Lightning 2 – Maple Leafs 7 (1-1 series) | The Leafs had no choice

For one night anyway, the Maple Leafs looked like what their goalie thinks they are: the best in the National League against the Tampa Bay Lightning.


No doubt that in this match presented under high pressure at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, the players with the maple leaf had no choice: they were going to have to sweep away the doubts, repel the fears, otherwise the bad jokes about a club that is suffocating and a club that hasn’t won anything since 1967 would suddenly rise again, like the bitter aftertaste of a bad meal in a dodgy cafeteria.

And what did the Leafs do? They did all that and even more, as indicated by this very decisive mark of 7-2 in their favor.

The most seasoned experts will tell you, the best must be the best, and that’s exactly what happened Thursday night. Toronto’s top three scorers, in order: Marner, Tavares, Nylander. Tavares ended his night at the office with three goals. It’s the first postseason hat trick for a Leafs member since Alexander Mogilny in 2003.


PHOTO FRANK GUNN, THE CANADIAN PRESS

John Tavares (91) beats goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy (88) in the second period.

If the Leafs want to move forward this spring, if they really want to be the best, then it’s going to take those three, and it’s going to take Matthews, too, who finished his night with two assists. We can also add the name of Morgan Rielly to this list, since the veteran tied a team record among defensemen in club history by recording four points in a playoff game. Also, note that the Leafs’ third center is called Ryan O’Reilly, which sounds like a bit of a luxury.

On the other side, we will say it, it was not joy, obviously.

Victor Hedman, injured, was not there, nor was Erik Cernak, also injured. Without these two on the blue line, the Lightning defense is obviously no longer the same, and Toronto was to take advantage of it in this second game, which was done.

We always say that a player does not make a team, maybe even two, but it is obvious that these absences are transformed into a marked advantage for the Maple Leafs. In big stretches Thursday night, the visitors’ defense looked completely overwhelmed, exhausted, unable to keep up with the pace set by the Toronto squad, unable to match the intensity.

On this subject, TV has often shown us the crestfallen face of Jon Cooper behind his bench. A pensive air that said a lot, because the Lightning coach is not used to such humiliations. Perhaps also that Cooper was unable to fully appreciate the intricacies of the pop of the famous duo Hall & Oates, whose old success is broadcast, like a torture, after each goal of the Torontonians.


PHOTO NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS

Tanner Jeannot (84) and Luke Schenn (2) in a third period fight

But Cooper, a cunning fox, will surely be far from down, and that’s probably why he refused to raise the white flag in the case of Andrei Vasilevskiy. Even after five or six or seven goals, the Lightning goalkeeper did not return to the locker room, first because he refused to do so, we learned at the end of the evening, but we also assume that THE coach didn’t want to suggest that he was giving up anyway. The series, let’s not forget, is also psychological warfare.

The Leafs therefore had no choice, and they delivered the kind of performance that will surely reassure their faithful. The problem now is that they have to win three more in order to advance to the second round, and that, in their case, is always the most complicated part.


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