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Toronto 3, Ottawa 1
Posted: Thursday April 19, 2001 12:53 AM
Ottawa Senators
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Toronto Maple Leafs
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TORONTO (Ticker) -- The "Battle of Ontario" turned out to be little
more than a skirmish.
The Toronto Maple Leafs actually trailed briefly before completing a
sweep of their Eastern Conference quarterfinal series, getting a pair
of first-period goals from Yanic Perreault in a 3-1 victory over the
Ottawa Senators.
Toronto eliminated Ottawa in the first round for the second straight
year, doing it as the seventh seed after losing all five regular-season
meetings.
"We reviewed the five games and found out that we were the culprits as
much as anything in our handling of the puck and our risk," Maple Leafs
coach Pat Quinn said. "Once those turnovers came, they were so
effective at sticking it down our throats that we were going to have to
take that part of the game out if we were going to have any success.
And our guys accepted that and they did it."
Curtis Joseph was virtually unbeatable in the series for the Maple
Leafs, yielding just three goals on 123 shots and helping them kill all
16 Senators' power plays.
"Three goals for the whole series, it can't be done without playing
great defense. And that sums it up," Joseph said. "The penalty-killing
was terrific -- a lot of guys got in shooting lanes and you either
block it or deter him from shooting. We did a lot of courageous blocks
and it was terrific to see."
After completing their first four-game sweep since 1949, the Leafs will
have several days off before the conference semifinals, where they
likely will face the New Jersey Devils for the second straight year.
The Senators' playoff futility continued. They have won just three
games in the last four series and have gotten past the first round just
once in five tries.
"I don't know what it is. We've had some great regular seasons and,
unfortunately, been unable to carry that over," said Ottawa defenseman
Chris Phillips. "I guess if we all had answers, we'd be going a lot
further in the playoffs."
This defeat could trigger major changes within the organization. Coach
Jacques Martin's future is cloudy at best and leading scorer Alexei
Yashin, who missed last year's series during his messy holdout, becomes
a restricted free agent on July 1.
"You've got to give credit to Toronto. They checked well, they played
hard," Martin said. "Joseph made some big saves, they're a good hockey
club. We should have done better, but you also got to give credit to
their team."
The Senators grabbed their first lead of the series when Phillips'
wrist shot from the top of the left faceoff circle hit Toronto's Tie
Domi on the leg and deflected past Joseph 2 1/2 minutes into the first
period.
It was the first goal for Phillips, who missed the first three games
with a left shoulder injury.
The Senators were able to protect the lead for all of six minutes, 26
seconds as Perreault tied it on the power play. With just five seconds
left on Daniel Alfredsson's interference penalty, Perreault took a pass
from Aki Berg and snapped a wrister from the edge of the right circle
over goalie Patrick Lalime's left shoulder.
"It was great to see the crowd get into it," Perreault said. "We came
back pretty strong after they took the lead. We didn't want to get two
goals behind."
Perreault put Toronto ahead for good with 1:53 left in the opening
period. After a turnover behind the net, Sergei Berezin threw a
backhanded pass out of the left corner and Perreault wristed the puck
over a sprawling Lalime.
"We came out hard and I got that lucky goal. Everything was going
good," Phillips said. "Before the game, we were very confident. But
it's the same result and unexplainable, really."
Defenseman Bryan McCabe sealed the win midway through the second period
with his first career playoff goal. Mats Sundin raced down the left
side on a play that turned into a 3-on-1. He made a backhanded
centering pass to McCabe, who charged down the slot and beat Lalime
with a wrister.
That was more than enough for the stingy Joseph, who stopped all 14
shots over the final two periods. Ottawa outshot Toronto in the third
period, 6-2.
"They capitalized on their chances and we didn't," Phillips said. "They
didn't dominate and it wasn't the change in systems that won it for
them. They just went out and showed a little more determination, and
that's what won it for them."
Leafs left wing Shayne Corson, one of a trio of gritty veterans who
were acquired in the offseason, agreed.
"When you're playing as a team, you never know what you can
accomplish," he said. "No one or two or three or four or five players
are going to win games for you, or even a series. But if you play as a
team, you could accomplish a lot of things. We did that in this series.
We came out and were willing to sacrifice ourselves for wins. We didn't
care how we got the wins just as long as we won the hockey game."