TORONTO – T.J. Brodie needed no reminding what happened the last time the Toronto Maple Leafs ran into the Pittsburgh Penguins. Which was a lot like running into a woodchipper.
Despite dressing a lineup scattered with farm hands and afterthoughts, the Penguins thrashed the reeling Maple Leafs 7-1 four Saturdays ago.
A wakeup call of the ugliest sort.
“You never really forget those games,” Brodie said. “We’re a different team now. Playing a lot better. And we know what we’re capable of.”
Indeed, they are.
The Leafs stepped into the rematch boasting top-five positions leaguewide in goals allowed as well as power-play and penalty-kill success. They have more home wins than the Wright Sisters and are racing for tops in the Atlantic Division.
“We’ve come a long way since then,” coach Sheldon Keefe agreed. “As it turns out, that’s part of our journey to get here. We had to go through something like that. But we feel like we’re in a better place here now.”
Saturday, facing a healthier version of the Pens, was the Leafs’ opportunity to prove it. To un-barrass themselves.
Well, Jack Campbell was his usual stellar self, but the Maple Leafs came out on the losing side again.
Pittsburgh — a .500 club more desperate for points — was both the more determined and opportunistic team in a 2-0 road victory, quieting Toronto’s big guns for the second time this fall.
Matching top lines to start with Sidney Crosby and Auston Matthews at centre ice (a Beijing preview?), Pittsburgh picked right up where these two clubs left off.
After Crosby’s winger, Jake Guentzel, drew first blood, Keefe would, at times, stray from the strength-on-strength matchup to give his stars better looks.
Alas, it was the Penguins’ speed that burned Toronto’s shutdown pair, Jake Muzzin and Justin Holl, at both ends. Pittsburgh doubled its lead in the first frame with a well-executed Jeff Carter strike off the rush.
The Penguins didn’t need to score a touchdown this time around, locking things down enough to take the crowd and the Leafs offence from making much noise.
The visitors even killed off a nail-biting, 109-second 5-on-3 power-play for Toronto late in the third.
Goaltender Tristan Jarry was excellent, but Pittsburgh’s defenders make it difficult to even reach his crease.
“They just play a hard and fast game,” Keefe said. “If you don’t match that, they can make you look real bad.”
The Maple Leafs flew to New York after the loss and will have an immediate chance to right their wrongs in the Islanders’ brand-new home, UBS Arena, Sunday night.
Rookie call-up Joseph Woll will be given his second-ever start in net as both teams battle through the sleepy half of a back-to-back.
Fox’s Fast 5
• Saturday marked the two-year anniversary of Sheldon Keefe’s hiring as Maple Leafs head coach. The NHL’s youngest active bench boss (74-35-13) considered what the job means to him:
“It’s a privilege to coach the Leafs. I feel good coming here and working every day knowing how passionate people are and how much people care about what you’re doing. I’ve had that at various levels, and it’s relative. This is on a whole other planet.
“I enjoy the challenge of it. Enjoy working every day to figure out how we can make our team better and how we can get to the highest level that matters the most. In these regular seasons, the pace of the schedule is just tough. It comes fast. But it’s all part of the journey that you’ve come to love and appreciate.”
• No video tribute for Kasperi Kapanen in his return to Toronto.
“In my experience coaching players, when they come back to a city where they played in the past, there’s always a certain added emotion to it. Kappy will be no different,” Penguins coach Mike Sullivan said Saturday morning.
“Kappy’s a real good kid. He’s hard on himself, so we try to help him manage his emotions through some of the ebbs and flows of the season. But he’s been a very good player for us.”
• Leafs backup Petr Mrazek skated Saturday morning for the first time since reaggravating his groin in late October. Sounds like he’s still at least a week away. (Injured goalie prospect Ian Scott’s return to the Marlies, however, is imminent.)
• Penguins president Brian Burke: “We’re never going to be the same team until we get Geno Malkin back.”
• How ’bout this Josh Ho-Sang kid?
Signed to an AHL-only contract, Ho-Sang leads the Marlies in goals (eight), points (12), game-winners (three), and shootout goals (2/2).
THIS IS INSANE
JOSH HO-SANG WITH THE OT WINNER #MarliesLive pic.twitter.com/AZISN0reFg
— Toronto Marlies (@TorontoMarlies) November 21, 2021