Tag Archive - Nikolai Kulemin

Another game, another OT win

Leafs scorers: Mitchell (6), Kaberle (7), Kulemin (16)
Rangers scorers: Parenteau (2), Dubinksy (18)
Links: Game Summary | Stats | Discussion boards

Forward lines: Kulemin-Bozak-Kessel, Stalberg-Grabovski-Caputi, Mitchell-Hanson-Sjostrom, Wallin-Orr-Lundmark
Defence pairings: Phaneuf-Beauchemin, Kaberle-Schenn, Finger-Gunnarsson
Goaltenders: Gustavsson (Win, 60:39 minutes played, 36 saves, 2 GA), Giguere (0:00),
Noteworthy:
-The Leafs won for the first time this season when trailing after two periods (1-30-7). Jonas Gustavsson extended his personal winning streak to seven games.
-Since March 6 the Leafs have won seven straight games that have gone to either overtime or shootout.
-Toronto has won 4 consecutive overtime games since March 9 after losing ten consecutive OT games to start the season.
Tomas Kaberle ended a 16-game goal scoring drought.

Blue And White Beat: Leafs continue to roll, in spoiler’s role

Leafs continue to roll, in spoiler’s role

The arrival of spring has once again coincided with the thaw of a miserable winter freeze for the Maple Leafs that saw the team crawl into the Olympic break with a 19-31-11 record.

Since the resumption of games following Brian Burke and Ron Wilson’s run to the silver medal in Vancouver, the Leafs have gone on a 7-3-1 run in March, a stretch which has included the team’s first two overtime victories of what has been an otherwise forgettable, regrettable season.

“We want to win games,” said Kessel , who has shaken off a January slump and has found the net 7 times in the past nine games. “This year isn’t over, we want to play it out to the end, and try to win as many games as we can.”

Just as Caesar was cautioned to “beware the Ides of March”, any of Toronto’s remaining opponents over the club’s last 10 games of the season would be well advised to not approach the team as the doormats that they have been for most of the year. The Montreal Canadiens are no stranger to their archrivals’ sudden surge, having had their 6-game winning streak halted at the hands of the Leafs on Saturday night.

Tyler Bozak, who scored the opening goal in the win over the Habs, relishes the spoiler role that his team has assumed. “We feel really good. (Montreal) is fighting for a playoff spot and they need wins pretty bad. We’re getting more confident game by game, and it just feels better each night.”

Bozak, has formed a lethal forward line in between Kessel and Nikolai Kulemin; a unit that has collected a terrific 27 points in the past eight games. Coach Wilson praised Kulemin as the team’s ‘most complete player, right now’.

“He goes in hard and protects the puck, and he’s physical. He’s everything you want in a hockey player,” said Wilson of the young Russian winger.

The fans of Toronto are no stranger to outbursts of productivity at Air Canada Centre come springtime. In the five seasons since the lockout, the Leafs have never had a combined March/April record below .500, and have gone 48-32-7 in games played after March 1.

There is a downside to the impressive collection of wins earned near the vernal equinox; none of post-lockout winning streaks have vaulted the Leafs into a playoff spot. An abysmal 2009-10 campaign will once again see Toronto out of the post-season.

Despite knowing that they’ll be trading their hockey sticks for golf irons come playoff time, the Leaf players are aiming to make as many Eastern Conference rivals as possible join them on the first tee. Seven of Toronto’s 10 remaining games are against teams that were within five points of the final playoff spot in the East, as of games played Saturday.

“There’s pressure on young guys,” said Wilson of the incentive to perform. “We’re playing against teams where the points matter, so they’re playing hard against us. It’s important for these young guys to learn what it takes to play, to gather experience, and I think we’re playing the right way.

We’re not trying to put people to sleep. We’re on the attack.”

The Leafs attack has included back-to-back shootout wins in which forward John Mitchell has used the same deke move against goalies Yann Danis of New Jersey and Jaroslav Halak of Montreal to score both times.

“We’re a confident group in here,” said a smiling Mitchell after Saturday’s win. “Things have turned for us in the last few weeks. It’s great for our team, especially for all the young guys in here.”


Rob Del Mundo is the author of Blue And White Beat, and is a regular columnist at TMLfans.ca

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Leafs shine in shootout

Leafs scorers: Kessel (27), shootout winner – Kulemin
Devils scorers: Clarkson (9)
Links: Game Summary | Stats | Discussion boards

Forward lines: Kulemin-Bozak-Kessel, Stalberg-Grabovski-Caputi, Mitchell-Hanson-
Sjostrom, Wallin-Orr-Lundmark
Defence pairings: Phaneuf-Beauchemin, Kaberle-Schenn, Exelby-Gunnarsson
Goaltenders: Giguere (Win, 64:56 minutes played, 24 saves, 1 GA), Gustavsson (0:00)
Noteworthy:
-Phil Kessel scored his 27th goal of the year and now has 6 goals and 3 assists in his last eight games played.
-All three Leafs skaters selected for the shootout – Kessel, Nikolai Kulemin and John Mitchell, scored on goalie Yann Danis.

Quinn returns: Leafs young guns shine in 6-4 win

Leafs scorers: Kulemin (14), Bozak (6), Lundmark 5, Kessel 2 (25), Grabovski (8)
Oilers scorers: Cogliano (7), Brule (15), Penner (25), Johnson (2)
Links: Game Summary | Stats | Discussion boards

Forward lines: Kulemin-Bozak-Kessel, Stalberg-Grabovski-Caputi, Mitchell-Hanson-Lundmark, Primeau-Wallin-Orr
Defence pairings: Phaneuf-Beauchemin, Kaberle-Schenn, Finger-Gunnarsson
Goaltenders: Gustavsson (Win, 60:00 minutes played, 25 saves, 4 GA), Giguere (0:00)
Noteworthy:
-Pat Quinn coached his first NHL game at Air Canada Centre since being fired from the Leafs at the end of the 2005-06 season. This was a terrific place for me, back when I was a player and for the years I was coaching here. I have terrific memories and that was a nice touch,” said Quinn of the tribute that was played for him on the scoreboard during a stoppage in play. Quinn, now coach of the Oilers, ranks second in coaching wins in Leafs history, trailing only Punch Imlach.
-The line of Nikolai Kulemin, Tyler Bozak and Phil Kessel combined for 8 points.
-The Leafs went 3-for-8 on the power-play, ending a stretch of 7 straight games without a power-play goal.
-Prior to the game, the Leafs honoured six Team Canada Olympians for their gold medal achievements at the 2010 Games: Tessa Bonhomme, Jayna Hefford and Becky Kellar (women’s hockey), Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir (ice dance) and Heather Moyse (bobsleigh).

Monday News: Leafs Fall to Flyers; Nonis Replaces Jackson as Marlies GM

The Maple Leafs dropped a 3-1 decision to the Philadephia Flyers on Sunday evening at Wachovia Center. Nikolai Kulemin had the only Toronto goal in a scrappy affair that saw Dion Phaneuf tangle with Philadelphia’s Scott Hartnell.

In Marlies news, Brendan Mikkelson’s overtime goal gave Toronto a 3-2 win over the Hartford Wolf Pack, while Jeff Jackson resigned as Marlies GM with Dave Nonis being named as his replacement.

Here are the hockey headlines in the news this morning:

Leafs News
Marlies News

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Maple Leafs’ prospects camp wraps up

It has been a very busy and exciting week for 22 of the Toronto Maple Leafs’ young prospects.

The 15 forwards, four defencemen and three goaltenders — all of them Maple Leafs prospects — spent the week of July 7-11 doing on-ice workouts, learning new exercises to try in the weight room, and stretching their minds in a series of classroom sessions covering such subjects as nutrition, media relations, special recipies to promote endurance and conditioning, and more. They even had a trip to a local area farm with Canadian strongman Jamie Aszmies.

Monday and Tuesday were spent at the Leafs’ training facility, the Lakeshore Lions Arena. After a high paced morning skate — something many players were dreading after having been off the ice for the last month or two — they were off to attend seminars on how to deal with Toronto’s relentless media pressure, how to cook a fat-free meal that maintains their conditioning while delivering the necessary fuel to keep their energy levels high during games, and to learn what the Maple Leafs organization expected of each of them.

Watch the Day One Leafs TV recap (includes a variety of player interviews)

Watch the Day Two Leafs TV recap (includes a variety of player interviews)

The theme for the week was E Pluribus Unun (latin for “from many to one”), a constant reminder to the players that they must work together as a single cohesive unit to be effective. This motto was emphasised on Wednesday when the prospects headed to Beretta Organic Farms in King City, just north of Toronto, where they were divided into two groups and engaged in a series of team competitions. Jamie Aszmies, a Canadian competitor in the International Strongman competitions, was on hand to help teach them how to safely work in pairs to flip a 600-pound tractor tire and push 800-pound bales of hay around a field. The teams also faced one another in a tug of war and a variety of other events, with Team Grey narrowly defeating Team Blue on the final event. The losers had to serve lunch.

Watch the Day Three Leafs TV recap (includes a variety of player interviews)

The group returned to the Lakeshore Lions Arena for the final two days of the camp. New Leafs coach Ron Wilson and several members of his staff watched their on-ice session on Thurday and then spent some time getting to know the young men in the classroom. General manager Cliff Fletcher also dropped in during several of the week’s on-ice practices, no doubt eagre to see several of the kids he had drafted less than a month ago in Ottawa.

Watch the Day Four Leafs TV recap (includes a variety of player interviews)

Watch the Leafs TV interview with Ron Wilson on Day Four

As the camp broke up on Friday, players went off in their own separate ways. Several will be attending the Team Canada Junior camp later this summer, while others will be headed to the weight room to put their recent education to practice before heading off to their respective teams’ pre-season camps in September. Perhaps half of the group will return to Toronto for the Leafs’ rookie camp, with the most promising of them continuing on to the main camp.

Watch the Day Five Leafs TV recap (includes a variety of player interviews)

Join our community forum’s discussion on the Leafs Prospects Camp.

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