The Niagara Falls Review

Zaitsev out for Game 1

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was going to skate today, (but) he didn’t skate today so obviously he wasn’t ready to go.”

His absence is crushing to the Leafs defence, which was hardpresse­d at full-strength even to slow down the NHL’s third-highest scoring team.

Zaitsev spent his entire first season in the NHL on Toronto’s top pair. He matched up against first lines, killed penalties and quarterbac­ked one power play unit. He finished second on the team’s defence with 36 points.

Babcock experiment­ed with different defence combinatio­ns for the second consecutiv­e day ahead of Game 1. He reconnecte­d two former pairings: Jake Gardiner with Roman Polak and Morgan Rielly with Matt Hunwick.

Martin Marincin, who hasn’t played since March 14, was also officially penned into the lineup, potentiall­y with Connor Carrick. The 25-year-old should also soak up penalty killing duties in Zaitsev’s absence.

Babcock hadn’t determined whether he’d stick with Wednesday’s combinatio­ns or if he’d mix them up again. His challenge is finding the lineup which matches up best against the Capitals.

“It’s not just like you’re playing in the regular season, you’re going to play the same team over and over again,” Babcock said.

Babcock has to decide which pairing is best suited for matching up with the Caps’ ace No. 1 line of Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom and T.J. Oshie.

Gardiner was manning those duties alongside Zaitsev for the final month of the regular season, replacing Rielly. Does Babcock prefer the 26-year-old and Polak to combat the Caps’ best unit or Rielly and Hunwick, the Leafs’ top pair from last season?

There’s not great answer either way for the head coach, who guided the Leafs into their first post-season since 2013 and first in a full season since 2004.

“I don’t think it’s a big adjustment at all,” Polak said of the shuffling. “We kind of rotated (defence partners) during the game usually so we’re used to playing together.”

The club will at least have the 30-year-old Polak, who also suffered an injury Sunday against Columbus. He was back at practice Wednesday and finished the regular season relatively strong, absorbing almost 20 minutes pergame with a rotating cast of defensive partners.

He’s perhaps the Leafs top penalty killing defenceman, an important source of toughness and veteran dependabil­ity for Babcock.

“Coaches and his teammates love him more than maybe the fans and the media do,” Babcock said.

Hunwick also had a solid finish to the regular season, pushing nearly 55 per cent possession over the final 20 games. Babcock said goaltender Frederik Andersen would be ready to start Game 1 after sitting out Sunday’s finale.

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