Montreal Gazette

Kadri happy to centre third line on winning team

With TAvAres ABoArd, longtime MAple LeAf willing to plAy A more Complement­Ary role

- TERRY KOSHAN tkoshan@postmedia.com twitter.com/ koshtoront­osun

Nazem Kadri, for several years, has envisioned himself as a firstline centre in the NHL.

Funny what can happen when a club, in this case the Toronto Maple Leafs, has not only restored respectabi­lity to the franchise but has worked diligently to become a legitimate and consistent Stanley Cup contender.

Kadri, the longest-serving Leaf on the roster, will be Toronto’s third-line centre when the 201819 season starts, behind Auston Matthews and John Tavares.

Never mind that he’s coming off back-to-back 32-goal seasons.

“You know what, winning is the most important thing to me,” Kadri said Wednesday before teeing off at Glen Abbey at the NHL Players’ Associatio­n’s charity golf tournament.

“And I know that is maybe a cliche for you guys, but that is the honest truth. I don’t care where I play. I don’t care what role I play. Obviously, I want to be an impact player and I want to continue to have the success I’ve been having, and I think players ahead of me will give me the chance to do that.

“It’s not really a one-two-three type thing. We’re all going to play together and have that success. Our ultimate goal is to win a Stanley Cup and bring that to the city of Toronto, so we’re all going be on the same page.”

Above all else, Kadri is stoked that Tavares, an old pal and former London Knights teammate, is going to be wearing blue and white for the next seven seasons. Kadri was optimistic about the future when the Leafs cleaned out their lockers in April after they were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs by the Boston Bruins. How much did that optimism take a jump when Tavares was signed?

“Big-time,” Kadri said. “I was thrilled. I was so happy to have a teammate like that. He is such a great guy and such a genuine person (and) good to have in the locker-room. It’s nice to reconnect.”

Kadri said he wasn’t “so sure” that another NHL team has a deeper trio of centres. And he is quite positive about another factor regarding Tavares.

“I don’t think a player like him would have wanted to sign in Toronto eight, nine years ago,” Kadri said.

“That’s the culture we have been trying to rebuild, is trying to acquire those free agents and try to make Toronto a destinatio­n where players want to come and win. Johnny realized something special we had here and I think he made the right choice.”

Tavares—whowasatth­e Mastercard Centre in Toronto on Wednesday morning, taking part in skating drills — penned an emotional goodbye to New York Islanders fans in an essay published by the Players’ Tribune.

Tavares spoke of his “real, honest, still-there love” for the Islanders and made it clear how difficult his decision was to leave for the Leafs in free agency. The underlying reason was a good one: Tavares later wrote the Leafs “weren’t just my first hockey love. They were basically my first human memory.”

There was no decision, Tavares stressed, until after the meetings with several teams in Los Angeles in June.

“I thought about how the Leafs have a strong, young core that has accomplish­ed a lot in a short amount of time,” Tavares wrote, “and how they have been able to establish themselves as a real contender.”

Tavares ended the piece by apologizin­g to the Isles fans that as captain, he was unable to lead the club to a Cup, and thanking them “for everything.”

Quite classy.

James van Riemsdyk, also playing in the NHLPA golf tournament, has not fully moved on from Toronto after signing with the Philadelph­ia Flyers and it doesn’t sound like he will soon.

“Over the last few weeks, it has been emotional,” van Riemsdyk said. “I was very invested in being a Maple Leaf and trying to put my best foot forward every day and wanting to be part of a winning organizati­on here in Toronto. I definitely think I can take some pride in going through some ups and downs and I guess be happy to leave it better than when you came in.”

Though there were indication­s through the season, and before, that the Leafs would not re-sign van Riemsdyk, the goal-scoring winger said it became official midway through June.

“They were actually good enough to tell me a few weeks before free agency that they were going to go in a different direction,” van Riemsdyk said. “It allows you to fully clear your head before you have to make a really big decision. I appreciate­d the fact they did that. I have nothing but good things to say about the city, about the fans, about the organizati­on.”

The Leafs re-signed centre Frederik Gauthier to a twoyear, two-way contract that has an annual average salary of US$675,000. Unless Gauthier blows the coaching staff away in training camp, and taking into considerat­ion that coach Mike Babcock likes newcomer Par Lindholm as the Leafs’ fourthline centre, the expectatio­n is Gauthier will remain with the Toronto Marlies.

 ?? ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES ?? New Jersey Devils star Taylor Hall is determined to show the level of play he displayed in his Hart Trophy-winning season won’t be a one-time thing.
ETHAN MILLER/GETTY IMAGES New Jersey Devils star Taylor Hall is determined to show the level of play he displayed in his Hart Trophy-winning season won’t be a one-time thing.
 ?? COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto Maple Leafs centre Nazem Kadri says the signing of John Tavares, his former junior hockey teammate, shows how the perception of the franchise has changed among players.
COLE BURSTON/THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto Maple Leafs centre Nazem Kadri says the signing of John Tavares, his former junior hockey teammate, shows how the perception of the franchise has changed among players.
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