Detroit Free Press

Maple Leafs’ brass to stay, no promises on ‘Core Four’

- — Wire reports

Team president Brendan Shanahan was spared his job, but time is running out to convince his bosses with the Toronto Maple Leafs he can build a championsh­ip contender.

Maple Leafs Sports and Entertainm­ent CEO Keith Pulley made it clear in a Friday news conference that winning popularity contests and competing for the Stanley Cup are not the same.

“In the last three to four weeks, I’ve gotten a full glimpse of the power of Leaf Nation,” Pulley said, comparing the atmosphere in Toronto’s home playoff games against the Boston Bruins to attending his first Liverpool match.

“The fans here not only deserve, but demand a championsh­ip. There’s no complacenc­y. We’re not here to sell jerseys. We’re here to win. And we’re going to do everything we possibly can to do that.”

Shanahan fired head coach Sheldon Keefe following a seven-game playoff series defeat at the hands of the Bruins. General manager Brad Treliving, seated next to Shanahan on Friday, said he felt a coaching change was necessary as the first step in what could be a dramatic facelift this offseason.

While Treliving said there is no urgency to find a replacemen­t on the bench, Shanahan cautioned a methodical review of all aspects of the franchise and roster was underway.

Pelley plans to be involved in decisions effective immediatel­y.

“No decision will be made without a detailed analysis that provides us the best chance to win,” Pelley said. “We need to win, nothing else matters. I’m 1,000 percent committed to it.”

NHL goals leader Auston Matthews’ availabili­ty was an obstacle against Boston. Treliving clarified the sequence of events that led to uncertaint­y around when — and if — Matthews could play in the series after he left Game 3.

Treliving said Matthews became ill during Game 2. He was able to play through it in Game 3 but a hit in Game 4 became the bigger challenge. Matthews suffered a head injury and was not medically cleared until the day of Game 7.

Breaking up Matthews and the socalled “Core Four” has become a hot topic in Toronto. What once seemed unlikely became central to the discussion Friday at the news conference when Shanahan said “everything is on the table.”

Friday’s playoff game

Panthers 6, Bruins 2: Florida built a four-goal lead on the road and regained home-ice advantage in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference semifinals. Evan Rodrigues scored twice, Brandon Montour had a goal and an assist, while Vladimir Tarasenko, Carter Verhaeghe and Sam Reinhart also scored for Florida, which took a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven series. Matthew Tkachuk had three assists, while Aleksander Barkov added two assists as the Panthers went 4-for-6 on the power play. Sergei Bobrovsky needed to make only 14 saves in Florida’s net in an impressive defensive effort, as Boston recorded half of its 16 shots in the third period. Jakub Lauko and Jake DeBrusk each scored in a 3:30 span in the third period to break up Florida’s 10-0 scoring run in the series. After the Bruins accumulate­d only seven shots by the halfway mark of the game, Jakub Lauko and Jake DeBrusk each scored in a 3:30 span in the third period to break up Florida’s 10-0 scoring run in the series. DeBrusk added an assist. Jeremy Swayman stopped 27 shots for the Bruins. Boston captain Brad Marchand did not return for the third period due to an upper-body injury. Reinhart’s empty-netter with 1:24 left punctuated the Florida win, and Rodrigues added on with a power-play tally inside the final minute.

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