Penticton Herald

Leafs down, but not out

Toronto coach confident team can force Game 7

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WASHINGTON — Mike Babcock didn’t say goodbye to Verizon Center. He said see you soon.

The highest paid coach in the NHL has a Stanley Cup ring and has been around the block a few times. He knows his Toronto Maple Leafs aren’t out of their first-round series against the Washington Capitals despite being down 3-2 going into Game 6 back at home today.

“These games are good,” Babcock said after an OT loss in Game 5 Friday night. “It’s a good, competitiv­e series. We believe we still have a chance to win. That’s what we’re going to do.”

Despite being a matchup of the playoff-tested Presidents’ Trophy winner with 118 points and the inexperien­ced eighth seed with 95, Washington and Toronto are separated by only one goal through five games — four of which went into overtime — and are tied at 175 shots apiece.

Capitals coach Barry Trotz said the closeness of the series is a credit to the parity in the NHL and Toronto’s young stars like Auston Matthews and William Nylander.

The difference so far has been the power play, where the Capitals are 5-for-15 and the Maple Leafs are 3-17.

“If you can keep your special teams going through the playoffs, it is a big factor in a series,” Trotz said on Saturday. “It can be because of the fact that the 5-on-5 play becomes so tight at times that (special teams) can be a deciding factor.”

Justin Williams, the overtime hero on Friday, anticipate­d a seven-game series but now hopes that’s not needed. In a coin-flip series where one bounce could decide a potential Game 7, the Capitals want to close out the pesky Maple Leafs in six.

“You get an opportunit­y to push someone off a cliff, you need to push them off if you can,” Trotz said. “The difference is we’ve got a little bit of wiggle room. They don’t.”

Toronto forward Matt Martin joked that he wouldn’t want to go hiking with Trotz after that analogy. But Babcock gets it.

“When you have someone down and you have a chance to step on him, you step on him,” Babcock said. “Or they might get up and kill you, you know what I mean? I agree with him 100 per cent.

“We’re the same thing. We don’t win, we go home. There should be no more desperate team than us. We’re all aware and understand that fully.”

SENATORS AT BRUINS

Bruins rookie Sean Kuraly’s goal in double overtime Friday sends the series back to Boston for Game 6. The Bruins are trying to overcome a 3-1 series deficit for the first time in franchise history.

Ottawa blew a two-goal lead in Game 5, continuing a league-wide trend. The Senators and Bruins also played the 15th overtime game of the first round, and given the tightness of this series, more free hockey could be in the offing.

“We knew it wasn’t going to come easy, it hasn’t come easy for us,” Boston forward David Backes said.

Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy said centre David Krejci, who left Game 5 after a knee-on-knee hit from Chris Wideman, was getting treatment and is considered day to day. Defenceman Torey Krug is skating, but he’s still unlikely to suit up for Boston today.

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