On a night when they honored late founding owner Dr. John J. McMullen, the New Jersey Devils played a lot like their 1982 forebearers in a crushing loss to the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Moving the Colorado Rockies to New Jersey in 1982, McMullen owned the club for 18 years and presided over two Stanley Cup championships. The Devils made their former owner the first to be inducted into the ring of honor at Prudential Center.
https://twitter.com/NJDevils/status/817533523925999616
Family and former players were on hand, wearing No. 82 sweaters with McMullen on the back. A commemorative patch was also worn by the current edition.
The @NJDevils honored the late Dr. John J. McMullen by making him the first inductee into their Ring of Honor. #TORvsNJD pic.twitter.com/vlXTKQU05B
— NHL Public Relations (@PR_NHL) January 7, 2017
For the first time in 350 contests, New Jersey was without their injured captain and defenseman Andy Greene.
It was a flat start for the Devils and Toronto pounced, right off the rip.
Here is tonight's @SentryInvest By the Numbers of the Leafs win over the Devils. #TMLtalk pic.twitter.com/BBLxim6kSZ
— Toronto Maple Leafs (@MapleLeafs) January 7, 2017
First Period
In the opening frame, Nazem Kadri got behind the Devils defense and potted home the rebound off a James van Riemsdyk shot, much to the approval of the Leafs’ dad’s in attendance. The power play tally by Kadri at the 9:26 point was No. 15 on the season.
Kadri's goal got the Leafs on the board first. #TMLtalk https://t.co/fv4OzZAS7F
— Toronto Maple Leafs (@MapleLeafs) January 7, 2017
More sloppy play by the Devils accounted for a two-goal deficit. New Jersey failed to keep the zone on the power play and keeping the pressure on the puck, Connor Brown was able to wrestle the biscuit away from Cory Schneider and pocket a shorthanded goal. Brown’s ninth doubled the Toronto advantage at 13:17.
Let's catch up on some goals. Here's Connor Brown's that made it 2-0 Leafs. #TMLtalk https://t.co/5zFbxsWYum
— Toronto Maple Leafs (@MapleLeafs) January 7, 2017
Shortly thereafter, with the Maple Leafs on the power play, Auston Matthews batted home a midair rebound for No. 21 on his rookie campaign. The 3-0 lead at the 14:40 mark was enough to chase Cory Schneider from the cage.
Matthews tips it in! #TMLtalk https://t.co/Z2S93VwR9x
— Toronto Maple Leafs (@MapleLeafs) January 7, 2017
Backup Keith Kinkaid would settle things down eventually but not before surrendering a goal on the first shot he faced.
Toronto again capitalized on the power play. Tyler Bozak jammed home a rebound for his eighth on the season, at the 15:15 mark and it was 4-0 Maple Leafs.
Tyler Bozak made it 4-0 Leafs! #TMLtalk https://t.co/BZz22889iK
— Toronto Maple Leafs (@MapleLeafs) January 7, 2017
Second Period
While the Devils picked up the pace, the second stanza was scoreless. Frederik Andersen stood tall making stops on all 11 shots sent in his direction.
Third Period
Scoring Summary
FIRST PERIOD
TOR — Nazem Kadri (15) assisted by Tyler Bozak (15) and James van Riemsdyk (16)
TOR — Connor Brown (9) unassisted
TOR — Auston Matthews (21) assisted by Josh Hyman (13) and Jake Gardiner (15)
TOR — Tyler Bozak (8) assisted by James van Riemsdyk (17) Nazem Kadri (9)
SECOND PERIOD
No goals.
THIRD PERIOD
NJ — PA Parenteau (12) assisted by Adam Henrique (13) and Damon Severson (17)
NJ — Jon Merrill (1) assisted by Miles Wood (2) and Devante Smith-Pelly (5)
THW Three Stars
First: Frederik Andersen
Second: Nazem Kadri
Third: Tyler Bozak
Next Up
Montreal Canadiens at Toronto Maple Leafs
Air Canada Centre, 7 p.m. EST on Jan. 7
Broadcast Channels: CBC, TVA
Next Up
Edmonton Oilers at New Jersey Devils
Prudential Center, 7 p.m. EST on Jan. 7
Broadcast Channels: MSG+