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Bruins notebook: Jakub Lauko puts experience to work

Steve Conroy, Boston Herald on

Published in Hockey

But the line made up for it in the third period. The Leafs finally got on the board with a goal and they were dominating play when the third line seized momentum back with what Montgomery described as “probably our best offensive zone shift of the game.” Geekie delivered a huge hit early on and then they continually won the puck back before Lauko drew a penalty, forcing Jake McCabe to take an interference penalty.

That shift pretty much extinguished any Toronto momentum for the evening

“We just went in there and said ‘Hey, let’s have a shift, let’s wear them down, let’s make something happen,’” said Lauko “We had a couple good opportunities to score. Geeks had a great hit before. We were able to draw a penalty so it was huge. We need to do it more often as a line and keep growing our game.”

It’s that type of physicality that must continue throughout the lineup.

“It’s really important. You’ve got to wear teams down and that’s how you wear them down,” said Montgomery. “I thought the second period in the last 15 minutes after we killed that 4-on-3, that was the best segment of the way we want to play. You could see players on the opposition being tired. Conversely in the third, I thought you saw us be tired. I didn’t particularly like our third, especially offensively.”

Lauko was able to maintain the battle mindset right up until the final horn with that blocked shot.

“It doesn’t matter if its 5-1 or 1-1 or whatever. You’re there to do a job. It was my job to block the shot, even though there was one second left.”

Now Lauko and the B’s have to do it all over again in Game 2 on Monday. …

Adjustments

 

The B’s adjusted their D pairings, flipping Matt Grzlecyk up to play with Charlie McAvoy while moving Hampus Lindholm to a shutdown pairing with Brandon Carlo. The result was just one fourth line goal from the Leafs and nothing from their big stars like Auston Matthews, Mitch Marner and John Tavares.

But Montgomery believes the B’s, outshot 36–24, can do more at both ends of the ice.

“We didn’t spend a lot of time in our own zone, which was probably the biggest reason we were able to neutralize some of what they did,” said Montgomery. “But I don’t think we were all that good at net-front. Swayman had to make a lot of second-chance saves, which we don’t like. Conversely, what can we do better? We need to spend more time in the O-zone. We didn’t do a good job offensively 5-on-5.”…

This may come as a surprise, but Montgomery didn’t name a starting goalie for Game 2.

“We’re still contemplating what’s the right way to go,” said Montgomery.

William Nylander, who missed Game 1 with a mysterious ailment, was on the ice at Warrior Ice Arena for about 45 minutes. As he promised, coach Sheldon Keefe would not give reporters any kind of update or prognosis for the Leafs’ 40-goal scorer for Game 2.

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