Hockey

Leafs coach upset with physical response after Marchand incident sidelines Liljegren

Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Timothy Liljegren has been placed on long-term injured reserve with a high ankle sprain, the team announced Saturday.

Tough guy Reaves says issue addressed internally; 2 D-men recalled from AHL

Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman stands on ice during stoppage in play.
Maple Leafs defenceman Timothy Liljegren is on long-term injured reserve with a high ankle sprain suffered in Thursday's 3-2 shootout loss in Boston. (Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports via Reuters)

Sheldon Keefe wasn't impressed.

Ryan Reaves added the situation was discussed internally.

As the Maple Leafs prepared to face the Buffalo Sabres on Saturday night, their attention in the morning was still firmly focused on what transpired less than 48 hours earlier.

Toronto announced defenceman Timothy Liljegren had been placed on long-term injured reserve with a high ankle sprain suffered in the first period of Thursday's 3-2 shootout loss in Boston when he was tripped by Bruins forward Brad Marchand and fell awkwardly into the board.

No penalty was called on the play.

Head coach Keefe, whose team had the day off Friday, was asked about the lack of a physical response from his group in both the moment and the immediate aftermath of the incident.

"I hated everything about, and I've addressed it," he said following Toronto's full morning skate at Scotiabank Arena. "It's not what we want to be about. At times we've responded very well in those situations.

"It's about consistency."

Knies body slammed in playoffs

Toronto was pushed around during last spring's five-game loss to Florida in the second round of the playoffs, including rookie forward Matthew Knies getting body slammed to the ice by Panthers centre Sam Bennett, without much pushback.

Reaves, an enforcer signed over the summer by general manager Brad Treliving as part of a roster overhaul, said the reaction to the Liljegren-Marchand incident had been talked about internally and would be "changed going forward."

The bruising winger added players on the ice might not have realized what happened in the moment.

"But when [Marchand] skates by the bench, I think there probably could be a little more of a response there," Reaves said. "We will respond accordingly."

The Leafs recalled defencemen Max Lajoie and Simon Benoit from the American Hockey League's Toronto Marlies with Liljegren out for the foreseeable future after being taken out by an opponent with a history of bending rules.

"In real time it didn't look like anything," Reaves said. "And the replay, you can form your own opinion on what happened based on the player.

"Didn't look overly malicious, but it looked like there was some intent."

Leafs captain John Tavares said the bond in the dressing room is strong despite Thursday's non-existent answer on the physical side.

There's a lot of other players wearing Bruins colours that we can make life harder on. It's more about an uplifting of our team.— Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe on the team's lack of physical response vs. Boston

"No doubt that we've got a tight group," he said. "We talked about having a strong brotherhood and instances like that, things that happen within the game, how we stick together.

"We discuss all areas that we want to be better in, and that situation as well."

Keefe said he wasn't looking for his players, who came back from a 2-0 deficit in Boston, to chase Marchand around the ice.

"Brad Marchand doesn't care about Ryan Reeves or anybody else in the league, that's well-established," Keefe said. "It's more about the team response. There's a lot of other players that are wearing Bruins colours that we can make life harder on.

"It's more just about an uplifting of our team."

Keefe said Toronto has shown an ability to respond in several ways but added that stepping up to a physical challenge in a moment like the Liljegren injury is a "part of the game we have to fully embrace."

"There's a lot of areas in our game where we're lacking consistency," he said. "Some nights we're great at it. Other nights we're not.

"To be the team that wants to accomplish great things, you've got to find consistency."

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