Ottawa Citizen

FAST AND FURIOUS START TO NHL PLAYOFFS

Intensity level for best-of-five matchups through the roof on first weekend of play

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS

You know it’s the playoffs when we’re writing off the Toronto Maple Leafs after just one game.

Just two days into Gary Bettman’s COVID CUP, we had fights, fines and overreacti­ons. There was a buzzer beater to decide one game and a six-goal blowout to decide another. One player was suspended for an illegal hit to the head. Another player avoided all supplement­ary discipline, despite delivering what one coach described as a “filthy, dirty kick to the back of the leg.”

And this was only the first two days.

If you thought playing in the bubble after four months off would result in subdued intensity and a boring product, think again. The intensity has been through the roof.

The best part about the playoffs is the stakes are at their highest. Every game matters. Every shift matters. Every goal, every save, every missed call is replayed and dissected more than the Zapruder film. This year, with the qualificat­ion round being a best-of-five rather than a best-ofseven series, the stakes are even higher.

You can’t afford to go down 2-0 in a series. Not with history telling you that teams are 1-55 when facing early eliminatio­n. And so, if the Leafs weren’t already under a heap of pressure heading into a post-season played on home ice, certainly they are after losing 2-0 in Game 1 to the Columbus Blue Jackets.

The Leafs need to win. More than that, they need to show they care.

The narrative going into their play-in series against Columbus was whether Toronto’s star players cared enough about playing defence. After losing 2-0 in the first game, it has now changed to whether the star players care enough to fight through traffic and score.

If not, it’s going to be a long rest of the summer.

KING NO MORE

Henrik Lundqvist made his 129th consecutiv­e start in the playoffs on Monday. Based on how he played in a 4-1 loss to the Hurricanes, stopping 30 of 34 shots, don’t expect him to make it to No. 130.

Then again, Lundqvist was only starting in net because Igor Shesterkin has been “unfit to play” in the series. You might as well slap that label on the 38-year-old Lundqvist, whose Rangers trail the Hurricanes 2-0 in the best-of-five series.

Even if Shesterkin can’t play in Game 3, expect Alexandar Georgiev to get the start ahead of Lundqvist. After all, this isn’t the same Lundqvist who won the Vezina Trophy and took the Rangers to the Stanley Cup in 2014. This isn’t the same goalie who won 35 or more games in six of his first seven seasons.

Lundqvist, who had a 3.16 goals-against average in the regular season, didn’t win 35 games this year. He didn’t even play in 35 games.

King Henrik’s reign is over. And with Pekka Rinne getting passed over in Nashville and Mike Smith losing the net in Edmonton, he’s not alone in that regard.

SVECHNIKOV ALREADY ‘ONE OF THE BEST’ IN NHL

It was in a first-round series against Washington when Alex Ovechkin “welcomed” Carolina’s Andrei Svechnikov into the Stanley Cup playoffs by delivering a knockout punch to the 19-yearold rookie.

One year later, the Hurricanes winger has wisely decided to keep the gloves on. As a result, he’s the one doling out the punishment.

Svechnikov, who had an assist in a 3-2 win over the New York Rangers in Game 1, followed it up with a hat trick in a 4-1 win in Game 2 on Monday. It was the first three-goal game for a Carolina player in the post-season. It was also an indication of how much the No. 2 overall pick has grown in the past year.

“I think he’ll get a few more (hat tricks) before his time is over,” Hurricanes head coach

Rod Brind’Amour said. “He’s a gamer, too. This guy is one of those players in this break who worked on his game. He wanted to get better. I think you’re seeing that.”

The player who teammates call the “Russian Mule” scored 34 points last season as a rookie. When this season was halted because of the coronaviru­s, Svechnikov was on pace to double that number with 61 points in 68 games.

No wonder Rangers coach David Quinn said Svechnikov, who also had a game-high six hits, is “quickly emerging as one of the best players in this league.”

MORE NHL PLAYERS SHOULD BE KNEELING

It took real courage for Mat Dumba to stand at centre ice and talk about the need for social and racial justice before Edmonton’s first game of the post-season. It’s just too bad no one else from his team — or the league, for that matter — was willing to display similar courage.

When Dumba took a knee for the American anthem prior to Edmonton’s game against Chicago, no one else took a knee with him. When he raised his first for the U.S. and Canadian anthems before Minnesota’s game against Vancouver, he raised it alone.

When asked why teammates had not joined Dumba in a show of solidarity, Wild head coach Dean Evason said it wasn’t brought up.

“Nope, there’s been no discussion­s,” he said. “The only thing that we’ve discussed as a staff is that we want to eliminate racism for good.”

Here’s one way you can start: take a knee. mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/Michael_Traikos

 ?? ANDRE RINGUETTE/FREESTYLE PHOTO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Capitals forward Carl Hagelin breaks in alone on Tampa Bay Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevski­y during action on Monday in the Eastern Conference qualifiers round robin at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto. For the game story and other NHL results, visit ottawaciti­zen.com.
ANDRE RINGUETTE/FREESTYLE PHOTO/GETTY IMAGES Capitals forward Carl Hagelin breaks in alone on Tampa Bay Lightning goalie Andrei Vasilevski­y during action on Monday in the Eastern Conference qualifiers round robin at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto. For the game story and other NHL results, visit ottawaciti­zen.com.
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