Two: Keep making the big saves
Joey Daccord got his third straight start against the Canadiens and now seems to be getting the bulk of games ahead of counterpart Philipp Grubauer. While the 8-2 rout appeared a routine win for Daccord there was a point late in the opening period where Montreal scored to cut the deficit to 4-1 and was all over the Kraken on a late power play trying to make it a two-goal game by intermission.
The Canadiens took five shots on Daccord during that power play and might have changed the game’s direction had any gone in. But Daccord made the stops he needed to – two in succession off Nick Suzuki from close range – and the Kraken quickly put things away early in the second period on Brandon Montour’s first of three goals.
It got lost in the final score, but those Daccord saves are typical of how solid goaltending can be about timing as much as stats. Daccord could have let in three more goals in the third period and it wouldn’t have impacted things as much by then as those first period stops did the final outcome.
Three: Know Your Foe
The Maple Leafs enter with the same 5-4-1 record as the Kraken, but a more angst-ridden existence. A team that hasn’t won a Stanley Cup – or even been to a Cup Final – since 1967 can’t play in one of hockey’s most rabid markets without hearing about that drought daily. Every regular season game gets over-analyzed by fans and pundits as to how it might impact performance in playoffs still a half-year away.
And that makes regular season life far more miserable. This recent stretch saw the Leafs hand Winnipeg their first regulation loss of the season in their prior game, but only after a week that saw Toronto go 1-2-1 and yield 19 goals. As you’d expect, that’s caused a mini goaltending controversy as new coach Craig Berube has given backup Anthony Stolarz more playing time than previously injured and now healthy presumptive No. 1 Joseph Woll.
Stolarz stopped 19 of 23 shots to beat the Jets in Winnipeg, so we’ll see who’s between the pipes this time.