The Daily Courier

Matthews, Leafs extend streak in ‘ugly’ win

- By JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

TORONTO — The Maple Leafs know learning how to win when you're far from your best is part of what makes good teams great.

Monday's performanc­e certainly fell into that category.

Auston Matthews extended his career-high goal streak to eight games midway through the third period before Alexander Kerfoot added some insurance just 11 seconds later as Toronto awoke from a 40-minute slumber to defeat the Vancouver Canucks 3-1.

After throttling the same club 7-3 on Thursday and 5-1 two nights later, the Leafs were down 27-7 on the shot clock -- but tied 11 -- through two periods thanks to Frederik Andersen's standout performanc­e in net.

"That was an ugly one," said Matthews, who also stretched his point streak to 10 contests. "Freddie really took control of the game. He was our best player by far tonight, and just kept us in it. Those first two periods, we didn't really have an answer.

"They came with a good push to start, and we just didn't have our best."

Morgan Rielly provided the rest of the offence for Toronto (10-2-1), while Andersen made 31 saves as the Leafs swept the spiralling Canucks three straight at Scotiabank Arena. Mitch Marner added an assist to extend his point streak to eight.

"We got away from what's made us successful," Kerfoot said. "They took it to us a little bit. That's credit to them, but we certainly played into their hands."

Elias Pettersson replied for Vancouver (610-0), which lost a fifth straight in regulation to close out a miserable 1-5-0 road trip. Braden Holtby stopped 16 shots for the Canucks, who put in by far their best performanc­e of the last week, but still came up short.

"It's frustratin­g," Pettersson said. "We played a great game."

Vancouver head coach Travis Green said Monday looked a lot more like the team that made the second round of last season's playoffs.

"We played with a lot more urgency," he said. "I don't know if we could have played any better in the first two periods ... probably deserved to be up.

"Sometimes when it's not going your way, that happens. You can play a really good game and not get the result."

Coming off that combined 12-4 scoreline over the first two meetings, the Leafs looked like a shadow of their high-flying selves until Matthews scored his 11th goal of the campaign at 9:22 of the third. After winning an offensive zone faceoff, Toronto's star centre took a feed from Marner in the slot and ripped a shot five-hole on Holtby through a screen for his 300th career point.

Ilya Mikheyev then stripped Quinn Hughes of the puck behind the Canucks' net before finding Kerfoot in front for his second moments later to stun Vancouver.

Toronto is now 7-0-1 over its last eight to sit atop both the NHL and North Division standings, but head coach Sheldon Keefe was disappoint­ed in his team's performanc­e through 40 minutes.

"You can't even compare tonight's game to the first two," he said. "Our failure was just to adapt to the game. I thought we really controlled the first two games with the puck.

"The way they worked and competed and got on top of us made it a lot harder."

Holtby, who played consecutiv­e games for the first time since signing with Vancouver, had to be sharp early in the third with the score tied 1-1, flailing his glove at a Rielly shot from the slot as Toronto came to life.

After a timid opening for both teams, the Leafs grabbed a 1-0 lead at 6:38 of the first when Canucks defenceman Nate Schmidt, who was in a battle in front, blindly kicked the puck right into an onrushing Rielly's path for him to fire his second.

Playing a league-leading 16th contest in 27 days since the start of the pandemic-shortened 2020-21 season, Vancouver eventually got the equalizer on a power play at 9:59 of the second when Kerfoot couldn't get the puck out of his zone. Hughes then found Pettersson, who had time and space to whip his fifth past Andersen.

Pettersson now has four goals and five assists in his last eight games after registerin­g just two points in his first eight contests.

NOTES — The Canucks placed Tyler Motte on injured reserve, while defenceman Olli Juolevi was recalled from the taxi squad and inserted into the lineup along with winger Jake Virtanen . ... The teams play six more times in the NHL's abbreviate­d season, with the next meetings set for March 4 and 6 in Vancouver . ... The Leafs visit the Montreal Canadiens today for the first of two meetings this week . ... The Canucks open a four-game set against the Calgary Flames, including three at Rogers Arena, beginning Thursday.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Frederik Andersen stops Vancouver Canuck Justin Bailey on a breakaway during first-period NHL action in Toronto on Monday.
The Associated Press Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Frederik Andersen stops Vancouver Canuck Justin Bailey on a breakaway during first-period NHL action in Toronto on Monday.

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