So continuing on from our discussion about the Leafs stretched breakout failing for a couple of weeks, they've tightened it up the past week while Matthews has been out, and found ways to win mostly through pouncing on mistakes (a la Penguins 2017 playoffs) rather than overwhelming wave after wave of chances through depth (a la 2016-17 Penguins regular season) and also getting improved goaltending.
They've cut back on the long pass, and instead, kept the centre in the swing position tighter to the D, as WIGWAL suggested. Wingers don't even go up to the blue line anymore, as they stop just past the red line for tip-ins. They're maintaining better numerical advantages in the NZ as a result, so there aren't as many odd-man rushes coming back. By the same token, they're also not really generating anything interesting unless their opponent makes an error (Marner thanks you, Brandon Carlo) or takes a penalty.
Watch Rielly's
goal from Saturday:
- Boston screws up a line change and gives us a temporary power play; Leafs, with a solid 5-man breakout, ID the weak-side immediately and attack the right, unsupported lane
- Marner's low-percentage and contested cross-ice pass is deflected oddly right to JvR on the opposite halfwall; JvR smartly bumps to Rielly
- Rielly shoots for a rebound with a nice low wrister (hoping for the kick out to Marner who is in good position to pounce)
- Rielly gets a maze of Bruins legs and sticks instead as all 5 of them scramble to compensate from the earlier miscommunication and unlucky bounce
- Who doesn't this puck hit before beating Rask? Zero Leaf screens/tips.
- This goal is brought to you by one good Leafs play (breakout), one Boston mistake, and literally every hockey god smiling upon Rielly
Game | Result | GF | GA | Shots For | Shots Against | Even CF% | SV% | SH% | PDO |
VGK | W-SO | 3 | 3 | 25 | 28 | 45.5 | 0.893 | 12 | 1.013 |
MIN | W | 4 | 2 | 19 | 37 | 41.5 | 0.946 | 21.1 | 1.157 |
BOS | W-OT | 3 | 2 | 33 | 35 | 51.6 | 0.943 | 9.1 | 1.034 |
@BOS | W | 4 | 1 | 25 | 39 | 41.6 | 0.974 | 16 | 1.134 |
Courtesy of
hockey-reference.
The wins are nice, because points in the bank are points in the bank, but if we're looking at the measures that usually carry a team to sustained success, it's not as pretty as the 4-0 record suggests. It really helped that we faced a couple of pop-gun attacks in MIN and BOS (they shot 2% on Saturday, and made McElhinney look like an All-Star).