Monday, 30 September 2013

Barb Underhill is working hard to improve the skating stride of the Toronto Maple Leafs

She doesn’t stand behind the bench and is rarely around during games.

But Barb Underhill’s impact on the Toronto Maple Leafs this upcoming season should not be forgotten.
Underhill is a former world figure skating champion (1984 pairs) and has been the Leafs skating instructor since April of 2012.

It isn’t unusual to see Underhill working with the likes of Joffrey Lupul, Carter Ashton and Nazem Kadri before practise.
“In figure skating, we had private lessons, probably several a week,” Underhill told Hockey Night in Canada on Saturday. “They never do that in hockey. You don’t learn the technique off the bat.”

Underhill is working to change that. Her coaching efforts have helped turn a number of skaters into better and more efficient skaters.
Carter Ashton is one of those players.

Underhill has Ashton skating with a more upright and efficient stride. In part due to his improved skating, the 22 year-old Ashton will start the season with the Leafs.
Joffrey Lupul has also become a better skater working with Underhill. (In fact working out with Underhill at the start of training camp- and working out a little too hard - led to the back spasms he suffered.)

Underhill said the key for Lupul was to get him not to skate so much on the front of the blade but more on “the sweet spot.”
“He’s got lightning speed when he hits that part of the blade,” said Underhill on Hockey Night in Canada.

She worked with Nazem Kadri twice a week during the summer, in the hopes of improving Kadri’s straightaway speed.
“I still feel there’s a lot of upside with him,” Underhill said on Saturday. “He’s always a great skater — great lateral mobility — but he still has an extra gear, and we’re working on that.”

“Before I started working with her, I would kind of coast my leg out when I pushed on the stride, and my leg would stay there for a split second,” Kadri explained to the Toronto Star. “That’s the kind of stuff that’s hard to see at full speed, but it’s amazing what you can learn with video. But by working on snapping my leg back to normal position ... I’ve become one or 2 ½ strides quicker skating (the full length of) the ice. It makes a difference.”
When she starts with her “students” Underhill will conduct a video analysis. It works for golf so why not a skating stride, she figured.

Her goal is to have the players try – as closely as possible – to emulate the stride of  Mike Gartner, one of the fastest and smoothest skaters in NHL history.
Gartner played 19 NHL seasons and in 2001 was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame.

“I looked at all the elements of Mike’s stride — his recovery, his extension, where his weight is, where his shoulders are,” Underhill told the Toronto Star in July of 2013. “And then I just worked on pulling everything apart. The bend of his knees, the angle of his body. I wanted to figure out, ‘Why is he so good? Why is he known as one of the best skaters ever?”’
Among the things she discovered was that Gartner bent his front knee by an average of about 83.5 degrees. His torso tilted forward at around 45 degrees.

Those numbers may not mean much to the average person but to Barb Underhill they mean plenty.
“She looks at players and she says, ‘I can make this guy 2 per cent better.’ Or, ‘I can make this guy 10 per cent better.’ But whatever that number is, she’s relentless in trying to reach that number,” said Dave Nonis, the Leafs general manager, to the Toronto Star. “She feels even the best skater can improve. And I think you look at the results she’s had — not just with our players, but with other players around the league — and I think she’s right.”

Underhill also works with the Tampa Bay Lightning.
“At this level, it’s about getting there a millionth of a second before the other guy,” Underhill told the Toronto Star. “It’s getting into the really fine details and finding that little extra, whether it’s the way they turn, the way they stop, the way they start. Whatever it is, it’s pulling apart their game and making it more efficient. What most players find after working over several sessions over the summer is that the game gets easier. When I hear that word — ‘easier’ — I know I’ve got ’em.”

John-Michael Liles placed on waivers; Morgan Rielly to start with the Maple Leafs

It’s a lengthy list: Mikhail Grabovski, Mike Komisarek, and now John-Michael Liles.

Lengthy contracts handed out by former Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager Brian Burke that did not work out.

Liles is the latest one – still with 3 years and a cap hit of $3.875 M.
The team has placed the likeable Liles on waivers. If he isn’t claimed (or traded) the 32 year-old defenceman will join the American Hockey League’s Toronto Marlies and save the Leafs $925,000 on the cap.

“It’s not something you control as a player whether it’s me or the young guys,” said Liles, hours before he was placed on waivers. “That’s the nature of the game we’re in. The business side is the business side and my job is to take care of playing.”
This must be a tough pill to swallow for Liles, who signed a 4-year contract extension with Burke (while Ron Wilson coached the team) in January of 2012. He took less money than he could have received elsewhere.

He did so because he loved playing in Toronto and wanted to be a part of the future.
At the time he signed his deal said, “I’m not looking at it like I’m taking a pay cut. I look at it like I’m taking a salary to stay where I want to be. It is the centre of the hockey universe. It’s a place where I’ve really enjoyed playing. It’s going to be a sellout every night. Hockey is going to be covered. For me, it’s been fantastic.”

How quickly things change for Liles and the Leafs. Liles never seemed to find a spot in the lineup with Coach Randy Carlyle.
At the end of the day, this is a move that was made for business reasons as much as for hockey decisions.

With John Michael-Liles out of the picture, the Leafs will give 19 year-old Morgan Rielly a chance to start the year with the NHL team.
Because of his age, his options are limited: either the Wetsern Hockey League or the NHL.

Carter Ashton will start the season with the Leafs. The young forward impressed during camp, making the Joe Colborne trade to Calgary possible.
The Leafs will start with 7 defencemen, 14 forwards and 2 goalies on the opening night roster.

The 22 players on the roster and means Toronto has about $65,000 in cap space. That’s cutting it close and explains why Liles was placed on waivers.
Toronto’s opening night roster and cap hit:

13 forwards:
Phil Kessel ($5.4M)

Joffrey Lupul ($5.25M)
David Clarkson ($5.25M)

James van Riemsdyk ($4.25M)
Tyler Bozak ($4.2M)

David Bolland ($3.375M)
Nazem Kadri ($2.9M)

Nikolai Kulemin ($2.8M)
Jay McClement ($1.5M)

Carter Ashton ($1.04M)
Mason Raymond ($1M)

Colton Orr ($925,000)

Frazer McLaren ($700,000)

7 defencemen:
Dion Phaneuf ($6.5M)

Carl Gunnarsson ($3.15M)

Cody Franson ($2M)
Morgan Rielly ($1.74M)

Mark Fraser ($1.25M)
Jake Gardiner ($1.116M)

Paul Ranger ($1M)
2 goalies:

Jonathan Bernier ($2.9M)
James Reimer ($1.8M)

Thursday, 26 September 2013

Franson signs - blueline looks set for this season

Give Dave Nonis credit for signing Cody Franson, Mason Raymond and Nazem Kadri for a total of $5.9M this season.

But you are going to have to wish the Toronto Maple Leafs General Manager luck, in trying to keep the bulk of his defensemen signed next season.
First of all, in signing Franson (1 year/$2M), Raymond (1 year/$1M), and Kadri (2 years/$5.8M) Nonis was able to sign players who will help this Leafs this year and in doing so he did it at a reasonable dollar amount.

Right now the Leafs are over the cap by about $1M (unless Morgan Rielly doesn’t start the year in Toronto). So the team has little to play with this year. They may try and trade (or send to the minors) John-Michael Liles and his contract ($3.875M a year for 3 more years) which will give them even more cap space. (A trade is unlikely at that dollar amount)
Franson was determined to sign only a one-year deal, after he saw the kind of dollars the Leafs were willing to pay. The team wanted at least a 2-year deal because they have many blueliners coming off the books next season.

The defensemen and the club agreed to the deal early this morning.
“It’s a pretty gruelling process and you don’t recommend it to anybody,” said Franson who was hoping for a higher pay out than what the restricted free agent defenseman eventually agreed to. “I’m glad it’s done and happy to move forward here.”

Things are set for this season.
But looking ahead, it gets interesting.  Right now the Leafs have 10 players signed next season.

Forwards: Joffrey Lupul ($5.25M), David Clarkson ($5.25M), James vanRiemsdyk ($4.25M), Tyler Bozak ($4.2M), Nazem Kadri, ($2.9M), Colton Orr ($925,000) and Frazer McLaren ($700,000).
Just 2 defensemen: Liles ($3.875M) and Carl Gunnarsson ($3.15M).

Goalie Jonathan Bernier ($2.9M) is also under contract for next season.
In total, the Maple Leafs have about $36.9M under contract for next season.

Nonis has put himself in a pretty good spot considering the salary cap likely will go up to $70M or so.
But he does have some issues to consider moving forward:

·        Phil Kessel will want a hefty raise from the $5.4M he is making now. What’s he worth? $8M a year? Will the Leafs pay that?

·        Dion Phaneuf - like Kessel- will be an unrestricted free agent after this season. He is making $6.5M this season.

·        In fact the Leafs blueline looks uncertain. Franson and Jake Gardiner are RFA’s, while Phaneuf, Fraser and Ranger are UFA’s. These guys are all playing for contracts next season – either with the Leafs or somewhere else.

·        And if Dave Bolland plays well what kind of money will he – as an Unrestricted Free Agent – get on the market? He is set to make $3.375M this year.
If Nonis can somehow shed the Liles contract (a class guy who just doesn’t seem to fit in with Coach Randy Carlyle) that would open up some money for him.

If reports are true, look for Nonis to try and sign Phil Kessel to a long-term deal before the season starts.

After that, he must determine the future of the Captain, Dion Phaneuf. How much money are the Leafs willing to spend on him?

Then he will likely try to address the blueline. Gardiner, Fraser, Ranger and Franson will be in line for raises (especially if they can impress this season).

The Leafs have youngsters like Rielly, Jesse Blacker, Stuart Percy, Korbinian Holzer and Andrew MacWilliam in the system. Their development this year will go a long way in determining what shape Toronto’s blueline takes next season.

It is an interesting time for the Leafs – and the puck hasn’t even dropped yet to start the season.

Kessel not to miss any regular season games

Phil Kessel comments on his stick swinging incident with John Scott of the Buffalo Sabres

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Phil Kessel won't miss any regular season games for his part in line-brawl

Phil Kessel admits he went overboard during his stick swinging incident with Buffalo’s John Scott during Sunday’s line-brawl.

“Things happen so quick out there. You can slow it down and it makes it look worse,” Kessel said Wednesday morning. “Obviously you can’t two hand people. The 2nd slash when looking at it was uncalled for.”
A day after learning he will be suspended for the rest of the pre- season, Kessel fired back at those who criticized his actions.

“Put them in that situation and see what they do,” said Kessel, who scored 20 goals in 48 games last season. “A lot of people criticize that, and see what they would do against a guy like that. I think they would be in trouble.”
Kessel used the word “happy” to describe how he felt about not losing any regular season games due to suspension.

While surprisingly in Buffalo, Scott didn’t seem too bothered by the fact Kessel will be available for the Leafs season opener.
“Im fine with it,” Scott said Wednesday morning. “It’s one of those things he was protecting himself.  I didn’t want to see anyone suspended in the 1st place. I’m ok with it.”

“If I was in his position and I saw someone coming after me, I would have been a little hesitant too to drop his gloves,” added the 6-foot-8 Scott.
Kessel has never had more than 28 penalty minutes in a season. But he’s been rather feisty during the pre-season, although he insists he isn’t a dirty player.

“I played 7 years now and averaged under 20 penalty minutes a year,” said Kessel. “I don’t think it’s going to be a problem.”
Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle said Kessel will “really practice hard” ahead of the season opener. Kessel isn’t looking forward to that, but his best friend and linemate, Tyler Bozak is.

“I think he’d rather play the games,” smiled Bozak. “I will likely go up against the glass and watch him bag-skate a few days.”
“When he says that it will be hard, I’m not looking forward to his bag skates,” said Kessel.

It’s a price he is willing to take to play in the Leafs season opener.

Monday, 23 September 2013

Randy Carlyle: "Obviously, I made a mistake."

Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Randy Carlyle was disappointed with what happened Sunday. He also accepted responsibility.

“Obviously, I made a mistake.”
It is a mistake that could hurt Carlyle and the Toronto Maple Leafs in so many ways.

A day after “the brawl” the Maple Leafs head coach was still trying to figure out what happened.
“I never believed in my wildest dreams the attack would come directed at that type of player from the opposition, but I was wrong,” said Carlyle.

When David Clarkson left the bench to defend Phil Kessel from 6-foot-8 giant John Scott, he created a plethora of issues for the team.
Clarkson has been suspended for the first 10 games of the season, Phil Kessel will likely be suspended for his stick work on Scott, and the Leafs will feel this on the salary cap.

You see, the cap hits of suspended players remain on the team’s books.
The Leafs did sign Mason Raymond to a 1-year, $1M deal. But that leaves them with little wiggle room to get to the cap by opening night.

This incident could be a benefit for the likes of Carter Ashton ($1.04 M), Troy Bodie ($600,000) and TJ Brennan ($550,000). They make little money and could start the year with the Leafs in the short term.

“It (the salary cap) is awfully tight and it is close. It just makes other situations more difficult to complete,” said Carlyle.
That it does. In fact, the Leafs may decide to start the year with a 21 man roster – not the usual 23 – in a way to stay under the $64.3 M cap.

What does this mean for hold-out Cody Franson? Let’s just say it’s not good and this doesn’t help his cause.
All of this the result of a brawl – in a pre-season game.

Devane fell on Tropp and the Sabres forward hit his head on the ice. That prompted the Scott incident.

Carlyle  – who had last line change – didn’t replace Kessel with one of his tough guys because he felt with a skilled player on the ice, that would “defuse the situation.”
“I would have went after whoever they lined up next to me,” said Scott.  “I don’t know what their coach had in mind. I was’t going to hurt him, I was just trying to send a message.”

“All night long he matched up with what he wanted the whole night,” said Sabres coach Ron Rolston. “He had last line change, he had the matchups.”

The one-time Carlyle didn’t match lines, it cost his team – and will cost his team – for the first month of the season.

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Joffrey Lupul knows he must find a way to stay healthy

Joffrey Lupul has had his share of injuries. You name it he’s suffered it.

Broken forearm? Check. Sprained ankle? You bet. Concussions, abdominal strain and of course a couple of back surgeries are also part of the injury history for Lupul.
So when the Maple Leafs forward suffered back spasms the day before on-ice activities were to start at training camp, the Leafs alternate captain decided to wait it out before joining his teammates.

“I felt great all summer,” said Lupul, after skating for an hour during practice on Wednesday. “I haven’t had any issues. It hasn’t been something that’s been bothering me all summer. It just kind of came one day.”
Blame Leafs skating coach Barb Underhill if you must. She had a couple of the Leafs on the ice before training camp for some work and that’s when Lupul starting feeling his back act up.

“I had some tightness in there and ended up going into spasm which is a painful thing for a couple of days,” said Lupul.
Lupul has had his share of injuries during his NHL career. But his most serious ailment occurred in 2009 when he suffered back spasms. That led to a pair of back surgeries. The second one led to him developing a blood infection that almost threatened his career.

“It was a bit of a concern because I have a history with the lower back,” said Lupul. “I believe since the surgery this is the first time I’ve missed time with it (back spasms). There is still plenty of time until opening day, so I’m feeling confident.”
Next week, Lupul turns 30 years-old – the prime of his career. He played just 16 games last season, and wants to have a bigger role on the Leafs this year. For that to happen, he must stay healthy.

So I asked him if he will change the way he plays the game in an effort to cut prevent injuries?
“No, not really,” Lupul told me. “Obviously you want to stay healthy but you have to stick with what got you there and what makes you successful. It would be a mistake not to go in front of the net, or can’t get in the way of pucks or anything like that. I’m just hoping to have a little more luck.”

His coach, Randy Carlyle, had this response when I asked him the same question.
“I think there’s probably some merit to that,” said the head Coach. “He has to pick and choose a little bit more cautiously in some situations. I think what happened with him was more the fact that he was frustrated with his injuries and then trying to come back and make an impact right away.”

“I feel like I’ve improved every year since I’ve been here,” said Lupul. “I’ve put in a lot of work this summer and different aspects of my game. I would expect to be a better player than I was last year. I don’t know if it will translate exactly to the stats sheet or whatever, but I’m constantly trying to improve and add elements to my game.”
In his last 82 regular season games, Joffrey Lupul has scored 36 goals. But it took him 2 NHL seasons (the 82 game season and the 48 game season of the lock-out shortened season) to reach that mark. He has missed 52 games over the course of those campaigns.

Lupul expects more from himself. In order to do that, he needs to spend more time playing and less time on the trainer’s table.
*
Below is a list of injuries Joffrey Lupul has suffered since 2008.

Lupul has missed time for the following ailments [from most recent to 2008]:

- concussion (5 games)
- forearm (25 games)
- separated shoulder (16 games)
- back surgery #1 (52 games)
- back surgery #2 (28 games)
- back (7 games)
- abdominal strain (3 games)
- sprained right ankle (12 games)
- concussion (14 games)

Since Lupul entered the NHL in the 2003-04 season, he has averaged only 64 regular season games [**this number does NOT include last year's lockout shortened season - last year Lupul played in only 16 of the Leafs 48 regular season games]

Saturday, 14 September 2013

Will Morgan Rielly start the season with the Maple Leafs?

Maybe as the head coach insists it doesn’t mean much at all.

After all, when Randy Carlyle was asked why during the first scrimmage of training camp, he paired up Captain Dion Phaneuf with Morgan Rielly on defence, he smiled, and said, “It gives you something to talk about.”

But then again maybe it is a sign of things to come, sooner rather than later.
“I’m not going to check into it too much,” Rielly said. “But it’s nice to play with a guy of his caliber. Hopefully I will have a chance to play with him again in the future.”

Rielly was Toronto’s 1st round pick – 5th overall – in 2012. The smooth skating defenceman didn’t look out of place in the first scrimmage, scoring a goal.
For the 19 year-old Rielly, his poise was apparent right from the opening faceoff.

“The word that you use, poise, fits him very well,” said Phaneuf. “He’s got real good patience and he passes the puck at an NHL level. He passes it hard. He passes it crisp. He passes it flat. He’s got a very bright future ahead of him.”
Rielly isn’t old enough to play in the American Hockey League. He can play up to 9 NHL regular season games without losing a year on his NHL contract.

It’s a dilemma the Leafs have – one that will likely see the 6-foot, 183 pound blueliner play in many of the 8 exhibition games the Maple Leafs have scheduled.
“I have a lot to prove still,” said Rielly, who picked up 54 points in 60 games in the Western Hockey League last season. “I’m not too comfortable just yet playing pro hockey. I think it’s a gradual process. Each day that goes by I think I’m improving.”

Carlyle made it clear on the first day of camp, if Rielly wasn’t going to play key minutes he would be better served to go back to his Western Hockey League team in Moose Jaw.
“We don’t envision him playing sparing minutes,” said the Coach. “His minutes have to be somewhere in excess of 12 to 15 minutes. Does he have to play every game? No, I don’t think he has to play every game. But I think what he has to do is he has to show growth.”

But if the young defenceman continues to impress, it will make the Leafs decision that much harder.
“He’s got to play to his strengths and that’s (skating and providing offence) his strength,” said Carlyle. “He has to continue to do those things into the next day. It’s a continuing evaluation of a young defenceman trying to cut his teeth in the NHL.”

Right now on the blueline Phaneuf, Carl Gunnarsson, Jake Gardiner, Paul Ranger and Mark Fraser appear to be certainties.
The longer Cody Franson misses from camp mired in a contract dispute, the better the odds are of Rielly making this team.

“He was a lot of fun to play with,” said Phaneuf. “He’s a smart player that moves the puck well. For his second camp, he’s doing a really nice job.”
He hopes to be the first teenage defenceman to play for the Leafs since Luke Schenn did it in 2008-09.

“I’m not that surprised (by the goal he scored) because of where he was taken in the draft,” said Carlyle. “When you have elite level junior players selected where he is selected, you suspect he has some skill set that shines above other players and that’s (his goal in the scrimmage) is a prime example."

Thursday, 12 September 2013

Mason Raymond confident he can make the Maple Leafs

Don’t be surprised if Mason Raymond makes the Toronto Maple Leafs.

 I believe in my abilities and what I can put forward,” said the 27 year-old Raymond as training camp opened.

The left-winger is in Toronto on a tryout basis. He needs to convince Leafs management he is worthy of a contract. Having been drafted by Leafs GM Dave Nonis (when Nonis ran Vancouver) he already is in good standing with the head man.
During on-ice sessions on Thursday, Raymond made a good impression on Coach Randy Carlyle.

Very noticeable,” said the coach when asked about Raymond’s first time on the ice with the Leafs. “He’s scored 25 goals in this league before and it’s not easy to score goals in the NHL. We feel very fortunate to have him here.”
Nonis meantime made it clear he wants a team that not only can play a physical brand, but has speed. With Clark MacArthur and Mikhail Grabovski gone, Raymond would provide the team with some quickness.

“It’s an odd year, a different year for sure,” said Raymond, who became an unrestricted free agent for the first time but failed to find a team and the big-money deal he was expecting after earning a pro-rated $2.275 M last season with Vancouver. “That’s the situation, that’s the reality. As a player you deal with it and you make the most of your opportunities.”
With the salary cap dropping to $64.3 M, many veteran players (Brad Boyes with Florida, Hal Gill with the Flyers) are on trying out, just like Raymond.

Raymond is so focused on the task at hand – playing with the Maple Leafs likely as a 3rd liner on the left-wing – that he hasn’t thought about what may happen if things don’t work out.
“I’m not thinking plan B, I’m thinking plan A,” said Raymond, “There are a few things you can’t control when you’re a player.”

Raymond suffered a serious back injury during the 2011 Stanley Cup final – the result of a Johnny Boychuk check. He didn’t return to Vancouver’s lineup until the following December.
Raymond calls the injury a “non-issue.”

“I don’t like dwelling on the past,” said the Calgary, native. “Injuries are injuries, they come and they go, and that wasn’t a particularly fun one to go through.  You learn a lot going through situations like that, I find, and the realization of how hard it is to fully recover from that.”
“I still feel like I’ve got what it takes to play in this league,” added Raymond. “Sometimes you’ve got to prove it. Other players have gone through situations like this where you’re reintroducing yourself a little bit, if you will.”

“I think I’m an NHL player.”

If the Leafs agree, Mason Raymond will no longer think he’s an NHL player. He will be – again.

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Paul Ranger: Looking forward to opportunity with Maple Leafs

Paul Ranger figured he would have another chance at an NHL job.

“I never had any doubts. I never had any doubt in my mind,” said Ranger after the first day of training camp with the Toronto Maple Leafs.  

Ranger last played an NHL game October 22, 2009. He played more than 17 minutes on the Tampa Bay Lightning blueline that night – a game his team won 5-2 over San Jose.
A couple of days later, he told the team he was going to take a leave of absence for personal reasons.
While he politely declined to get into specifics when he met the media on Wednesday, the 28 year-old insists he’s ready to resume his NHL career now.
After spending some time coaching minor hockey teams, he joined the Toronto Marlies last season where he picked up 25 points in 51 games.
His play impressed Leafs management, who signed him to a deal with the NHL team in July.
Now he has a chance to play for the Toronto Maple Leafs – a team he grew up watching and cheering for in nearby Whitby, Ontario.
“It means everything to me,” said an emotional Ranger. “This is huge for me and I know it. I’m really excited for it and I’m so emotional about it because it means so much to me.”
“We think Paul has the ability to play possibly in our top 4 (defensemen),” said GM Dave Nonis. “Last year at times he looked too good for the American Hockey League.”
Paul Ranger has the talent to play professional hockey. After all he spent parts of five seasons with the Tampa Bay Lightning before walking away from the game. But as Ranger can attest, talent isn’t everything.
“Not even close,” he insists. “Everyone has the power to do whatever they want, and that’s something I’ve learned along the way. The metal side of the game is something that’s never really been talked about a lot. Self-esteem, just mental strength, courage. It’s not talked about a lot but it’s a skill.”
A skill the 6-foot-3, 210 pound Ranger has developed over the years.
And now he proudly sports his Maple Leafs jersey as he fulfills his media obligations on day one of training camp.

“It’s home,” Ranger said when asked why he agreed to a deal with the Leafs, when other NHL teams came calling. “Everyone I love is here. My family, friends. I have some of the best friends in the world, and an amazing family.”

“If I had an opportunity to play here, why would I pick anywhere else. This is where I want to be. I’m proud to be here. I’m so proud to be here.”

Tuesday, 10 September 2013

Kadri signed as Leafs head into training camp

With Nazem Kadri under contract, the Toronto Maple Leafs head into training camp on Wednesday with just one player unsigned; restricted free agent Cody Franson.

Kadri`s 2-year, $5.8M deal leaves the Leafs with about $3M in cap room for this season.
The Leafs will head into camp Wednesday with a roster pretty much set, and before any preseason games are played this appears to be the lineup the Leafs will start the season with.

The top line will likely will see James van Reimdsyk with Tyler Bozak and Phil Kessel.
Look for Nazem Kadri to centre a line with Joffrey Lupul and David Clarkson.

David Bolland could centre a line with Jay McClement and Nik Kulemin. That`s a unit that could be a very effective “shutdown” line for Toronto.
While a 4th line could see Frazer McLaren and Colton Orr on the wings with Joe Colborne at centre.

Defensively, the pairings could end up being Carl Gunnarsson with Dion Phaneuf; Cody Franson (if he is signed) with Jake Gardiner while Mark Fraser could with John-Michael Liles, or Paul Ranger or perhaps Morgan Rielly, Toronto`s 1st round pick in the 2012 NHL draft.
Reilly will get a long look at camp. The Leafs will play 8 preseason games and Reilly could play in as many as 5 of them.

There will certainly be an interesting battle in goal as James Reimer (who is a restricted free agent after this season) and Jonathan Bernier will compete to be number 1.
“If you win, you’re in,” said Coach Randy Carlyle. “It’s pretty simple.”

The additions of Bolland and Clarkson give the Leafs more grit and make them tougher to play against.
In Bolland, they get a 2-time Stanley Cup winner.

“He can provide us with a level of compete that matches his resume,” Carlyle said. “That’s what we are looking for.”
The addition of Bolland and Clarkson was in part brought on by the game 7 meltdown in Boston.

It was apparent that night Toronto didn’t have enough veteran players who could handle stressful situations. That shouldn’t be an issue this season.
They also have upgraded their goaltending – an issue again that haunted them that fateful night in Boston.

“We will take what we can from last year and hopefully learn from it and build from some of the things we put in place and try to push this group together,” said Carlyle.
This will be Carlyle’s first full training camp with the Maple Leafs. It will be fast paced, physical and demanding.

Buckle up.

Joe Colborne is ready to make impact on the Maple Leafs

Joe Colborne knows this is a wonderful “opportunity” to break training camp with the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The 6-foot-5 centre played a pair of playoff games for the Leafs last season and impressed management filling in for an injured Tyler Bozak.
That earned him a one-year contract this off season. Colborne, a former 1st round pick, now hopes to springboard that success into playing a significant role in the NHL this season.

“No more pressure than I’ve put on myself in the past,” said Colborne on the eve of training camp. “Having that opportunity to come up and show the coaching staff last year was a huge advantage for me. I’m ready to go out and have a great camp. I’m looking forward to showing what I can do.”
Colborne has worked hard this off-season to improve his skating and has added some much needed weight to his lanky frame.

“I’m up over 220 pounds now which is a good weight for me. I feel more comfortable,” said the 23 year-old, who played just 5 regular season games with the Maple Leafs last season, where he failed to register a point. “I feel more powerful on the ice being heavier. It’s mostly good weight and I’m excited to show what I can do.”
“It was nice to be healthy for a full summer, I haven’t had that in a while. I was able to get back and start working out early and get quite a bit stronger.”

In a perfect world, the Leafs would have TylerBozak, Nazem Kadri, David Bolland and Joe Colborne up the middle.
I can see Jay McClement (a 4th line centre a year ago) playing on the wing on the 3rd line with Bolland to create a shut-down line.

This is a great chance for Colborne who had 42 points in 65 games with the Toronto Marlies in the American Hockey League last season, to make his mark with the Maple Leafs this season.
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Colborne meantime had a tough summer in his hometown of Calgary, where flooding devastated the community.
"I'm carrying photo albums out of my friends homes, and all those memories were destroyed," said Colborne. "I've never seen anything like it before. You think it would never happen (in your hometown.)"
The flooding did not hit Colborne's home but it did not hit in areas where some of his friends lived.
Colborne said watching the Calgary Stampede, held 2 months after the flooding was something that made him "so proud" of his community.