Waterloo Region Record

Leafs forward Plekanec proves his worth

- KYLE CICERELLA

TORONTO — Forward Tomas Plekanec was waiting for a chance to show Maple Leafs head coach Mike Babcock he was more than just a depth guy. He picked the right moment to prove himself.

Looking to avoid an 0-3 series deficit against Boston, Plekanec had his best outing as a Leaf on Monday in Toronto’s Game 3 victory over the Bruins, much to Babcock’s satisfacti­on. He played 17:58 — the most ice time he’s had in 20 games with the Toronto since being acquired from Montreal at the trade deadline — in a top-six role alongside Mitch Marner and Patrick Marleau.

He hit the scoresheet with an assist on Marleau’s third-period goal to seal the 4-2 win, but more importantl­y won the matchup against Boston’s top line by keeping it off the scoresheet for the first time in the series.

“Yeah, I felt better. Every player says that when you’re in the game more you feel much better about yourself, you’re more confident, and the key to that as at the beginning of the game we had a good couple shifts, gets you going, and you can shake off that rust from previous games,” said Plekanec.

“And I felt personally very good physically, which I wasn’t really sure about after a long time not playing a lot of minutes. I felt very good.”

Plekanec had been used to playing a significan­t role with Montreal for the majority of his 11-year career, and having to adapt to a lesser one with Toronto has come with some challenges.

The 35-year-old averaged close to 20 minutes of ice time a night in 87 career playoff games with the Canadiens, but only played a combined 21:25 in the first two games against Boston.

With centre Nazem Kadri serving the second of his three-game suspension on Monday and Toronto having last change with home-ice advantage, Babcock felt the need to move Plekanec up in the lineup with the hope of maximizing what he could get out of the veteran centre.

“He played his best game since he’s been here, maybe just the fact he maybe didn’t feel as important as he should have when he got here affected his play, but I thought he was really good and a huge factor in our win,” said Babcock.

When the Leafs traded for Plekanec, the expectatio­n was that he would give Toronto depth down the middle. Babcock wasn’t concerned that Plekanec only produced two assists in 17 regular-season games after the deal and said he was thrilled to have him for the playoffs because: “You can trust him. You can trust him without the puck, you can trust him to play against good players.”

“I know what I came for here, why I got traded for, and I’m trying to do the best I can. And I try to focus on that,” added Plekanec, who is an unrestrict­ed free agent at the end of the season.

The trio of Brad Marchand, Patrice Bergeron and David Pastrnak torched Toronto for 20 points in two wins at TD Garden, playing mostly against the Auston Matthews line.

They had their chances in Game 3, but when it was over the Leafs cut Boston’s series lead to 2-1 by keeping the trio from producing.

“End of the day they can be better. They had a tougher matchup (in Game 3), determined to keep them off the scoresheet and they did,” said Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy.

Kadri is expected to return for Game 5 while forward Leo Komarov, who missed Game 3 with a lower-body injury, could be back for Thursday’s Game 4 at Air Canada Centre.

 ?? RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR ?? Toronto Maple Leafs centre Tomas Plekanec causes a little bit of havoc in front of Bruins goaltender Tuukka Rask during Game 3 on Monday.
RICK MADONIK TORONTO STAR Toronto Maple Leafs centre Tomas Plekanec causes a little bit of havoc in front of Bruins goaltender Tuukka Rask during Game 3 on Monday.

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