from behind.
They said it
"We have to be able to do it consistently. We have some tough matchups in the near future that we've got to be ready for. So we take this one. It feels good. But we move on. I think we play tomorrow, don't we? Do we play tomorrow? Yeah. We play tomorrow. So start thinking about that one." -- Maple Leafs defenseman Morgan Rielly
Need to know

The Maple Leafs shut out the Capitals in Washington for the first time (73 games). … Ovechkin, who leads the NHL in goals (nine) and shots on goal (39), was held without a point for the second consecutive game.



NHL - Hawks @ Leafs 3-4 OT - Monday, October 09, 2017




Auston Matthews scored at 3:43 of overtime to give the Toronto Maple Leafs their third straight win, 4-3 against the Chicago Blackhawks at Air Canada Centre. The Maple Leafs (3-0-0) scored twice in the third period to tie it after trailing 3-1.
"As the game went on, we got better and better," Matthews said. "That's the way we want to play. We were up against a pretty good hockey team, they're a team that knows how to win. When you get into these tight games, it's definitely a matter of inches so it's definitely a big win for us as far as confidence goes and we just want to keep this momentum going."

Connor Brown made it 3-2 with 7:00 left, scoring his first goal of the season on a wrist shot from the high slot. James van Riemsdyk deflected a shot by Tyler Bozak past Anton Forsberg with 4:18 left to tie it 3-3.

"I thought we had some good chances, they're definitely a good team where there always seems to be somebody around you getting a stick on it or a guy in the lane you have to shoot around," van Riesmdyk said. "They make you earn your chances and when you get them you really have to bear down."
Richard Panik put Chicago (2-0-1) ahead 3-1 at 7:52 of the third when he scored a power-play goal, putting in a rebound off the end-boards from Gustav Forsling's point shot.
"We had the lead and they're playing catching up and they're pressing and they have some skill," Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville said. "They were forcing some plays and they got a lot of loose pucks, we didn't make them turn in the second period and that's where they started getting momentum. They've got some guys with speed off the rush. Their rush game is something you have to give them credit for, it was quick for us."
The Blackhawks scored twice in the first period. Jan Rutta made it 1-0 at 3:46 when his centering pass deflected off Maple Leafs forward Mitchell Marner at the top of the goal crease. Jonathan Toews put a scored 4:11 later to make it 2-0. 
Nikita Zaitsev made it 2-1 at 10:20 of the second period when he caught Patrick Kane standing still at the blueline and pinched into the slot, taking a cross-ice pass from Brown and putting a wrist shot past Forsberg's blocker. Andersen allowed three goals on 21 shots. Forsberg made 39 saves in his Chicago debut.
Goal of the game
Matthews skated in on the left wing and put a wrist shot over Forsberg's glove for his second goal of the season.
Save of the game
Matthews held onto the puck on a 2-on-1 with William Nylander and dragged it around Blackhawks defenseman Michal Kempny before taking a wrist shot that Forsberg stopped with his blocker to keep the score 2-0 at 15:30 of the second period.
Highlight of the game
Maple Leafs defenseman Jake Gardiner had his pass slowed up behind the net by Andersen's stick. Blackhawks forward Brandon Saad put the puck in front where Panik was stopped by Andersen. Toews flipped the rebound into the net over Andersen's glove.
They said it
"They're good, they're really good. We gave up a ton of chances tonight, uncharacteristic of us but they've got some amazing players. They're dangerous, give them credit." -- Blackhawks coach Joel Quenneville on the Maple Leafs 

"Probably the biggest reason why we got a point out of it." -- Blackhawks captain Jonathan Toews on Anton Forsberg's performance

"Absolutely, I feel like that's a big part of my game and I feel like I can do that. When you get the ball rolling, it's nice." -- Maple Leafs forward Connor Brown on contributing on offense 
Need to know
Matthews overtime goal was the second of his NHL career. His previous overtime goal came on Jan 1, 2017, a 5-4 win against the Detroit Red Wings in the Centennial Classic. Maple Leafs defenseman Calle Rosen had his first NHL point by assisting on Zaitsev's goal. 

NHL - NY Rangers @ Leafs 5-8 - Saturday, October 07, 2017




Tyler Bozak scored the tiebreaking goal at 7:17 of the third period, and the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the New York Rangers 8-5 at Air Canada Centre.
The Rangers challenged that the goal was offside but it was upheld upon review, and New York received a two-minute penalty. Leo Komarov scored on the power play to give Toronto a 7-5 lead at 9:52. Nazem Kadri made it 8-5 with a power-play goal at 18:30. The Maple Leafs (2-0-0) built a 5-1 first-period lead but the Rangers (0-2-0) scored three times in the second to tie it 5-5.
"I thought we had a much better third. The first period, structurally we played good, really worked and we had the puck," Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock said. "In the second period, I don't know what we were doing; we got away from our game. That's the way sports should be: When you don't do things right, you shouldn't have success, and we didn't. The way I look at it, we've played two home openers now, found a way to survive in both of them and win the game."
New York goalie Henrik Lundqvist allowed five goals on 17 shots in the first period. He was replaced by Ondrej Pavelec to start the second period, and Pavelec allowed three goals on 24 shots. Kevin Shattenkirk scored his first goal with the Rangers on the power play with 23 seconds left in the first period to make it 5-2. Mika Zibanejad made it 5-3 at 7:43 of the second on the power play when he shot past goalie Frederik Andersen, who was screened by Chris Kreider. Marc Staal deflected a shot from the slot to make it 5-4 at 12:14. 
Mats Zuccarello tied it 5-5 at 14:06. The goal was upheld after it was reviewed to determine whether Zuccarello deflected the puck with a high stick.
Dominic Moore put Toronto ahead 1-0 at 2:30 of the first period, but J.T. Miller scored 1:12 later to tie it 1-1. Zach Hyman made it 2-1 at 5:34 with his first of two goals in the period. Jake Gardiner scored a power-play goal at 11:07 to make it 3-1, and Nikita Zaitsev put a point shot past Lundqvist's blocker at 13:59 for a 4-1 lead. Hyman made it 5-1 at 17:19.
"It was a pretty crazy game, 8-5," Hyman said. "You don't want to be in a game like that, you want to have it low-scoring and play well defensively, but offensively things were clicking for us. It's good to get another win for sure."
Andersen made 30 saves to win his second consecutive game to start the season.
Goal of the game
Bozak was left uncovered in the slot, took a pass from defenseman Jake Gardiner behind the net and flipped the puck over Pavelec's glove to break the 5-5 tie.
Save of the game
Andersen slid across to make a toe save 24 seconds into the third period, after Rangers forward Rick Nash set up Miller with a cross-crease pass.
Highlight of the game
Hyman split the Rangers defense but was his shot was stopped by Lundqvist. New York defenseman Tony DeAngelo got the puck behind the net but turned it over in the slot. Hyman skated in alone on Lundqvist and fooled him with a deke before sliding it past his glove.
They said it
"The first period we were all over them, didn't give them any space, and kind of got away from that. If you're winning a game, there's a tendency to think you can just play run-and-gun hockey, and that's not the case. We're going to have to kind of regroup and know that we can't do that again." -- Maple Leafs defenseman Jake Gardiner
Need to know
Zuccarello (goal, three assists) had his first four-point game in the NHL. He is the first Rangers player with five points in the first two games of a season since Bernie Nicholls in 1990-91. … Ron Hainsey assisted on Zaitsev's goal for his first point with the Maple Leafs. ... Moore went 9-for-9 on face-offs.