The Province

Together again?

It sounds as though Leafs coach Babcock thinks he could have both Matthews and Nylander back by the weekend

- LANCE HORNBY

When Mike Babcock starts talking about multiple healthy scratches among his forwards this week, you know he seriously believes Auston Matthews will be joined by William Nylander in Toronto’s lineup by the weekend.

With Matthews expected to return Wednesday against San Jose, a month after his shoulder injury, speculatio­n is increasing that the club and Nylander will finally end a a 150-day stand-off with the restricted free agent with some sort of deal. The alternativ­e is a hardball approach to make him sit the rest of the season after 5 p.m. Saturday or make a trade that general manager Kyle Dubas would likely prefer not be forced upon him.

Coach Babcock, the only one in the organizati­on authorized to mention anything public about Nylander, was discussing the lineup impact on whichever Leaf must sit to accommodat­e Matthews, when he volunteere­d this on Tuesday: “Our guys all know (Matthews) is going to be here, I expect Willy will be here, too. I expect. So there are other guys not playing, too.”

It added a bit more intrigue to why Babcock did not show his hand with any set forward lines in the contact practice Matthews had to get through to be green-lighted for the Sharks.

“I feel ready to play tomorrow,” Matthews said. “The guys took it easy on me for the most part, but just in those (few) battle drills and competing and stuff, everything felt good.”

Both Matthews and Babcock said final clearance would come after a discussion with head athletic therapist Paul Ayotte.

“Probably for the first period, it will be (adjusting) to the speed, the time and space,” Matthews said. “For myself, I want to get out there, get the puck, make sure I’m doing things right, not trying to be too fancy with it.

“I’ve been bored to death the past month, I’m going to be excited just to be back with the team.”

In his absence since Jacob Trouba of the Jets popped his shoulder Oct. 29, the Leafs won nine of 15 games. Among those passing him as leading scorer (Matthews had 16 points in 11 games) was Mitch Marner, now up to 33 and tied for third place overall with Edmonton’s Connor McDavid before Tuesday night’s slate of games.

John Tavares has 15 goals, Kasperi Kapanen 10, Andreas Johnsson had a hat trick last week, Patrick Marleau had nine points in 14 games and Morgan Rielly’s 27 points are among the most by NHL defencemen. Frederik Andersen has a league-high 13 wins in net.

“It’s awesome to see,” Matthews said. “Obviously a big part of you is frustrated because you want to be out there with them and help contribute, but a lot of guys have been playing very well for us. We’re winning, that’s the most important part.”

Babcock started Tuesday’s practice with 4-on-4 mini-games with nets in the neutral zone and then mostly 1-on-1, or 2-on-2 rink long drills, nothing to give away a line assignment for Matthews at even strength or on the power play.

“To be honest with you, I haven’t thought about it,” Babcock deadpanned. “Until they tell me he’s playing, it’s just us (speculatin­g). When he’s available, I’m sure we’ll find him some linemates.”

The plan in the summer was to start Matthews with Marleau and Nylander on his flanks, but the Nylander dispute saw Tyler Ennis moved up to right wing with Matthews. After Matthews’ mishap, two strong offensive lines were formed around Tavares between Marner and Hyman and Nazem Kadri between Kapanen and Marleau.

“It’s never about one player, it’s about the team,” Babcock said of the excellent post-Matthews record. “We have a good leadership and the guys have worked hard most nights. We’ve had a tough schedule.”

The Leafs will have to move a cen- tre for Matthews, either making Par Lindholm a winger again, dropping fourth-line middleman Frederick Gauthier or pushing out wingers Josh Leivo, Ennis or Johnsson. All have played well on both sides of the puck.

Nylander might be a little rusty, practicing with a Swedish junior team at last report, but if he signs in the next two days, on a long-term or bridge deal, he might be able to play Saturday night in Minnesota against theWild.

 ?? ERNEST DOROSZUK/ POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Maple Leafs forward William Nylander (right) and Auston Matthews were slated to play together again this season until Nylander took a hard line on contract negotiatio­ns and chose to sit out.
ERNEST DOROSZUK/ POSTMEDIA NEWS Maple Leafs forward William Nylander (right) and Auston Matthews were slated to play together again this season until Nylander took a hard line on contract negotiatio­ns and chose to sit out.
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