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Saturday, 18 February 2012
FINAL
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FINAL 1 2 3 T
Maple Leafs 0 1 1 2
Canucks 2 3 1 6
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GOAL SCORERS

TOR:   D. Phaneuf (06:02 - 2nd) , N. Kulemin (19:40 - 3rd)
VAN:   A. Burrows (07:49 - 1st) , M. Malhotra (09:16 - 1st) , A. Burrows (03:18 - 2nd) , D. Sedin (11:14 - 2nd) , S. Salo (PPG, 12:48 - 2nd) , K. Bieksa (08:25 - 3rd)
GOALIES

TOR: J. Reimer (L) , J. Gustavsson
 VAN: R. Luongo (W)
Maple Leafs-Canucks Preview
Associated Press

As the Toronto Maple Leafs try to end one major drought that dates to before the NHL lockout, they can address another run of futility that has lasted just as long.

It won't be easy, however, for the Leafs to enter a hostile atmosphere Saturday and snap a nine-game losing streak to the Vancouver Canucks, who haven't lost in regulation in more than a month.

Toronto (29-23-6) hasn't reached the playoffs since 2004, but coach Ron Wilson's club has a chance to finally bring postseason hockey back to Canada's largest city as it clings to eighth place in the Eastern Conference.

The hockey-crazed nation's most successful franchise lately has been Vancouver, which has showed in this matchup. The Canucks have outscored Toronto 38-19 while winning each meeting since a 2-1 road defeat Nov. 24, 2003.

"The Leafs have always been a team I hated as a kid," Vancouver's Alexandre Burrows said after scoring the game-winner in a 5-3 victory at Toronto on Dec. 17. "I know a lot of fans in Vancouver don't like this team. ... It just makes it extra special."

The Canucks (36-15-6) haven't discriminated - they've been tough on every opponent for the last several weeks, going 8-0-3 in their last 11. Seven of those games have gone to shootouts, but they finally escaped with a regulation win Wednesday over Colorado.

David Booth scored for the third straight game and Jannik Hansen broke a tie with a third-period tally before Burrows' empty-netter sealed the 3-1 victory.

"We get off a little earlier than normal," Hansen said. "It's nice to only have to play 60 (minutes)."

The Leafs needed more than that Wednesday in Edmonton, but they were simply happy to get a 4-3 victory and snap a four-game losing streak.

Tim Connolly scored 1:39 into overtime - his first goal in 18 games - as Toronto won despite squandering a 2-0 lead it had built 1:38 into the first period.

"We've been in a little bit of a rut," Connolly said, "and to come out and battle in a game like that where it's going back and forth, and really grind it out and get the win is a huge two points for us."

Wilson, however, is wary because the Leafs' previous win also came against the Oilers, 6-3 at home Feb. 6. The coach said Edmonton's uptempo style may have been partly responsible for getting Toronto, which was outscored 16-5 during its slide, out of whack.

"That's the way Edmonton plays. It actually set us off on this little losing skid, I think," Wilson said. "You get into a flow that's going back and forth, and sometimes when you get some free looks like we were getting, you forget about playing in your own end."

The Leafs will certainly have to be sharp defensively against one of the league's most prolific clubs, and their impressive run of success on the penalty kill might be tested.

Opponents have scored once in 34 power-play chances over 20 games since the start of 2012 after a dreadful start to the season for the unit. Vancouver, though, leads the league at 22.1 percent with the man advantage despite its current 2-for-23 stretch.

The Canucks had only one power-play chance - failing to convert - at Toronto earlier this season, but they're 12 for 50 (24.0 percent) during the winning streak in the series.




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STANDINGS

WESTERN CONFERENCE
  TEAM GP W L OT GF GA PTS
1 p - CHI 48 36 7 5 155 102 77
2 y - ANA 48 30 12 6 140 118 66
3 y - VAN 48 26 15 7 127 121 59
4 x - STL 48 29 17 2 129 115 60
5 x - LAK 48 27 16 5 133 118 59
6 x - SJS 48 25 16 7 124 116 57
7 x - DET 48 24 16 8 124 115 56
8 x - MIN 48 26 19 3 122 127 55
9 CBJ 48 24 17 7 120 119 55
10 PHX 48 21 18 9 125 131 51
11 DAL 48 22 22 4 130 142 48
12 EDM 48 19 22 7 125 134 45
13 CGY 48 19 25 4 128 160 42
14 NSH 48 16 23 9 111 139 41
15 COL 48 16 25 7 116 152 39