The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Matthews did it all — and more — in Leafs Game 2 win

- STEVE SIMMONS

In the final minute of Auston Matthews’ tour de force, with overtime seemingly looming, with the Boston Bruins buzzing, with Ilya Samsonov unsure of the location of the puck Matthews slid the disc under Samsonov’s pads.

There is no statistic for composure. There is no statistic for assuring victory. There is no statistic, overall, for being the most complete player on the ice in every zone and every way of a playoff victory.

There is a statistic for this though: The Maple Leafs and the Bruins are tied 1-1 after two games at the TD Garden. This playoff series is now a best of five.

The blasted Leafs from Game 1, battled back in Game 2, made some stunning mistakes and some shocking errors and still wound up standing tall enough for a 3-2 hold-your-breath win Monday night over a clearly exasperate­d Bruins team.

You expect Matthews to score, because that’s what he does better than anyone in hockey. His 70th goal of this season didn’t happen in the regular season. And he set up two other scores. Three goals for the Leafs, three points for the giant, Matthews.

On a night the Leafs were losing at faceoffs, he was winning his. He did what he usually does, win puck battles, block shots, rarely turned it over, rarely get beat in any situation, and think the way great hockey players are supposed to think when the game and the series and maybe the season are all on the line.

The Leafs can make you crazy some nights. You can’t understand why they do what they do, how they do it and when they do it.

They took a dumb penalty early — Jake Mccabe seems to be the captain of dumb penalties — and within 26 seconds on the penalty kill, they trailed 1-0. The Leafs may need to add Matthews to the penalty kill if only to help one of the weakest elements of their team about now.

There is no official statistic for power-play goals scored after a penalty killer fails to clear an easy puck. But there probably should be. David Kampf messed up in his own zone, thinking someone else would clear the puck. Someone else named Timothy Liljegren didn’t.

Boston led 1-0.

And this was the moment the Leafs discovered their playoff resilience. Just 14 seconds after the goal by Morgan Geekie, Max Domi took advantage of Boston having the yips and the game was tied, the goal coming on an assist from Matthews.

The period should have ended 1-1 as the Leafs can be a strange back and forth team. There was a faceoff late in the Toronto end, after Samsonov failed to move the puck to one of his defencemen, after the D-to-d pass from Liljegren to Joel Edmundson didn’t connect, and before Simon Benoit chased high in his zone when he shouldn’t have.

The first period should have ended 1-1. It ended with Toronto trailing 2-1 after the Benoit chase and Mitch Marner failed to realize that was David Pastrnak wide open not far from him.

Recognizin­g situations. It’s an enormous skill in playoff hockey. Sometimes the Leafs seem to forget who and what they are.

Give Matthews and the club credit: They didn’t melt after the last second goal. And that has been something about the Sheldon Keefe Leafs teams that has been hard to explain.

Why does the club seem so unstructur­ed when it needs to be the opposite in the final minutes of games and periods? Why?

But almost everything great that happened in Game 2 came back to Matthews. Sometimes the Leafs want to do nothing but pass to Matthews, no matter what the circumstan­ces.

Sometimes, Domi and Tyler Bertuzzi, the wingers, defer to Matthews in every situation.

Bertuzzi had an excellent scoring opportunit­y early in the game but instead of taking the puck to the net, he looked and passed to a completely covered Matthews.

 ?? USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Toronto Maple Leafs centre Auston Matthews (34) reacts with left wing Tyler Bertuzzi (59) after scoring a goal against the Boston Bruins during the third period in game two of the first round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden, April 22.
USA TODAY SPORTS Toronto Maple Leafs centre Auston Matthews (34) reacts with left wing Tyler Bertuzzi (59) after scoring a goal against the Boston Bruins during the third period in game two of the first round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden, April 22.

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