Maple Leafs hope to relying on goalie vs. Ducks

The Toronto Maple Leafs know they stole a win on Tuesday thanks to goaltender Anthony Stolarz, and they aim to be better against the visiting Anaheim Ducks on Thursday night.

Stolarz stopped 38 shots against the host New Jersey Devils on Tuesday and captain Auston Matthews scored in overtime to pull out a 2-1 victory, a result that didn’t reflect the tone of the game.

New Jersey had a 16-1 advantage in shots on goal in the first period and a 39-17 edge for the game, yet the Devils scored only a second-period goal. Toronto tied it in the third on a short-handed goal by Pontus Holmberg.

“It was a great goal for us,” Toronto coach Craig Berube said of Holmberg’s tally. “We had more chances short-handed than we did five-on-five and the power play tonight. I mean, our short-handed chances were good. I thought we created some opportunities there, and that was a big goal.”

Stolarz, who was born in Edison, N.J., said, “I grew up a Devils fan so anytime you can beat your childhood team, it’s exciting.”

“Without (Stolarz), it’s not even close,” said Toronto defenseman Chris Tanev, who had an assist and five blocked shots. “So, big props to him. Better third (period) for us. But the first two were god-awful. So, thankfully, he made a key number of saves that allowed us to keep it 1-0.”

Toronto avoided a three-game losing streak when Matthews scored his 13th career overtime goal, one short of Mats Sundin’s franchise record.

“In the first five minutes of the game, they had seven shots, so I think when a team is going to pepper you pretty early on and kind of get you in a groove, it’s kind of up to you to stay in there and just keep battling,” Stolarz said.

Berube wasn’t concerned about the manner of the win.

“It’s one of those games,” Berube said. “I mean, I’m not really going to read too much into it. I’m not going to talk about it too much. Our goalie was excellent. We found a way to get two points. That’s all that matters.”

The Ducks, meanwhile, are 0-3-1 in their past four games after losing 5-1 to the Ottawa Senators on Wednesday in their second contest of a four-game road trip.

Cutter Gauthier scored for the Ducks and John Gibson made 29 saves.

Anaheim’s Leo Carlsson (upper-body injury) returned Wednesday after missing six games.

“Leo is a dynamic player,” Ducks coach Greg Cronin said. “He’s got the size and the length and the skill. Anytime you get somebody back in the lineup like that, it’s going to add some offense to our team. And we’ve obviously struggled this year with the offensive part of the game, so I think that will give us a good boost.”

Carlsson, who has six goals and five assists in 21 games this season, played 13:35 against the Senators without recording a shot on goal.

“We weren’t skating,” Cronin said. “I mean, they were jumping from the opening faceoff, they won faceoff battles, they won edge battles, they won puck battles. It’s hard to compete when you’re behind the puck.”

Toronto’s Max Domi (lower-body injury) returned on Tuesday after missing eight games. He had two shots on goal in 14:57 of ice time.

The Maple Leafs are 12-4-0 at home, with five wins in their past six games in Toronto. The Ducks are 5-4-3 on the road, with the current 0-1-1 start to the trip coming after a 4-0-1 road stretch.

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