Maple Leafs vs. Devils
Newark, NJ – Three games in eight days against the Toronto Maple Leafs figured to give the New Jersey Devils a good chance to emerge from a mediocre stretch.
After winning the first one, New Jersey faced a much different Maple Leafs team.
Oddsmakers from online sportsbook SBGGlobal.com have made the Devils –200 money line favorites for Friday’s game against the Maple Leafs. Current NHL Public Betting Information shows that 78% of more than 80 bets for this game have been placed on the Devils -200.
Based on that first impression, it’s also a much better one.
Dion Phaneuf and Jean-Sebastien Giguere keyed a win over the Devils in their Toronto debuts, and they’ll look to help the Maple Leafs sweep a home-and-home series that concludes Friday night at the Prudential Center.
Toronto (18-28-11) had lost six straight and 11 of 13 when general manager Brian Burke made two moves designed to shake up his last-place club Sunday.
Phaneuf, acquired from Calgary in a seven-player deal, and Giguere, who came over from Anaheim for Vesa Toskala and Jason Blake, were seen as building blocks as recently as two years ago but had fallen out of favor with their clubs.
Both played more like their former All-Star selves Tuesday at Air Canada Centre. Phaneuf had a team-high four shots and set a physical tone by fighting New Jersey’s Colin White 6:51 into the first period, and Giguere made 30 saves in the 3-0 victory.
"It was a good result," Giguere said after his first shutout since Nov. 27. "Since I’ve come here, over the last 48 hours, I really like what I’ve seen from the rest of the team. Everybody’s really focused. Everybody’s working really hard. Tonight, you could tell."
Giguere has plenty of positive history against the Devils, having won the Conn Smythe Trophy in the 2003 Stanley Cup finals despite New Jersey defeating Anaheim in seven games. He’s 4-1-0 with a tie and a 2.12 goals-against average against the Devils (35-18-2) in the regular season.
New Jersey coach Jacques Lemaire was impressed with the new-look Leafs, who didn’t have much luck slowing the Devils down four days earlier in a 5-4 overtime loss in Newark.
"They’re better defensively, you can tell," said Lemaire, whose Devils are in a 3-7-1 slump. "They’ve got great shooters on the point and you could see it tonight. They got some great shots."
Toronto coach Ron Wilson – who will be behind the bench for the U.S. Olympic team – learned Monday he will no longer be joined by rugged Leafs defenseman Mike Komisarek in Vancouver due to season-ending shoulder surgery.
The 6-foot-3, 214-pound Phaneuf, however, provides plenty of physicality, and some leadership as well.
"He’s gung-ho, seems to love hockey, and it rubs off on everybody," Wilson said. "We could hear him talking in between periods from the coach’s office, which is almost two rooms away and three doorways."
Devils defenseman Paul Martin also was slated to be on the U.S. team, but pulled out Monday due to a slow-healing broken forearm that’s sidelined him since late October.
New Jersey’s biggest problem lately, however, has come up front. The Devils have scored 16 goals in their last 10 games, getting little production aside from Zach Parise (five goals, five assists) while seeing their Atlantic Division lead over Pittsburgh shrink to one point.
Parise had two goals and two assists last Friday against the Leafs, his third multigoal game in his past eight versus Toronto.
The Devils should have Martin Brodeur back in net Friday after backup Yann Danis played Tuesday, breaking the four-time Vezina Trophy winner’s streak of 40 consecutive starts.
Brodeur hasn’t exactly posted Vezina-worthy numbers at home against Toronto, however, going 4-3-2 with a 3.88 GAA in his last nine starts.
Posted: 2/4/2010 9:20PM ET