
The Toronto Maple Leafs will have to declare the 2024-2025 Atlantic Division title to customs when they cross the Peace Bridge on their way home. Perhaps more importantly, tonight’s victory over the Buffalo Sabres guarantees fans will get to see the Battle of Ontario in the playoffs for the first time since 2004.
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Steven Lorentz’s second-period goal opened the scoring and ended up being the eventual game-winner thanks to an excellent shutout performance from Anthony Stolarz. Mitch Marner scored a key insurance goal in the final minutes to pick up his 100th point of the season, and Auston Matthews followed with an empty-netter for his 400th career goal. Finally, Nick Robertson scored with one minute to play to make it a 4-0 Leafs victory.
Toronto’s top line and bottom six impressed, and while the second line wasn’t great, the overall team grade is an A.
Mitch Marner: A+
Marner set up Matthews for chance after chance, and just when it felt like he would never pick up his 100th point of the season, he scored a key insurance goal with just under five minutes to play. He had just set up Matthews on a two-on-one seconds earlier, and while Toronto’s captain was unable to score, he quickly returned the favour to set up Marner for a major milestone.
Anthony Stolarz: A+
The Leafs did well to limit Buffalo’s shot quality in the opening forty, and Stolarz was able to stop all 22 that came his way. The Sabres dialed up their shots in the third, but Toronto’s goaltender simply didn’t care. Stolarz stopped all 36 shots he faced en route to a shutout and could not be in better form heading into the playoffs.
Anthony Stolarz went Super Saiyan in those final minutes pic.twitter.com/AlP662vohg
— Omar (@TicTacTOmar) April 16, 2025
Auston Matthews: A
Matthews had several excellent chances to score in the opening forty, but couldn’t find a way to beat Sabres goalie Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen. Two of his best shots came off one-timer looks on the power play, and Marner also set him up for quality shot after quality shot at even strength.
Fortunately, Matthews found a way to come up clutch in the final minutes. He set up Marner’s 100th point of the season with under five minutes to play and earned his 400th career goal a few minutes later by adding an empty-netter.
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Steven Lorentz: A
Lorentz opened the scoring in the late second by finding a soft spot in the slot and firing a gorgeous one-timer past Luukkonen. It’s exactly the type of goal that the Leafs will need a week from now, and his line was also excellent defensively.
Scott Laughton: A
Laughton looked far more dangerous offensively than he usually does, as he set up Mermis for a half-decent chance in the first and created a quality chance of his own in the early second. He was eventually rewarded for his efforts, as he set up the game’s first goal by making a strong play in the cycle to set up Lorentz in the slot.
Bobby McMann: A
McMann came close to scoring off a deflection in the first and won a footrace that led to a Sabres penalty in the early second. He was absolutely flying, as he consistently looked like the fastest player on either team, and used his speed to set up Robertson for a couple of quality chances in the third.
Nick Robertson: A
Robertson took a high-sticking penalty in the first, but was actually quite impressive. His work ethic consistently stood out and it looked like he was trying to put his best foot forward for a spot in the playoff lineup. He was finally rewarded after making a gorgeous backhand move on a breakaway with one minute to play.
NICK ROBERTSON 🚨
Sabres Slayer! pic.twitter.com/t1HpRMwRbs
— Omar (@TicTacTOmar) April 16, 2025
Pontus Holmberg: A-
His line played quite well, and while his linemates were more noticeable, he deserves some credit as the centre for their strong defensive results. He hasn’t been on the ice for a five-on-five goal against in ten straight games.
Matthew Knies: A-
He was noticeable on the forecheck early on and also made a key play while short-handed to steal the puck and eventually draw a penalty. He picked up a secondary assist on Marner’s goal, and his only major blemish was a bad turnover halfway through the second.
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All six defencemen (Chris Tanev, Morgan Rielly, Brandon Carlo, Simon Benoit, Philippe Myers, Dakota Mermis): A-
I’ve never grouped six players together before, but this is a rare occasion where it feels like they all deserve the same grade. This was a low-scoring game where all three pairs did well to limit Buffalo’s shot quality, but no one exactly stood out individually.
Mermis certainly looked like he belonged and he wasn’t shy about throwing the puck on the net. He got caught flat-flooted and gave up a scoring chance to Alex Tuch in the late second, but mostly looked like a perfectly fine depth defenceman.
The group as a whole was quite effective.
Calle Järnkrok: B-
Järnkrok was the least noticeable player on his line, but his unit did their job effectively. He was parked in front of the net ahead of Lorentz’s goal, and it’s always easy to trust him defensively.
Max Domi: C+
Domi had an A+ scoring chance three minutes in, but was unable to hit the net. While the Sabres didn’t generate a ton of scoring chances in the first, he seemed to be on the ice for just about all of them. His second period got off to the exact same start, as he wasn’t quite able to finish off an A+ scoring chance in the opening minutes and ended up being on the ice for far too many scoring chances.
John Tavares and William Nylander: D
Tavares set up Domi with a grade-A scoring chance three minutes in before disappearing for most of the game. Nylander was quiet at five-on-five, and his best shift came during some four-on-four action. He failed to score on a partial breakaway in the early third and ended up taking a high-sticking penalty seconds later.
Game Score
What’s next?
Heading home to play the Detroit Red Wings on Thursday at 7 p.m. on TSN.
(Photo of Auston Matthews and Scott Laughton: Timothy T. Ludwig / Imagn Images)
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