La date limite des échanges est venue et est passée alors que les Maple Leafs de Toronto finalisent leur alignement et continuent de perdre de manière décevante contre les Canucks de Vancouver. Mike DiStefano et David Morassutti donnent leurs dernières réflexions sur les accords conclus, l’intérêt signalé pour Erik Karlsson et l’ajout qui, selon eux, a eu le plus d’impact. Ils passent au match de samedi qui a vu une bonne performance de Matt Murray à son retour se perdre. Ils examinent la blessure de Ryan O’Reilly et évaluent le meilleur et le pire des cas (c’est avant toute mise à jour officielle sur son statut). Pour terminer le spectacle, Mike et Dave donnent leurs dernières réflexions sur la date limite en regardant quelles équipes les ont impressionnés et si les Leafs ont comblé l’écart avec les prétendants. Soutenez-nous en soutenant nos sponsors ! Built Bar Built Bar est une barre protéinée qui a le goût d’une barre chocolatée. Rendez-vous sur builtbar.com et utilisez le code promotionnel « LOCKEDON15 » et vous obtiendrez 15 % de réduction sur votre prochaine commande. Athletic Greens Pour vous faciliter la tâche, Athletic Greens vous offrira un approvisionnement GRATUIT d’un an en vitamine D de soutien immunitaire ET 5 packs de voyage GRATUITS avec votre premier achat. Tout ce que vous avez à faire est de visiter athleticgreens.com/NHLNETWORK Suivez et abonnez-vous sur toutes les plateformes de podcast… Plus 🎧 https://linktr.ee/LockedOnNHL Suivez sur Twitter : https://twitter.com/Mickey_Canuck Suivez sur Twitter : https://twitter.com/d_morassutti Suivez l’émission sur Twitter : https://twitter.com /lockedonleafs
@Canucks de Vancouver
9 Comments
First. Canucks fan here, just kidding. How can you be a fan of the Canucks as they currently stand? 🤢
ok macabe wouldnt drop the gloves with lucic or nurse and then got beat up by myers
Tampa 3 consecutive Stanley Cup finals take its toll, they have to run into a wall.
How come nobody is talking about the " white elephant " in the room . Sheldon Keefe . It is my opinion that the Leafs have a coaching issue . Actually since last year. Evidence ? They repeat mistakes over & over & over again . Keefe is articulate and his post games are accurate , but that would indicate an analyst not a coach. I also question his over thinking the forward lines & defence pairings. I've watched NHL hockey since 1962. It's not rocket science. The most succesful teams do the little, simple things consistently.
Toronto will beat Tampa but will never beat Boston or Carolina. I think Toronto will be out coached.
Leaf totally let down the goalie. They will collapse in the first round again
The Bruins have been playing playoff hockey all year. They seem very much like a team that could crash and burn in the first round. Tampa, I don't know. You almost expect Keefe plus these guys to find a way to lose.
I pulled up early Monday Eastern Time stats for now-Canes’ (ex-Oilers’) winger Puljujarvi, a 4th overall pick in the 2016 NHL Entry Draft. I admit that it can take time for draftees to develop. Between him and the Leafs’ Marner (the 4th overall pick in the 2015 Draft) there is absolutely NO contest at least when it comes to regular-season points, with Marner having EASILY averaged over a point per game played under such circumstances. Marner, in each season he has played, has easily averaged over ½ points per game. Included in that average has been one of almost ⅓ goal. This season he hasn’t skipped too many beats, with his having scored 22 goals over 63 games, thus having averaged just over ⅓ goal per game that span.
I admit that not every point from a player will be a goal, but when I look at Puljujarvi‘s regular-season point production, things haven’t gone as well for him as for Marner. Whilst in only one season, Marner has had a regular-season plus-minus of under 0 just once (a -1 during the 2017-18 season), Puljujärvi this season so far has a -11, not far from his career-worst of -14 through the 2018–19 season during which the Oilers had missed out on postseason play. 112 points over 317 games -> a per-game average of just over ⅓ over Puljujarvi‘s career although this season has gone quite badly for him, with an average of just under ¼ point per game. That over his career, Puljujarvi has averaged about the same number of points per game as Marner has in the goal department clearly shows how badly Puljujarvi‘s career has gone when compared to that of Marner at least on regular-season play.
How about playoff production on points? Sure the Oilers have won two playoff rounds during Puljujarvi’s time with the team although during the Swede’s time with the Alberta team, he’s put up just 5 points, 3 of them goals, over 20 games. Tampa Bay Lightning winger Nick Paul, drafted 101st overall by the Dallas Stars in 2013, put up last postseason against the Leafs 4 points to just 2 Puljujarvi had put up against the Kings. Paul did go pointless after the third game of last season’s Stanley Cup finals, making it quite fair to compare how he did over his first 20 playoff games in his NHL career to the 20 playoff games, Puljujarvi has ever played in his NHL career. Paul has scored so far as many goals in postseason play (5) as Puljujarvi has put up points.
Nick Paul, as a 25-year-old, signed his second, most recent contract, a 2-season one with a per-season cap hit (PSCH) of US$1.35 million. Neither contract Puljujarvi had signed, before his existing one, had had a PSCH of US$1.2 million or more. Furthermore, whilst Nick Paul signed with the Bolts a seven-season contract with a US$3.15 million PSCH, Puljujarvi was only able to manage to sign a contract valid for this season, and for a US$3 million PSCH. Puljujarvi has yet to play a game with the Canes as he was dealt to his new team only after he had played 58 games with the Oilers after last preseason although because his existing contract expires in June, he doesn’t have a lot of time to make a good first impression on his new team, with the right, the canes, still have to decide, call me end of the season, whether or not to extend him a qualifying offer. That’s because his pending free agent status is that of the restricted (RFA) type, but one that gives him the ability to exercise arbitration rights as long as he receives a qualifying offer from the Canes no later than the day ET following the upcoming NHL Draft.
Toronto started the physical play, Vancouver answered back. Toronto got these new guys on the road trip They are going to need some practice together