|
|
Toronto Maple Leafs 1999-2000 Capsule
Schedule | Statistics
SportsTicker
Wednesday, Sept. 29, 1999
1998-99 record: 45-30-7, 97 points, 2nd Northeast Division
Coach: Pat Quinn (45-30-7, one year as Maple Leafs coach)
New faces: G Jimmy Waite, LW Jonas Hoglund, D Greg Andrusak,
D Terran Sandwith, C Jason Bonsignore, C Syl
Apps III, C Craig Charron, C Adam Mair, LW
Darrin Shannon
Losses: RW Martin Prochazka, LW Niklas Andersson,
D Yannick Tremblay, D Dallas Eakins
Strengths: G Curtis Joseph was everything the Maple Leafs
hoped he'd be when they shelled out $24 million
over four years to sign him. Guy Hebert was the
only NHL goaltender who faced more shots but Joseph
tied for second in the league with 35 wins. He
also helped Toronto reach the conference finals in
its first season back East. Under first-year coach
Pat Quinn, the Leafs employed a freewheeling style
that was the envy of fans across North America.
They led the NHL with 268 goals, 20 more than any
other team. C Mats Sundin remains one of the best
in the game, tying for 11th in scoring with 83
points. LW Sergei Berezin had a breakout season
with 37 goals and LW Steve Thomas, freed from the
shackles of New Jersey's defensive system, added
28. Tomas Kaberle and Daniil Markov were pleasant
surprises on defense. Toronto also begins its
first full season in the Air Canada Centre.
Weaknesses: The offseason was a mess in the Maple Leafs front
office. Associate GM Mike Smith left after a
power struggle with team president Ken Dryden, and
assistant GM Anders Hedberg followed him out the
door a short time later. D Bryan Berard stumbled
through a season with two teams. While leading
Toronto defensemen with 34 points, his plus-1 was
the worst among regulars on the blue line. Lack
of toughness was a factor as the Leafs were
knocked out of the playoffs in five games by the
Buffalo Sabres. That need was not addressed via
free agency. Toronto's offensive output was
surprising, considering the Leafs ranked 17th on
the power play at 14.4 percent. Toronto was a
dismal 24th in penalty-killing at 80.3 percent.
Quinn says: "Our focus needs to be trying to improve our
transition to defense. We want to try to move the
puck like we did last year. We have to be good
positionally and not give up as many chances. So
we have to find a balance between our good offense
and making the positional changes to be better
defensively."
© Copyright 1999 washingtonpost.com
Back to the top |