Edmonton Journal

Toronto faces quandary in goaltendin­g

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS

TORONTO — It is the toughest decision Randy Carlyle has had to make all year.

With nine games remaining and the Toronto Maple Leafs mired in a five-game losing streak, does the head coach go back to the former No. 1 goalie who has gone two months without winning a game he started? Or does he roll the dice and put in a 30-year-old minor-league journeyman who has never started an NHL game? Carlyle might wish a third option presents itself.

Jonathan Bernier, who has missed the last five games with a strained groin, participat­ed in an optional practice on Monday. While the goaltender was unsure about when he would return, he is not ruling out Tuesday night’s game against the St. Louis Blues.

“I had a pretty good day today,” Bernier said. “I’ll see how it feels tomorrow. When the staff feels my strength is right, then I’ll be ready to go.”

Toronto remains in a playoff spot, but its hold is slipping with every loss. The Leafs are tied with the Detroit Red Wings with 80 points (the Wings have played two fewer games, though). They occupy the two wild-card spots in the Eastern Conference. Both are one point ahead of the Washington Capitals and two points ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets.

James Reimer, who led the Leafs to their first playoff berth since 2004 last season, has started all five games during Bernier’s absence. He has allowed 18 goals during that span and was replaced by Drew MacIntyre during the second period of Sunday’s 3-2 loss to the New Jersey Devils. MacIntyre stopped all 14 shots he faced.

When asked who might start on Tuesday against the Western Conference­leading Blues, Carlyle was noncommitt­al.

“You make the decision on who you feel is going to give you the best opportunit­y to have success in the game,” he said. “That’s not going to change. What happened last game, sure you take that into considerat­ion. But the most important thing is the individual we choose to represent ourselves in that position, we feel confident that he’s going to get the job done.”

Whether it is Reimer, MacIntyre or Bernier, the Leafs skaters have to do a better job of supporting their netminder. Reimer has allowed some soft goals during the losing streak, but he has also faced a number of breakaways, oddman rushes and point-blank chances. As a result, Toronto has given up the first goal in the last seven games and trailed by two or more goals in five of those games.

Bernier, who had lost just once in regulation in his last 13 games, would be the obvious choice to play if he were available. But it is still a pretty big if. On Friday, he admitted to suffering a setback in his recovery after he “tried to push it hard to see if I could play (last) weekend.”

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