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Toronto Maple Leafs Tickets

Displaying 1 Ticket Results
EventVenue NameEvent Date 
Winter Classic: Detroit Red Wings vs. Toronto Maple LeafsMichigan StadiumMichigan Stadium
Ann Arbor, MI
01/01/2013 3:30 AM
Jan 01, 2013
TBA
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Toronto Maple Leafs Tour Dates


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Results

    Toronto Marlies advance to Calder Cup final with win over Oklahoma City (Yahoo! Sports)

    The Maple Leafs farm team will face the Norfolk Admirals in the final.

     

    Devils look to eliminate Rangers in Game 6; Hal Gill’s broken tibia (Playoff Puck Previews) (Puck Daddy)

    Preview: New York Rangers at New Jersey Devils, 8 p.m. ET The Rangers and Devils head back to Newark for Game 6. Will the Rangers stave off elimination, just as they did in 1994? Here's the key: Michael Del Zotto (above, punching Alexei Ponikarovsky in the beak). The offensive defenceman is a minus-5 in this series, going even in 3 of them, and minus-2 and minus-3 in the Game 2 and Game 5 losses, respectively. The Rangers' top pairing looks to be slowing down -- totally natural considering the minutes they've played all year -- and if Del Zotto can't eat up some quality minutes behind them, the Rangers could be done tonight. Evening reading: • Alain Vigneault went on a French-language radio show earlier this week and confirmed that Roberto Luongo had requested a trade. Friday, Mike Gillis established that "he didn't mean what he said." Right. Got it. [ Vancouver Sun ] • The definitive guide to playoff facial hair. [ Five Minutes for Fighting ] • As it turns out, Hal Gill played the entire postseason on a broken tibia, which is sort of badass. But what blows me away is that I'm not entirely blown away by it -- this sort of things happens fairly often in hockey, reason a billion why hockey is awesome. [ SB Nation ] • What sort of impact has Martin Brodeur's puckhandling had on the Rangers/Devils series? [ Edmonton Journal ] • Sean McIndoe on why Maple Leafs fans still can't get over that missed call from the 1993 Western Conference finals. [ Grantland ] • And finally, Mark Messier guarantees a Game 6 win after all: Puck Buddy Comment of the Day: Frank Grimes, on John Tortorella's origin story , which included ground balls to the face: This article has been up for an hour and I haven't read one good "balls to the face joke" yet. Make my Friday Puck Daddy! No kidding. I expected more from all of you. Bold prediction: Wysh has four heart attacks during the course of Friday night's game.

     

    Dominik Hasek wants NHL return; Tortorella on Game 6; Nash to Boston? (Puck Headlines) (Puck Daddy)

    Here are your Puck Headlines: a glorious collection of news and views collected from the greatest blogosphere in sports and the few, the proud, the mainstream hockey media. • We love this photo from Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals. We also can't imagine how many people mistook Chad Smith of the Chili Peppers for Will Ferrell. • Dominik Hasek, 47, would like to play in the NHL again. As a backup? As a training camp invitee? Doesn't say. But we'd love to see it happen. Preferably in Tampa Bay in a tandem with Dwayne Roloson, so he can have someone to reminisce with about the discovery of fire. [ Malik ] • Steve Yzerman doesn't rule out trading for a goalie for the Tampa Bay Lightning: "My preference," Yzerman said Thursday night, "is to go with a little bit younger guy that maybe has a little less experience that can step up and play well for us now." [ TB Times ] • Coveted NCAA prospect Justin Schultz is reportedly leaving Wisconsin, giving the Anaheim Ducks a 30-day window in which to negotiate exclusively with him before he joins the Leafs, errrr, becomes a free agent. [ Ducks Blog ] • Rick Dudley has left the Toronto Maple Leafs for the Montreal Canadiens as an assistant GM. Tim Wharnsby of CBC on Dudley's mixed results. [ CBC Sports ] • Joe Haggerty breaks down a Rick Nash the Boston Bruins scenario: "Fact: The Blue Jackets are asking for too much for Nash at this point. This hockey writer can only see the superstar winger coming to Boston if Columbus is willing to take on Krejci or Tim Thomas in exchange for their franchise cornerstone. That may or may not happen." [ CSNNE ] • Glendale councilwoman calls Canadians interested in the Phoenix Coyotes' relocation "poachers." Mark Spector pounces. [ Sportsnet ] • John Tortorella on Game 6: "I thought we were on our heels, and you have to give credit to Jersey, too, a little bit, for putting us on our heels. But I think as we've been going here, I think entering tonight's game we're in the right mindset and that's going to be very important for an important game." [ NYDN ]

     

    Canadiens hire Dudley as assistant GM (The SportsXchange)

    The Montreal Canadiens have hired Rick Dudley as their assistant general manager, the team announced Friday.

     

    Los Angeles Kings Clinch Stanley Cup Finals Berth with Game 5 Win Over Phoenix: Fan’s Reaction (Yahoo! Contributor Network)

    On Tuesday, May 22, the Los Angeles Kings beat the Phoenix Coyotes 4-3 in sudden-death overtime to clinch their second Western Conference title. The team will now move on to play either the New York Rangers or the New Jersey Devils in the Stanley Cup Finals.

     

    Islanders goalie Al Montoya, the most popular hockey player on Wikipedia? (Puck Daddy)

    Over on Puck Drunk Love, David Rogers found a list from the WikiProject Ice Hockey group that ranks the most popular hockey-centric pages . The top five, in views per day: 5. Mike Comrie (3,389) 4. Wayne Gretzky (3,481) 3. Mario Lemieux (3,600) 2. National Hockey League (3,670) And at No. 1 … 1. Al Montoya (8,110) What the what? Seeing New York Islanders Al Montoya top a list of the most popular hockey pages on Wikipedia is seeing a Bobcat Goldthwaite comedy win the box office. It begs for investigation into what find of nefarious "Vote For Rory"-esque campaign may have influenced these tallies. Writes Rogers: Unfortunately, Montoya's popularity on Wikipedia likely has nothing to do with his skills on the ice. In reality, Montoya's popularity might be due to confusion with the character from "The Princess Bride", Inigo Montoya. Searchers hunting for the infamous Inigo Montoya quote ("Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die.") likely stumbled on the goaltender for the Islanders by mistake. Well, that's one theory.

     

    What We Learned: Embarrassing LA sports media moments while covering Kings playoff run (Puck Daddy)

    Hello, this is a feature that will run through the entire season and aims to recap the weekend's events and boils those events down to one admittedly superficial fact or stupid opinion about each team. Feel free to complain about it. It's possibly the greatest bit of investigative journalism conducted since Woodward and Bernstein brought down Richard Nixon. This exemplary, collective effort of sleuth work is currently ongoing in Los Angeles, Calif., where an entire media market has unearthed the NHL's shocking secret: The city has a professional hockey team. Over the past week or so here at Puck Daddy, we've tried to document every startling discovery made by the intrepid Los Angeles media, like how to properly pronounce Anze Kopitar's name (it's hard because he's from Bosnia or something), the real name of this Drew Doughty character ( it's actually Brad !) and that hockey is in fact not played with a ball, but rather a little piece of rubber known as a "puck." That last one makes me pretty uncomfortable because of the word it rhymes with. ("Duck" — sorry, I just don't trust 'em; they have weird beaks). Just how villainous is this team, operating as a sort of sporting sleeper cell? They got all the way to the Western Conference Finals without one local noticing. That takes real criminal talent. And not only that, but, the NHL had the diabolical idea to hide it right under the Los Angelinos' noses, by having their home games played at the Staples Center. You know, where the Lakers play. Further, they named the team the Kings to intentionally confuse even the savviest media organization into thinking they are the NBA's Sacramento Kings. Astonishingly devious stuff. More twists and turns than the Da Vinci Code, which I've read three times just to make sure I understood it all. The best bit of this journalism on this pressing issue comes, of course, from the city's paper of record, the Los Angeles Times, winner of 44 Pulitzer Prizes since 1942, including three in 2012. It was for that towering beacon of journalistic excellence that columnist Chris Erskine successfully scruted several of the team and sport's most inscrutable mysteries . For instance, that thing I said earlier about the puck (again, yuck… oh and that's another gross word it rhymes with), I learned it from Erskine. Apparently they even freeze the thing. And that's a huge point of concern, because, "The hardest shots can reach 110 mph and tear flesh, crush bone, even kill you if you're not careful." Yikes, you guys! ( Coming Up: Rick Nash to Boston?; Tororella defends Prust; Ryan Suter faces his future; Evegni Malkin is having a pretty good season; why Lundqvist is King; why the Capitals can't win with Ovechkin; the Islanders know how to party; Canucks might keep Luongo; Ryan Miller on the CBA; Flames and Oilers coaching news; and are the Kings in trouble?)

     

    Russia back on top, defeats Slovakia 6-2 in final (The Associated Press)

    HELSINKI (AP) Russia won the world championship Sunday by defeating Slovakia 6-2.

     

    King leads Kings to super-meta Game 3 victory over the Coyotes (Puck Daddy)

    Make it eight. No, not Canadian teams -- consecutive wins for the Los Angeles Kings, who took a 3-0 series lead over the Phoenix Coyotes in the Western Conference Finals with a 2-1 Game 3 victory. While the result was the same, Thursday night's script was slightly different, at least for the first 21 minutes. The Coyotes came out stronger in Los Angeles, outshooting the Kings 11-8 in the first period and showing that they wouldn't go easily. A minute into the second period, they finally beat Jonathan Quick, as Daymond Langkow slipped a shot through the LA netminder's pads on a partial breakaway to give the Coyotes their first lead of the series. But only 127 seconds later, the Kings answered. Dustin Brown found Anze Kopitar streaking in behind the Phoenix defence, and Kopitar made two elite plays to tie the score: first, he deftly accepted the pass by kicking it from his skate to his stick, and second, he opened up Mike Smith up with a first-class deke, slipping the puck through the five-hole. And then the Kings kept answering.

     

    Rangers shot-blocking mentality bad for NHL (The Hockey News)

    The New York Rangers are the only team left that only plays defense, so if they win the Stanley Cup, the league will be worse off.