Official icc fooball - live matches commentary rankings
                                                                                                                        
                                
                            - Reporter 21
 - 03 Nov, 2021
 
It’s
 been a day since the NHL’s 2021-22 trade deadline, and in addition to 
the joy felt in markets that did well on the trade front, there’s 
already angst, criticism and condemnation for various reasons in other 
NHL cities. In no particular order, let’s take a brief look at the 
losers at Deadline Day:
1. Edmonton Oilers: They’ve been getting 
improved goaltending of late, but the Oilers not too long ago were in 
goalie hell with their current pair of Mikko Koskinen and Mike Smith. In
 Koskinen’s past two games, he’s put in sub-.900 save percentages, and 
in two of his past five appearances, Smith has posted a sub.860 SP.
Did
 Edmonton GM Ken Holland have all the reason in the world to go out and 
get a better goalie? He sure did. Could that failure to do so come back 
to haunt him once the playoffs begin? It sure could. Holland had all 
season long to find another netminder, and he knew the deadline was 
coming. It didn’t have to come to this, but now, it has. A goaltending 
crisis may prove to be what sinks the Oilers’ championship aspirations.
2.
 Toronto Maple Leafs: The Leafs land here with a caveat – namely, the 
acknowledgment that Toronto GM Kyle Dubas did improve his blueline and 
fourth line of forwards when he acquired D-man Mark Giordano and forward
 Colin Blackwell from Seattle on Sunday. However, their most pressing 
need – a veteran goalie to be given a shot at the No. 1 job until Jack 
Campbell returns from a rib injury – was not dealt with by the deadline.
That
 means, if rookie netminder Erik Kallgren crumbles under the pressure of
 the starter’s role, Leafs head coach Sheldon Keefe will have no other 
alternative but to use Petr Mrazek. And anyone who has watched Mrazek’s 
recent games will tell you that’s not a good thing. Mrazek’s .884 SP and
 3.48 goals-against average show his struggles with Toronto this season,
 and the pressure is only going to increase on him, whenever the Leafs 
decide to play him. Another soft goal here or there and Mrazek will be 
quickly pulled from games.
Dubas has claimed he waived Mrazek 
over the weekend as a salary cap move, but who’s kidding who - you don’t
 waive someone you really want to keep around. If, for whatever reason, 
another franchise decided to take a chance on Mrazek – for this year, 
and two more years, with a $3.8 million annual cap hit – there would be 
little in the way of mourning over Mrazek’s departure. Instead, Leafs 
brass now has to be cold-blooded in their analysis and deployment of 
goalies. Campbell and Kallgren will get the first chances to run with 
the No. 1 job, and if they fail, it will fall on Mrazek to get one last 
shot at proving himself in Toronto. 
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