Latest episode of The Francis Report is out! Mike and I write our own version of the 12 Days of Christmas. Talk about if the Leafs are for real this time, about The Big Ice chat, and what the Leafs should do to shed some salary.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Tuesday, December 16, 2014
Jeff's Holiday Song!
Twas the week before Christmas, and all through the rink,
Not a Ducks fan cheering, They’re all pukin in the sinks
Bozie and Getzlaf faceoff on the dot,
Phanuef starts laying checks, getting Jackman all hot.
Kessel bringing dekes, turnin Fowler all blue
He even beats Bryzgalov, for a goal or two.
With Kessel & Kadri scoring all over the place,
Bryzgalov could do nothing but bury his face.
Robidas start chirpin, getting the Ducks all riled up,
Boudreau sends out Jackman, and says “Enough is enough”
Jackman starts pushing, Phaneuf on the ice,
In comes the Ref to make them play nice.
The Leafs light up Anderson like a pretty Christmas Tree,
Making all the Leafs fans scream with glee,.
The final whistle blows, The Fan Deck sighs in relief
Because the Ducks gets their butts beat, by the Toronto Maple Leafs
He even beats Bryzgalov, for a goal or two.
With Kessel & Kadri scoring all over the place,
Bryzgalov could do nothing but bury his face.
Robidas start chirpin, getting the Ducks all riled up,
Boudreau sends out Jackman, and says “Enough is enough”
Jackman starts pushing, Phaneuf on the ice,
In comes the Ref to make them play nice.
The Leafs light up Anderson like a pretty Christmas Tree,
Making all the Leafs fans scream with glee,.
The final whistle blows, The Fan Deck sighs in relief
Because the Ducks gets their butts beat, by the Toronto Maple Leafs
Monday, December 15, 2014
Santo Claus; The Gift that Keeps on Giving
This Leafs season has a couple of ties to the Nashville Predators. On November 19th the Preds handed the Leafs a 9-2 loss at the ACC, which proved to be the wakeup call this team needed, going 9-1-1 since the mid November debacle. During this streak, the Leafs have seen improved play from a majority of the team, however, they have been led by an unsuspecting player, who happens to be a former Nashville Predator.
Mike Santorelli was
picked 178th overall in the 6th round of the 04 NHL entry draft by the
Predators. Santorelli spent the bulk of his time in Milwaukee with the Preds
AHL affiliate, scoring 171Pts (74G, 97A) over 3 seasons with the Preds AHL
affiliate. He only ended up playing 32 games with the big club in Nashville,
making his NHL debut in the 08/09 season. In 2010/11 Santorelli became a member
of the Florida Panthers, and finally experienced his first full 82 game season,
where he posted his career highs in goals (20), assists (21) and points (41).
Following the success of this season, he would experience a huge drop off,
appearing in only 60 games. During the lockout season he played 4 games in
Sweden for Tingsryds AIF, and 24 games for the Panthers, before eventually
ending up in the AHL once again and closing out the season in Winnipeg. It
appeared as though he would end up another journeyman playing in the NHL,
bouncing from team to team, never being able to find a home.
Last season,
Santorelli signed with his 4th NHL team, the Vancouver Canucks. In what was a
productive season, he played 49 games and finished the season with 10G, 18A for
28Pts, while also earning league wide recognition for his play on the penalty
kill. However, the theme of not being able to stick with an NHL club continued
as Santorelli did not receive a new contract from the Canucks. Luckily for the
Leafs, and Santorelli, this season Dave Nonis and the rest of the Toronto front
office realized that depth was something an NHL team needed to do things like
win hockey games.
In an offseason where
the Leafs turned their attention to addressing the depth (or lack thereof) on
the team, by signing guys such as; Leo Komarov, Daniel Winnik and David Booth.
Perhaps the best offseason move the Leafs made came on July 3rd when the signed
Mike Santorelli to a 1yr, $1.5 million deal. In the Leafs current 9-1-1 streak,
Santorelli leads the team in scoring (3G, 10A, 13 Pts) and seems to have found
great chemistry on the Leafs hottest line alongside Kadri and Winnik. For the
season, Santorelli has 6G, 16A, 22Pts, which puts him on pace to set career
highs in all three categories. Santorelli is 4th overall in team scoring,
behind only Kessel, Bozak and JVR, and is tied for 2nd overall in the entire
league in +/- (+17). Also, Santorelli (along with Winnik) has been a pivotal
piece of the Leafs 10th ranked penalty kill. For a $1.5 million dollar
"prove it" contract, so far Santorelli is setting himself up for an
"I proved it, now pay me" contract next offseason.
It has been fun to
watch the Leafs on this current streak, and all of us in Leafs nation hope that
it continues. The highlight for me personally has been the emergence and consistent
play of Mike Santorelli, a journeyman NHLer who is quickly becoming a fan
favourite here in Toronto. It's still too early to tell if he will finally be
able to land a long term deal to stay with the Maple Leafs, however, if he
continues to play at the level he is, this may turn out to be a match made in
hockey heaven, and Santorelli may finally have found a place to call home.
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Labels:
Daniel Winnik,
Dave Nonis,
Florida Panthers,
Hockey,
James van Riemsdyk,
Kadri,
Mike Santorelli,
Nashville Predators,
Phil Kessel,
Sports,
Toronto Maple Leafs,
Tyler Bozak,
Vancouver Canucks,
Winnipeg Jets
Thursday, December 11, 2014
Leafs Winning Streak a Cause for Concern?
Last seasons monumental collapse is something no Leaf fan
wants to experience ever again. For the better part of the beginning of this
season, the Leafs had been improving in all the areas that hindered them in the
2013/14 campaign. However, this current streak has brought up memories of last
seasons hot start, and the eventual collapse The Leafs are currently on a 7-1-1
run, and all of us in Leafs nation are enjoying the current stretch of winning.
However, there are far too many statistical similarities between the Leafs
current streak, and last year’s hot start. The Leafs may be winning, but their
play is declining, and that is concerning considering where that lead the team
in 2013/14. In the last 3 games (all wins) the Leafs have been out shot 110-76,
for a -34 differential, some of these shots against can be attributed to the
Leafs being able to sit back on their lead, however, the Leafs sit back far too
much, and this style of play is one that has come back to hurt the Leafs
historically (hate to bring it up but, see Boston game 7) The Leafs have had an
average shooting percentage of 13% which is unsustainable when compared to the
league average 9%. One of the main reasons the Leafs have experienced success
over the past two seasons is their stellar goaltending.
Prior to Saturday night, Jonathan Bernier had 9 consecutive
starts for the Leafs, playing some of his best games as a Leaf. In the 9 games,
Bernier had faced 303 and stopped 284 for a .937 save percentage, which is
outstanding. In two of his last starts Bernier has had his best two
performances during the stretch, first against Vancouver (stopping 44 of 46)
then against Calgary on Tuesday. Reimer was called upon Wednesday might, in a
move that had great skepticism. Reimer having not played in almost a month, had
many speculating a rusty game for the Leafs backup, however it was quite the
opposite , Reimer stopped 41/42 (.976 Sv. %) shots and was the sole reason the
leafs were even in the game through three periods. Looking at the 9 game
stretch last season, the Leafs goaltenders faced 305 shots and stopped 283 for
a save percentage of .927, eerily similar to the similar stretch last season. A
solid (sustainable) save percentage for an NHL goalie is about .915, if
The Leaf goaltending was playing with a .915 SV% the teams
record (in both cases) without a doubt looks drastically different. In both the
current streak and the streak of last season, the Leafs have been fortunate to
have their goalies bailing them out with above average play, which
unfortunately for them, is not sustainable through an 82 game season. Whether
you are a fan of advanced stats or not, there is no denying that to win hockey
games you must possess the puck.
It goes without
saying but, if you do not possess the puck, you cannot shoot it, score with it,
or do anything except defend, and in the Leafs case, spend a lot of time hemmed
in your own zone. Against Detroit, the Leafs had the worst single game
possession percentage (26%) of any team in the league this season, low
possession is something becoming a trend with this team again, and is something
that cannot be ignored.
Last season through the Leafs first 9 games they were dead
last in the league with a possession percentage of 43.3%, comparatively in this
9 game stretch the Leafs have a very similar, yet even worse possession
percentage at 43%. Toronto finished 29th in the league with a 42.8% possession
percentage, something that the team desperately needed to improve this season.
Prior to this 9 game streak the Leafs had been showing improvement in their possession
sitting at 47.3%, still not amazing, but an improvement nonetheless. Hopefully,
with the Leafs bringing in guys like Kyle Dubas, these issues are already being
brought to the attention of the team, and they're going to be fixed before we
end up with another lost season.
The Leafs had been improving in their possession game prior
to this 9 game run, slowly improving in managing more shots for and less
against, and their goaltending wasn't forced to play at an unrealistic level.
As odd as it may seem to be hoping the team can "turn in around"
while in of 7-1-1 streak, the stats do not lie, and have come back to hurt the
Leafs in the past. It is great to be able to watch the Leafs win, and continue
to climb the eastern conference standings. However, and I hope this is not the
case, we could potentially be seeing the team rewrite their collapse of last
season. As Leaf fans that have experienced what we have over the past couple of
years, we should enjoy when the team is winning, but realize there is more to
hockey games than the final score, and during streaks like this we need to
temper expectations and just take it one game at a time.
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Labels:
Analytics,
Corsi,
Hockey,
James Reimer,
Jonathan Bernier,
Kyle Dubas,
Maple Leafs,
NHL,
Sports,
Toronto,
Toronto Maple Leafs
Monday, December 08, 2014
The Contest
Seasons greetings Francis Faithful!
Here is your chance to win a nice prize from us here at The Francis Report.
What to do: Follow and Tweet one of us @FrancisReport or @ByrneMGL with #TheFrancisReport to get entered in the draw.
Don't have twitter? Thats ok! Comment on the wall of The Francis Report on Facebook with #TheFrancisReport
Do it on both Twitter and Facebook and you will get two entries into the draw.
If you can find us on any social media platform and send us #TheFrancisReport you will get additional entries per social media platform.
We are on SoundCloud, Twitter, Facebook, and, Instagram. Comment on this blog post with #TheFrancisReport and get another entry into the draw!
Want a bonus entry? Get someone new to send us that hash tag and get them to mention your name and we will put one entry in for you and for your new Francis Faithful member.
Good Luck!
Labels:
Contest,
Frame,
Maple Leafs,
NHL,
The Francis Report,
Tie Domi
Saturday, December 06, 2014
Maple Leafs; a One Liner No More
For as long as the Kessel, VanReimsdyk and Bozak line has been together, the Leafs have been known as a one line team, that are easy to handle when the top line isn't producing. However, some bargain free agent signings last offseason, the emergence of Peter Holland, and a lot of 'O' from the 'D', have allowed the Leafs to get a glimpse of what it's like to have depth in their lineup.
David Clarkson (7G, 1A, 9 Pts) makes $5.25 million a year. Daniel Winnik, David Booth, Leo Komarov and Mike Santorelli combined make $4.8 million, this is a testiment to how much more productive last offseason was to the year prior. In an uncharachteristic move, Dave Nonis approached last offseason a little differently than in years past. Instead of paying one large contract to a big name free agent, Nonis signed multiple players to smaller contracts, a move that (so far) is paying off nicely for the 3rd year GM. The largest contract the Leafs offered last offseason was to Leo Komarov, a move that no Leafs fan could argue was a bad one. In 23 GP Komarov has 4G, 12A, 16 Pts, which has him on pace to easily surpass the numbers he put up during his first stint with the blue & white. Mike Santorelli has been one of the least talked about, most productive Leaf players all season. Santorelli (4G, 14A, 18Pts), along with Daniel Winnik (1G, 8A, 9Pts) have not only been productive on the score sheet, but both have been pivotal on the PK which currently ranks 11th in the NHL, a drastic improvement from what we saw last season where the Leafs ended up with the 28th ranked PK in the league. The final bargain signing for the Leafs this offseason was David Booth (1yr, $1.1 million), unfortunately for Booth he has missed most of the season with a broken foot suffered in the preaseason, after another few games getting his legs back, we should start to see what he will bring to the lineup. It is unclear as to who is really running this team following last offseasons various hirings and firings. One thing is evident however, coach Carlyle was forced to change at least some of his coaching tactics.
If there is one player that has beneffited from the changes made by the Leafs last offseason, its Peter Holland. Holland was acquired in a trade last season that saw Anaheim receive defenseman Jesse Blacker, and two draft picks from the Leafs. When given more than 4:00 minutes of ice time, Holand showed flashes of great play and offensive skill, however, no matter how successful he was, much like the rest of the bottom six forwards last season, he would see less than 8:00 minutes of ice time a night. This season to start, it appeared we would be seeing (or not seeing) more of the same. However, recently Holland has been seeing an increased amount of ice time, and much like last season, increased production when he actually sees the ice. As it sits right now Holland has 5G, 4A, 9Pts and has been shooting the puck a ton. Hopefully, Randy Carlyle's new found confidence in the centre will allow his ice time to continue to increase, because it seems like the more he plays, the better he plays, and production from Holland would make the Leafs bottom six that much more effective. The Leafs have always been knocked for their lack of scoring depth, this season the additions to the forward core and their production have only been helped by the fire power from the Leafs back end.
So far this season the Leafs have been seeing great offensive production from their defense. The Leafs defense might not be the best in the league (at all), and as much as they need to focus on their defensive game, the offense they are providing doesn't hurt. Heading in to tonight's game against the Canucks, the Leafs defense has 58 points (12G, 48A) which has them on pace to top their numbers from last season. Special mention has to go to Cody Franson who has 18 of those 58 points, is 6th in team scoring and 13th in the league when it comes to points for a defenseman. Franson is in his 3rd one year deal with the Leafs, and is quitely having his best season with the team. If he continues to play at the level he has been playing, the Leafs will have to decide once and for all whether they will sign him to the long term deal he's been looking for (if they dont someone will), or trade him at the deadline. If the defense can keep up with thier point production, while tightening up their defensive game and responsibilites, the Leafs defense may end up being one of the teams greatest strengths by seasons end.
Although it's never good when your top line goes silent and isn't producing, as a Leafs fan it's nice to know the team has the firepower to still compete in any given game if the big three go silent in a game. The evidence of the depth is clear; with the top line slowing down in 6 games prior to the game against the Devils, the Leafs top line posted 9G, 8A for 17Pts, where as the rest of the team combined for 16G, 25A for 41Pts in the same span. If the Leafs depth players and defense can continue to produce at a steady rate, whenever the top line does play like we all know they are capable of, this Leafs team will be a force to be wreckoned with, and potentially, a dangerous post season opponent to any team.
David Clarkson (7G, 1A, 9 Pts) makes $5.25 million a year. Daniel Winnik, David Booth, Leo Komarov and Mike Santorelli combined make $4.8 million, this is a testiment to how much more productive last offseason was to the year prior. In an uncharachteristic move, Dave Nonis approached last offseason a little differently than in years past. Instead of paying one large contract to a big name free agent, Nonis signed multiple players to smaller contracts, a move that (so far) is paying off nicely for the 3rd year GM. The largest contract the Leafs offered last offseason was to Leo Komarov, a move that no Leafs fan could argue was a bad one. In 23 GP Komarov has 4G, 12A, 16 Pts, which has him on pace to easily surpass the numbers he put up during his first stint with the blue & white. Mike Santorelli has been one of the least talked about, most productive Leaf players all season. Santorelli (4G, 14A, 18Pts), along with Daniel Winnik (1G, 8A, 9Pts) have not only been productive on the score sheet, but both have been pivotal on the PK which currently ranks 11th in the NHL, a drastic improvement from what we saw last season where the Leafs ended up with the 28th ranked PK in the league. The final bargain signing for the Leafs this offseason was David Booth (1yr, $1.1 million), unfortunately for Booth he has missed most of the season with a broken foot suffered in the preaseason, after another few games getting his legs back, we should start to see what he will bring to the lineup. It is unclear as to who is really running this team following last offseasons various hirings and firings. One thing is evident however, coach Carlyle was forced to change at least some of his coaching tactics.
If there is one player that has beneffited from the changes made by the Leafs last offseason, its Peter Holland. Holland was acquired in a trade last season that saw Anaheim receive defenseman Jesse Blacker, and two draft picks from the Leafs. When given more than 4:00 minutes of ice time, Holand showed flashes of great play and offensive skill, however, no matter how successful he was, much like the rest of the bottom six forwards last season, he would see less than 8:00 minutes of ice time a night. This season to start, it appeared we would be seeing (or not seeing) more of the same. However, recently Holland has been seeing an increased amount of ice time, and much like last season, increased production when he actually sees the ice. As it sits right now Holland has 5G, 4A, 9Pts and has been shooting the puck a ton. Hopefully, Randy Carlyle's new found confidence in the centre will allow his ice time to continue to increase, because it seems like the more he plays, the better he plays, and production from Holland would make the Leafs bottom six that much more effective. The Leafs have always been knocked for their lack of scoring depth, this season the additions to the forward core and their production have only been helped by the fire power from the Leafs back end.
So far this season the Leafs have been seeing great offensive production from their defense. The Leafs defense might not be the best in the league (at all), and as much as they need to focus on their defensive game, the offense they are providing doesn't hurt. Heading in to tonight's game against the Canucks, the Leafs defense has 58 points (12G, 48A) which has them on pace to top their numbers from last season. Special mention has to go to Cody Franson who has 18 of those 58 points, is 6th in team scoring and 13th in the league when it comes to points for a defenseman. Franson is in his 3rd one year deal with the Leafs, and is quitely having his best season with the team. If he continues to play at the level he has been playing, the Leafs will have to decide once and for all whether they will sign him to the long term deal he's been looking for (if they dont someone will), or trade him at the deadline. If the defense can keep up with thier point production, while tightening up their defensive game and responsibilites, the Leafs defense may end up being one of the teams greatest strengths by seasons end.
Although it's never good when your top line goes silent and isn't producing, as a Leafs fan it's nice to know the team has the firepower to still compete in any given game if the big three go silent in a game. The evidence of the depth is clear; with the top line slowing down in 6 games prior to the game against the Devils, the Leafs top line posted 9G, 8A for 17Pts, where as the rest of the team combined for 16G, 25A for 41Pts in the same span. If the Leafs depth players and defense can continue to produce at a steady rate, whenever the top line does play like we all know they are capable of, this Leafs team will be a force to be wreckoned with, and potentially, a dangerous post season opponent to any team.
Labels:
Cody Franson,
Daniel Winnik,
David Booth,
Hockey,
Leo Komarov,
Mike Santorelli,
NHL,
Peter Holland,
Phil Kessel,
Randy Carlyle,
Sports,
Toronto,
Toronto Maple Leafs,
Tyler Bozak,
Vancouver Canucks
Thursday, December 04, 2014
A Chance to Thrive for #45
Early in to the 2014/15 season it was looking like the Leafs would be experiencing another season with a goalie controversy on their hands. As we move into the second quarter of the season it appears Bernier is ready to claim the net.
Initially , when Dave Nonis made the trade for Bernier last offseason, I was very much bewildered by the move and totally against it, granted, I have always been a huge fan of James Reimer, especially following the lockout shortened season where he dragged the Leafs into the playoffs and single handedly took them to game 7 with the Bruins.
The Bernier deal seemed, at the time like a move that was made to address an area the Leafs had no need to address, especially when defense was (and continues to be) a glaring area of need for this team. As soon as the trade was made it was believed Bernier was finally going to be given the chance tp be a number one goalie, an opportunity the entire league felt he deserved.
At first it appeared as though Randy Carlyle was going to stick to the 1a, 1b system with the two net minders. Perhaps this philosophy is what created the controversy in the first place, the whole narrative could've been avoided if Carlyle had just named Bernier the number one. Although Carlyle always seemed more comfortable to use Bernier on a nightly basis. As the season progressed #45 was earning a majority of the starts, ending up with 55 games played, a number that likely would have been higher if not for a late season groin injury. Considering how the Leafs ended last season, it would only seem natural Bernier would be able to come in to this season and be named the outright number one. However, an offseason that saw a 2 year extension for James Reimer, more confusing quotes from the head coachwould lead to more confusion surrounding the Toronto net.
Bernier began the season with a (1-3-0 ) allowing 10 goals in 3 losses, many of which were shaky, making the netminder look very human, especially compared to last season. The lacklustre start combined with what was a solid start for Reimer, had many questioning if Bernier would seize the opportunity and take over the net in Toronto. However, if there is one thing Carlyle should get credit for, continued faith in Bernier appears to be paying off. Recently, Bernier has been given complete control of his destiny and is proving equal to the task. One thing is clear about Jonathan Bernier, when he is on, he is dynamite and can steal you a few games. The one thing Leaf nation need to see from him is consitency. In the last 5 games Bernier is 4-0-1 and has looked solid in each of the starts. We haven't seen Reimer in net since November 18th against the Preds.
Bernier is set to make his 7th conescutive start tonight, as the Leafs take on the Devils. It appears as if he is ready to claim sole posession of the number one spot on the depth chart. No matter what happens throughout the rest of this season the Leafs will have a crucial decision to make at the end of the season. There is no doubt then when he is playing at the level we all know he is capable of, Bernier is a top 10 goalie in the NHL. The Leafs have a big decision to make at the conclusion of this season; do they go all in on Bernier and sign him to a contract worthy of a number one goalie? or do they dangle him at the deadline and try to get maximum return, the latter would make little to no sense, as Nonis tried for so long to secure the netminder. As long as Bernier keeps up his play of late, I see no reason why the Leafs should not pay him the contract he deserves and allow Toronto to finally have a bonifed number one goalie, not only for this season, but for years to come.
By the numbers;
Jonathan Bernier, G, Toronto Maple Leafs 17 GP 9W, 5L, 3OTL 2.62GAA, .917 SV%
Jonathan Bernier, G, Toronto Maple Leafs 17 GP 9W, 5L, 3OTL 2.62GAA, .917 SV%
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Labels:
Dave Nonis,
Hockey,
James Reimer,
Jonathan Bernier,
Leafs,
New Jersey Devils,
NHL,
Randy Carlyle,
Sports,
Toronto,
Toronto Maple Leafs
Sunday, November 30, 2014
The Francis Report - Episode 10 - Contest Contest Contest!
The latest episode of The Francis Report is OUT! We launch our 1st contest! Details are below.
Contest details: Make sure you follow us on twitter, Facebook and SoundCloud. Send us a tweet, email, Facebook message, SoundCloud comment with #TheFrancisReport to be entered into the contest.
You get 1 entry for each social media platform you message us on with #TheFrancisReport. Example: 1 comment on Facebook, 1 tweet on Twitter, 1 comment on SoundCloud would get you 3 entries into the contest.
Bonus Entries: You get a bonus entry if you get a new follower to Tweet/Comment us #TheFrancisReport, mentioning your name.
Prize:
Follow @ByrneMGL
Follow @FrancisReport
Contest details: Make sure you follow us on twitter, Facebook and SoundCloud. Send us a tweet, email, Facebook message, SoundCloud comment with #TheFrancisReport to be entered into the contest.
You get 1 entry for each social media platform you message us on with #TheFrancisReport. Example: 1 comment on Facebook, 1 tweet on Twitter, 1 comment on SoundCloud would get you 3 entries into the contest.
Bonus Entries: You get a bonus entry if you get a new follower to Tweet/Comment us #TheFrancisReport, mentioning your name.
Prize:
Follow @ByrneMGL
Follow @FrancisReport
Labels:
Buffalo Sabres,
Canadiens,
Contest,
Daniel Winnik,
James Reimer,
Leafs,
Phil Kessel,
possession
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
21 Games in; The Leafs are, who we thought they were
Typically, the 20 game mark the NHL season is a benchmark, when a fan bases
can start to evaluate the team they watch on a nightly basis,
however, in a season full of ups, downs and sometimes lefts and rights, I'm not
100% sure what the Leafs are.
The Leafs have 21 games played, hold a record of 11-8-2, 24 Pts and sit
6th in the conference. Compared to last year at the same mark (13-3-1, 27 Pts)
, the Leafs are slightly regressed, in terms of overall record that is. This
time last year the Leafs were playing way above their heads, at an
unsustainable level for the roster they had.All through the season the
analytics crowd was predicting the eventual collapse, which as we all know,
occurred in the last stretch of the season where the Leafs went 2-12-0 I'm 14 games.
Although they may have a worse W-L record, it is refreshing in the sense that
it better indicates where the team is at skill wise. 20 games in to this season
and we have already experienced a roller coaster of emotions surrounding this
team.
It seems as though every week the Leafs will lose a couple
of games, sometimes in miraculous fashion, and the fan base is calling for
everyone to be fired, and all the players to be traded, then, almost as if
nothing has happened the team will win a few games and just like that the Leafs
are headed to the playoffs and everything is right in Leafs nation. Here's the
thing with this team, they had been involved in 3 blowout losses, of course
headlined by the 9-2 shellacking at the hands of the red hot Nashville Predators,
and the 6-2 loss to the bottom dwelling Buffalo Sabres. On the other hand, the
Leafs have experienced a few dominating wins, most recently of course when the
Leafs Boston Bruined the Boston Bruins 6-1, in a game where Phil Kessel scored
2G and looked phenomenal. The point is, the Leafs aren't as bad as they play
when they get blown out, nor are they as good as they play when they are the
team doing the blowing out. With all of the ups and downs so far this season, a
few players have managed to rise above and maintain a high level of play.
I've eluded to this before, but I'll say it again, as a fan
base, we don't realize how lucky we are to have Phil Kessel on our team, and
this season he is providing even more evidence that he is an elite player in the
NHL. Kessel has 11G, 12A, 23 Pts and has remained in the top 10 in league
scoring for most, if not all of the season so far. Kessel, not only looks elite
on his own,but he makes another player on the roster look like the number one
centre we al know he is not. Whether you like him or dislike him, and despite
his lack of defensive ability, Tyler Bozak (8G, 11A, 19Pts) is playing at an
even higher level than he was last year, a feat no one thought was possible
coming in to this year. Now, this could be in direct relation to the fact
Kessel has also upped his level of play this year, regardless Bozak is
producing at a pace that will see him have another career year. The final stand
out from the first quarter of the season is none other than everyone's favourite
family member, uncle Leo. Komarov (2G, 12A, 14pts) has made glorious return to
the Leafs this season and has done nothing but impress all year long. Not only
with his production (which is higher Nazem Kadri) but his ability to elevate
the players he is alongside (David Clarkson) as well as developing some great
chemistry with Mike Santorelli, all while continuing to be the hitting machine
we have come to know and love (90 in 21GP). As awful as the Leafs defence has
looked at times, an honourable mention has to go to Roman Polak, as well as the
captain.
Originally the Leafs
were believed to have brought in Stephane Robidas to assist in alleviating some
of the pressure from Dion Phaneuf, however, it seems Polak has stepped in to
that role, and, in my opinion done an admirable job. Polak (3G, 2A, 5pts) isn't
wowing anyone with his point production, or athleticism, but he has been among
league leaders in shot blocks (51) and hits (83) and often times has lead the
Leafs in ice time. When Polak isn't leading the Leafs defence in ice time,
often times that will mean captain Dion Phaneuf is. Phaneuf has made his
mistakes this season, as any defenceman will, however he is still playing in a
role which does not suit him, therefore making his mistakes look that much
worse. Whether he is a top pairing defenceman or not, he is the best the Leafs
have, and is playing well through the first 21 games. Hopefully all of these
players continue to produce as the season goes on and we can witness Phil
Kessel break the 100 point mark, as good as these players have been, there are
some things to keep an eye on as the season progresses.
As the Leafs move in to the next portion of their season,
here are few things I'll be watching for;
- Will JVR be able to step away from his streaky play and
have some consistency in his game
- Will David Clarkson continue to produce and settle in to a
third line role which he is better suited
-Can Jonathan Bernier take the reigns and finally claim the
#1 job, and return his play to a level closer to what we saw last year
-Does Randy Carlyle last the rest of the season behind the
bench
-How will David Booth fit in to the lineup, and if he is
successful, will that set the table for a possible Joffrey Lupul trade
In a season riddled
with controversies such as salute gate and jersey throwers, the media, fan base
and players are intertwined in what appears to be a never ending game of finger
pointing and he said, she said, they said, or in Phil Kessel's case, he didn't
say. Regardless of what goes on in the media, the Leafs appear to be what many
of us thought they were; a bubble team that will compete for a playoff spot and
finish anywhere from 6-10 in the east. Personally, I look forward to seeing how
this season unfolds, as always there is never a dull moment when it comes to
the Leafs, and with all the questions still left to be answered surrounding the
team, from front office, to players, there is no doubt it will be fun to watch
it all unfold.
What has impressed you most so far about the Leafs? What are some things you're looking for as the season progresses, comment below !
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Labels:
Boston Bruins,
Buffalo Sabers,
Dion Phaneuf,
Hockey,
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Roman Polak,
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Toronto,
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Tyler Bozak
Monday, November 24, 2014
The Francis Report Episode 9 - We Salute You
Episode 9 of the Francis Report podcast is available on Soundcloud!
Latest articles:
Jeff Francis - Crosby VS Ovechkin
Mike Byrne - I Wish All The Leafs Were As Fat As Phil
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Latest articles:
Jeff Francis - Crosby VS Ovechkin
Mike Byrne - I Wish All The Leafs Were As Fat As Phil
Follow @ByrneMGL
Follow @FrancisReport
Friday, November 21, 2014
Episode 8 - Thank You
Episode 8 of the Francis Report podcast is available on Soundcloud !
This episode features special shout outs, a recap of the past 10 days in Leafs nation and of course the post game scrum !
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This episode features special shout outs, a recap of the past 10 days in Leafs nation and of course the post game scrum !
Follow @ByrneMGL
Follow @FrancisReport
Labels:
Boston Bruins,
Buffalo Sabres,
Hockey,
James van Riemsdyk,
Leo Komarov,
Nashville Predators,
NHL,
Ottawa Senators,
Phil Kessel,
Sports,
Toronto Maple Leafs
Tuesday, November 18, 2014
Crosby VS Ovechkin
Number 87 versus number 8, Sid vs Ovi, Sid the Kid vs Alexander The Great. All of their NHL careers they have been compared to each other. They were drafted a year apart, but entered the NHL during the same season because of the lockout in 2004.
From the time they started their careers, they didn't disappoint. Ovechkin finished 3rd in league scoring and Crosby finished 6th in their 1st season. Ovechkin took home the Rookie of the year award that year. If we are talking personal trophies, this is where we are at.
As you can see, Ovechkin has a lead in personal trophies. Although, a lot of people will only count cups by the time they retire, and in that regard, Crosby leads Ovechkin 1-0.
To add to their "rivalry", in 2009, their respective teams met in the 2nd round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The series went to seven, and boy did they impress. The Penguins and Sidney Crosby ended up beating Ovechkin's Washington Captials 4-3. Ovi and Sid had a wonderful series. Especially in game two, when both of them scored hattricks.
Ovechkin got his 500th point of his career on Feburary 4th 2010. He managed to do this in just 373 games. Crosby you ask? Well he just HAD to show up Ovechkin and did it in 4 games less (369)
Where I am going with this, is we potentially have something special coming up. Barring any long term injuries, (more than 10 games) these two studs could score their 1000th career points on the same night. Here is a look at where they are in relations to their 1000th career point.
As of Aug 15 2015 |
As you can see, Crosby will most likely blow away Ovechkin in games it takes to get to 1000 points, but they could get that 1000th point on the same night. How nice would it be to see them do this on the same night or maybe even against each other.
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Labels:
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Art Ross,
assists,
Crosby,
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Rangers,
Ted Lindsay Award
I wish all of the Leafs were as fat as Phil
Phil Kessel leads the entire NHL in 5 on 5 scoring, is a
perennial 30 goal scorer, is on pace this season to eclipse 100 points and
hasn't missed a game in over 3 seasons. In other words, Phil Kessel is
incredibly good at his job, yet the Toronto media continues to paint a negative
picture around arguably one of the best, most consistent players in the NHL.
Phil Kessel has been
with the Toronto Maple Leafs for six glorious seasons now , in each season he
has seen an increase in point production and over all effectiveness in his
game, not to mention he elevates the play of those around him (Mainly, Tyler
Bozak) along with the point production Kessel possesses one of the most unique,
deadly wrist shots in the NHL. So, all of this sounds great and as a fan base
we love Phil Kessel for all of the fantastic things he does right? Wrong.
Throughout his time
with the Leafs Phil Kessel has had to put up with an unfair amount of BS from
the Toronto media. Granted , being the hockey Mecca that Toronto is, any player
coming to play got the blue and white should expect to be more heavily
scrutinized than smaller NHL markets. Now, some players will eventually flee
the spotlight for more money and ridiculous contracts in Florida (See Dave
Bolland) however, through all the garbage the media has put Phil through, he
decided to sign an 8 year contract extension to remain a Leaf until the 2021-22
season.
Most recently Phil
has taken heat for his post game remarks (or lack there of) following the teams
dismal performance against the Buffalo Sabres. The media approached him for
comments on the game and he simply replied "Get away from me" , this
has caused commotion all week within the sports media circle, and given the
media yet another chance to dump on Kessel. God forbid a player doesn't want to
talk to you after a 6-2 loss to one of the worst teams in the league, the media
is quick to jump on the winger for his lack of leadership, to me his response
to the media said more about his passion and feelings about the game than any
30 second post game scrum with quotes on compete level and winning one on one
battles would have.
Perhaps due to the
lack of success Toronto has had over the years we just feel we don't deserve to
have an elite player on the team, or are sadly uncomfortable accepting it. When
it comes to Kessel you can either listen to the media, who love to throw hissy
fits every time he neglects to give an interview,mother they get to continue to
tell you how he lacks leadership, doesn't care enough about his job to skate in
the summer and is overweight and out of shape, or, you can sit back, enjoy the
fact that the Leafs have one of the top players in the league, and continue to
enjoy watching him improve each season and wire that disgusting wrist shot into
the opposing teams net.
By the numbers;
Phil Kessel RW, Toronto Maple Leafs 382 GP, 167G, 188A, 355Pts
Labels:
Buffalo Sabers,
Dave Bolland,
Fat,
Florida Panthers,
Hockey,
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Media,
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Toronto,
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Tyler Bozak
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