Toronto Star

Kadri willing to take one for the team

Signing of Tavares will bump centre down the depth chart

- DAN RALPH THE CANADIAN PRESS

OAKVILLE— Nazem Kadri has always seen himself as a No.1-centre, but he’d have no problem being No. 3 on the Maple Leafs’ depth chart this season after the addition of John Tavares.

Toronto strengthen­ed itself up the middle July 1 by signing free-agent Tavares to a seven-year, $77 million (U.S.) deal. The 27-year-old Mississaug­a native had 272 goals and 621 points over nine seasons with the New York Islanders.

The addition of Tavares (37 goals, 47 assists last season) leaves Toronto threedeep at centre, with young star Auston Matthews (34 goals, 29 assists) and Kadri (32 goals, 23 assists).

If Tavares’s arrival pushes Kadri to the third line, the 27-year-old London, Ont., native would be fine with it.

“Winning is the most important thing to me,” Kadri said Tuesday prior to participat­ing in the NHL Classic at Glen Abbey Golf Club in Oakville. “I know that’s maybe a cliche but that’s just the honest truth.

“I don’t care where I play, I don’t care what role I play. Obviously I want to be an impact player and continue to have the success I’m having. At the end of the day our ultimate goal is to win a Stanley Cup and bring that to the city of Toronto so we’re all going to be on the same page.”

Kadri believes with Tavares, few teams can match Toronto’s depth at centre.

“Not so sure,” he said. “There’s definitely some good centremen out there but we’re trying to generate some chemistry between the three of us.”

Toronto (40-27-15, 95 points) finished third in the Atlantic Division last season but was eliminated in the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs in seven games by the Boston Bruins.

Despite that setback, right winger Connor Brown said it will be hard for the Leafs to surprise opponents this season.

“Two years ago we were kind of sneaking up on teams and last year everyone was a little bit more prepared,” he said. “You’re going to get everyone’s best and so you’ve got to bring your best every day.

“It (seven-game playoff loss) is a tough thing to go through for the city and the fans but also as a player. But you’ve got to control the controllab­les and all you can do is put together something better the next time.”

The prospect of playing along- side three top-flight centres this season certainly excites the six-foot, 185-pound Brown.

“Those guys, they’re all very dynamic and so it doesn’t matter who you get,” he said. “You’re going to have a good centreman and usually that’s a recipe for success.”

Afact not lost upon centre Logan Couture of the San Jose Sharks, who were also in the running for Tavares.

“To find three centremen like that is tough,” he said of the Leafs’ trio. “They’re going to be tough to match up against for teams, especially in their own division.”

New Jersey forward Taylor Hall, the NHL’s reigning Hart Trophy winner, said the acqui- sition of Tavares gives Toronto head coach Mike Babcock plenty of options.

“There’s going to be some mismatches for sure,” said Hall, who went first overall to Edmonton in the 2010 NHL entry draft.

“He (Tavares) went there because they’re a strong team, they have a bright future.”

In other Maple Leafs news, they signed forward Frederik Gauthier to a two-year, twoway contract.

 ??  ?? Nazem Kadri feels the Leafs are as strong as any team in the NHL at centre.
Nazem Kadri feels the Leafs are as strong as any team in the NHL at centre.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada