Ritchie finally scores first with Maple Leafs in win over Blue Jackets

0
Ritchie finally scores first with Maple Leafs in win over Blue Jackets

TORONTO — When a team scores with the regularity of the Toronto Maple Leafs, seldom does the head coach so much as blink in the glare of a red goal lamp.

Game 27 of an 82-game grind? An early-December Tuesday at home against an overmatched Columbus Blue Jackets outfit?

For a club that considers itself a contender, offence is to be expected, not celebrated. Or singled out.

And yet, there was Sheldon Keefe, stepping away from his post and going down the bench to congratulate Nick Ritchie in the middle of a walkaway victory. Patting him on the back where a monkey used to reside.

A push alert to the smartphones of Leaf Nation: Nick Ritchie has scored a goal.

On a roster brimming with pleasant surprises (Ondrej Kase, Michael Bunting) and superstars who make the scoresheet as often as Admiral William H. McRaven makes his bed, Ritchie had become the rusty cog on an otherwise well-oiled machine.

Keefe had tried giving the free-agent flyer an extended trial on Auston Matthews’ top line not once but twice. He’s had the benefit of net-front power-play position and even been promoted to the top PP unit in times of injury.

At every turn, Ritchie’s teammates and coach would defend his work ethic and attitude.

As the big winger’s goal drought dragged on to 36 games, they would go out of their way to praise a nice screen or a sweet pass. The little things, until the big one arrived.

In Ritchie’s defence, who among us would turn down $5 million to play two years with a few of the world’s greatest playmakers?

After a while, reporters had stopped asking questions about Ritchie.

For one, he’s played OK as a bottom-six winger. He seldom makes an impact play, but that applies both ways. For two, it feels silly to complain about the blister on Andre De Grasse’s baby toe when you can just watch the guy run.

Ritchie quietly went to work. And with the Leafs stacking standings points, the noise around him quieted too.

But amidst Toronto’s 5-4 victory over the Jackets, the joyous celebration over Ritchie’s first-period goal stood out.

Kase, who set up Ritchie in the slot with a hard forecheck behind the net, pumped both fists like he was shaking a KitKat out of a vending machine. Keefe strode over for the pep talk. The fans roared. And the face of Ritchie himself turned seven shades of relief.

Absolutely, we could be writing about Morgan Rielly’s four-assist showing.

Or Matthews’ torrid scoring streak, now up to 10 goals in seven games.

Or Bunting’s hardworking, between-the-legs, blind assist with Mitch Marner injured (“It was beautiful,” Matthews said) — giving the senior rookie 11 points in eight games.

Or another Jack Campbell win, decorated with a few highlight-reel stops.

But Ritchie was due.

So, let’s him give some.

Fox’s Fast 5

• Yes, Keefe considered promoting Kase, instead of Wayne Simmonds, up to Matthews’ top line in the absence of Marner and the suspended Jason Spezza. But Kase’s recent return from injury and his chemistry with David Kämpf on the checking line made the coach hesitant to break that third unit up.

• Campbell wasn’t tested nearly as much as Columbus counterpart Elvis Merzlikins, but this pair of short-handed stops on speedy Alexandre Texier were critical in the early going:

• Matthews has scored 16 goals and racked up 26 points in his past 18 games, making us forget about his slow start. The wrist looks just fine now, thanks.

• Call him old-school, but Columbus’s Max Domi is a fan of the way things used to be — when players doubled as police.

“You look at Wayne Gretzky,” Domi said. “No one got within 10 feet of him because they’d have to answer to four or five other guys.”

(Domi was not referring to the Department of Player Safety.)

• The undrafted Kristians Rubins climbing his way from the ECHL to the NHL is kinda like Jermaine Dupri climbing his way from Whodini backup dancer to president of So So Def Recordings.

Comments are closed.