The Globe and Mail - 08.04.2020

(WallPaper) #1

B16 OTHE GLOBE AND MAIL | WEDNESDAY,APRIL8,2020


S


heldon Keefe doesn’t have
Netflix and hasn’t seenTiger
King.
In fact, when the head coach
of the Toronto Maple Leafs heard
about the cringe-inducing-but-
can’t-look-away series, he as-
sumed it was a documentary
about Tiger Woods.
“I don’t know if I’m proud or
embarrassed,” Keefe said Tues-
day on a conference call with re-
porters. “But it seems like a rab-
bit hole of entertainment that I
don’t necessarily need to go
down.”
He’s instead immersing him-
self in something different, and
more familiar, during the NHL’s
unprecedented shutdown amid
the COVID-19 pandemic – his
own team.
“I’m doing a lot of binging on
the Toronto Maple Leafs,” Keefe
said. “It’s taking up a lot of my
time.”
That includes examining why
a talent-filled roster with the
likes of Auston Matthews, Mitch
Marner, John Tavares and Wil-
liam Nylander can go from ap-
parent world beaters to a team
beaten by a 42-year-old emergen-
cy backup goalie/Zamboni driv-
er.
Keefe talked earlier this sea-
son about the Leafs’ periods of
immaturity, while general man-
ager Kyle Dubas likened the
group to Jekyll and Hyde follow-
ing performances that ran a ga-
mut of highlight-reel to horror
show.
“We’ve shown at times that we
can play very well against the
best teams in the league and get
great results,” Keefe said Tues-
day. “It’s a matter of us finding
that more consistently. You can
attach whatever description you
want to it, but the reality is that
we need to take steps, both as a
team and individually.”


The 39-year-old Keefe, who
has been more or less attached at
the hip with Dubas since their
Ontario Hockey League days,
took over for the fired Mike
Babcock on Nov. 20 after four-
plus seasons leading the AHL’s
Toronto Marlies.
The Leafs caught fire after the
change behind the bench, going
15-4-1 out of the gate, but came
back to earth and were just 12-
11-4 over their next 27 games be-
fore the NHL suspended the
2019-20 campaign March 12.
Toronto sat third in the Atlan-
tic Division when the pause hit –
the Florida Panthers being un-
able to get their act together pro-
vided a boost – but Keefe is using
this time away from the rink to
focus on what needs to change
whenever the games return.
“Right now is a chance for us
to reset,” he said. “But also really
identify where we want to grow,

how we’re going to get there.”
With that in mind, Keefe is
staying in touch with his players
as much as possible, while also
taking into account the world-
upside-down uncertainty of the

novel coronavirus outbreak.
Known for his communica-
tion skills, it’s presented Keefe
with a unique challenge.
“You don’t have the face-to-

face contact where you’re able to
sit across from someone and re-
ally talk them through some-
thing,” he said. “But like every-
body, we’re adapting to the sit-
uation. We’re trying to find the
balance as a coaching staff of giv-
ing the players space to deal with
the things that they need to deal
with.”
That’s included text messages
and phone calls, while the coach-
es have kept up a normal rou-
tine, albeit remotely, with the
knowledge the season may or
may not resume.
“As this moves ahead, you’re
really by the day adjusting your
plan a little bit,” Keefe said.
“While it seems like maybe noth-
ing is happening, there is a lot
happening because there’s a lot
of emotions and a lot of different
things that are attached to the
situation we’re all in. We want to
make sure that we’re going about

it appropriately.”
And while players might have
difficulty making gains physical-
ly away from team facilities and
off their skates, between the ears
is where Keefe thinks there could
be a bump.
“The conditions are challeng-
ing ... yet it is an opportunity
where there’s time to focus on
certain things,” he said. “The
messaging that we’ve been giv-
ing to our players and to our staff
is that there’s no excuse. We
should come back as better ver-
sions of ourselves. Maybe in lots
of cases, that’s going to be diffi-
cult to do from a physical stand-
point, but there’s things that we
can do in other areas that maybe
frankly are more important for
our group.
“This pause that we’re going
through right now gives us a
chance to really talk about those
types of things and make those
sorts of adjustments to make
those plans. We’re looking to
take advantage of it.”
On a personal level, Keefe has
enjoyed spending extra time
with his wife and two sons. He’s
been doing the home-schooling
thing – “My Grade 4 math skills
are improving daily” – and is try-
ing his best stay active.
There’s also been an opportu-
nity to gain some perspective on
the world.
“When it really comes down
to it, sports is pretty low on the
priority list,” Keefe said. “So
many things are more important


  • family and health.
    “But then you also do recog-
    nize that a lot [people]enjoy
    their sports and the role sports
    do play in their lives.
    “So it also makes you recog-
    nize and know what you’re do-
    ing is important and that people
    miss it.”
    In his down time there’s been
    movies such asFord v Ferrariand
    the Fred Rogers biopicA Beauti-
    ful Day in the Neighborhood.
    “There’s lots of things out
    there to keep people occupied,”
    Keefe said.
    But at least for now,Tiger King
    isn’t on the coach’s list.


THE CANADIAN PRESS

KeefeeyesopportunityforLeafsfromisolation


Headcoachhasbeen


focusedonteamand


movingitpastits


roller-coasterways


JOSHUACLIPPERTONTORONTO


LeafsheadcoachSheldonKeefewatchesagameagainsttheBuffaloSabresbehind,fromleft,William
Nylander,AustonMatthewsandAndreasJohnssoninTorontoonNov.30,2019.Keefeisstayingintouchwith
hisplayersasmuchaspossibleduringthecoronaviruscrisis.NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS

Right now is a chance
for us to reset. But also
really identify where we
want to grow, how
we’re going to get
there.

SHELDONKEEFE
HEAD COACH OF THE
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS

HOCKEY


The Toronto Maple Leafs signed
forward Alexander Barabanov to
a one-year, entry-level contract
for the 2020-21 campaign Tues-
day.
The 25-year-old had 11 goals
and 20 points in 43 games with
SKA St. Petersburg of Russia’s
Kontinental Hockey League this
season. He added three points
(one goal, two assists) in four
playoff games for his hometown
club.


“We’re really excited that an-
other player to the fold here that
we think has got great experience
and a great skill set, very high
character,” Leafs head coach Shel-
don Keefe said on a conference
call Tuesday. “Just checks a lot of
the boxes that you’re always look-
ing for when you’re adding a play-
er that you fully expected to step
in and be an important part of
your team.”
Barabanov has appeared in 262
career KHL games, all with SKA,
registering 137 points (62 goals, 75
assists). In 68 career playoff

games, Barabanov recorded 23
points (11 goals, 12 assists) while
helping SKA win the KHL’s Gaga-
rin Cup in both 2015 and 2017.
Internationally, Barabanov
was a member of a team of Rus-
sian athletes – the country was
banned from playing under its
flag because of doping violations


  • that won gold at the 2018 Pye-
    ongchang Olympics. He has also
    represented Russia three times at
    the world championships, re-
    cording 14 points (four goals, 10
    assists) in 28 contests.
    “He’s very strong winger, tre-


mendous playmaking ability,
great skill level in tight,” Leafs
general manager Kyle Dubas said
of Barabanov on a separate con-
ference call with reporters last
week. “One of the other things
that we like most about him is his
ability to make plays under pres-
sure, and his ability to win pucks
[and] protect pucks when people
come after him.
“He’s a playmaking winger
that also has the ability to finish
at the net.”
The move for Barbanov comes
11 months after the Leafs rolled

the dice on another Russian for-
ward, signing Ilya Mikheyev to a
one-year, entry-level contract on
May 6, 2019.
The 25-year-old registered
eight goals and 23 points in 39
games with Toronto this season –
which has been put on indefinite
hold by the COVID-19 pandemic –
before suffering a scary wrist lac-
eration from an opponent’s skate
on Dec. 27 that was expected to
keep him out of the lineup until
at least late March.

THE CANADIAN PRESS

TorontosignsRussianforwardBarabanovtoentry-levelcontract


TORONTO


The 16-team playoffs were sched-
uled to open Wednesday, though
they likely won’t begin until late
June – at the earliest – and could
stretch into August and potential-
ly September.
NHL players have been asked
to self-quarantine through April
15, a date that has been pushed
back twice already and is expect-
ed to be moved once again. The
number of NHL players testing
positive for COVID-19 rose to
eight Tuesday as the league an-
nounced a third Colorado Ava-
lanche player tested positive,
joining five members of the Otta-
wa Senators.
The season was put on hold
with teams having played an un-
even amount of games and with
tightly contested races taking
place in each of the two confer-
ences.
The NHL has not placed a firm
deadline on the latest when the
playoffs could start. Deputy com-
missioner Bill Daly, however, ac-
knowledged in an e-mail to The
Associated Press the league will
eventually have to establish
“some last possible day” so not to
cut into the start of the next sea-
son.
“It’s nothing that we are even
close to setting at this point in
time,” he wrote.
Florida Panthers goalie Sergei
Bobrovsky said it would be unfair
for the NHL to dump what re-
mains of the regular season.
“There’s a lot of games [left]
and we’re right in the mix, and we


have the opportunity to be in
there,” Bobrovsky said. “The sea-
son is 82 games and then the play-
offs. So you can’t just cut of where
we are and jump right into the
playoffs.”
The possibility of playing at
neutral sites is being considered
because the pandemic is affecting
regions at different times. North
Dakota, among a handful of
states without stay-at-home or-
ders, was mentioned as a poten-
tial site because the state isn’t
densely populated and the Uni-
versity of North Dakota features
an NHL-calibre facility.
Buffalo has also been dis-
cussed because the Sabres, who
are out of contention, have a two-
rink practice facility connected to
their downtown arena and a 200-

plus room hotel.
Boston defenceman Torey
Krug urged the NHL to take a pa-
tient approach.
“Look, we all want to get back
to playing,” Krug said.
“If we do have the opportunity
to get back to playing, let’s be safe
about it and be smart,” he added.
“No one wants to jump back into
a situation where we put a bunch
of people in one area, and all of a
sudden this thing takes off again.”
Bettman sees the potential of
games being played into the sum-
mer and doesn’t expect the abil-
ity to maintain NHL-calibre ice
sheets to be an issue because of
the league’s modern and air-con-
ditioned facilities.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Season:NHLhasnotplacedafirmdeadline


onlatestpointplayoffscanstart


FROMB13

NHLcommissionerGaryBettmansaystheNHLisfloatinganumberof
optionsonhowtoproceedwiththe2019-20season.MARY ALTAFFER/AP

An eighth NHL player has tested positive for COVID-19.
The league announced Tuesday that a third player from
the Colorado Avalanche has the disease caused by the
novel coronavirus. The league says the player is in self-
isolation and has not had close contact with teammates or
Colorado staff members.
The five other NHL players who tested positive all play
for the Ottawa Senators.
The Senators met the Sharks in San Jose, Calif., on March
7 despite a recommendation from officials in Santa Clara
County against holding large public gatherings owing to
the spreading coronavirus. The Avalanche played at SAP
Center the next night.
The NHL suspended its season March 12, and NHL play-
ers have been advised by the league to self-quarantine
since March 13. That directive is currently in effect until
April 15.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EIGHTHNHLPLAYER,ANDTHIRDONCOLORADO
AVALANCHE,TESTSPOSITIVEFORCOVID-19

Edmonton Oilers forward Colby Cave has been placed in a
medically induced coma after suffering a brain bleed.
The Oilers said Tuesday on their Twitter account that the
brain bleed happened overnight and that Cave was in the
critical care unit at Toronto’s Sunnybrook Hospital.
A 25-year-old from Battleford, Sask., Cave scored once in
11 appearances with Edmonton this season. He has 11 goals
and 23 points in 44 games with the American Hockey
League’s Bakersfield Condors.
Cave’s agent, Jason Davidson, confirmed in an e-mail to
The Canadian Press that the situation doesn’t appear to be
linked to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Oilers posted Cave’s goal – an impressive rush down
the right wing that saw him beat a Pittsburgh defender and
stuff the puck past Penguins netminder Matt Murray – on
Twitter.
“Colby is an awesome person who scored an awesome
goal for us this season,” the team said. “The entire Oilers
family is sending you all our love and strength right now.”
He has four goals and five assists over 67 NHL games
with Boston and Edmonton.THE CANADIAN PRESS

OILERSFORWARDCAVEPLACEDINMEDICALLY
INDUCEDCOMAAFTERSUFFERINGBRAINBLEED
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