TORMTL_051621

The first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs features 16 teams in eight division-based best-of-7 series.
Today, NHL.com previews the Stanley Cup First Round between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Montreal Canadiens.

No. 1 Toronto Maple Leafs vs. No. 4 Montreal Canadiens

Maple Leafs: 35-14-7, 77 points
Canadiens: 24-21-11, 59 points
Season series: TOR 7-2-1; MTL 3-6-1
Game 1: Thursday (7:30 p.m. ET; NHLN, CBC, SN, TVAS)
The Maple Leafs and Canadiens will meet in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the 15th time but the first since 1979.
Toronto won the Scotia North Division, its first division title since winning the Northeast Division in 2000, when it lost in six games to the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference Semifinals.
The Maple Leafs have not won a playoff series since 2004, including losing in five games to the Columbus Blue Jackets in the best-of-5 Stanley Cup Qualifiers last season.
Each team comes into the series well-rested. The Maple Leafs will have had six days between games when they play Game 1, while the Canadiens will have had eight days off.
"We are going to play against a Montreal team that is going to be refreshed and revived," Maple Leafs coach Sheldon Keefe said. "They are finally going to get a break and some time off here. They have had a very difficult schedule. We are going to see a much different-looking Montreal team than what we just went through with them."
RELATED: [Complete Maple Leafs vs. Canadiens series coverage]
Keefe said the knowledge the two teams have with each other from their 10 regular-season games makes playoff preparations unique from previous seasons.
"These types of weeks usually get crowded with meetings and discussions of that nature," he said. "This is a little bit different given we are playing an opponent we are very familiar with.
"The practices are important, and we will get things ramped up again."
The Canadiens brought high hopes into the season after advancing to the Stanley Cup First Round last season, defeating the Pittsburgh Penguins in four games in the qualifiers before losing to the Philadelphia Flyers in six games. They finished fourth in the North, going 4-6-2 in their final 12 games.
But help is on the way with key players returning from injuries. Coach Dominique Ducharme said Saturday he is confident defenseman Shea Weber, who missed the final eight games with an upper-body injury, will be ready to start the series. He said he also expects goalie Carey Price, who has not played since he sustained a concussion in Edmonton on April 19, to be in the lineup for Game 1.
Forwards Brendan Gallagher and Phillip Danault will also play. Gallagher has not played since breaking his right thumb April 5; Danault has been out since sustaining a concussion May 6.
"We have experience, we have youth we rely on, we have the best goaltender in the world, and we have a lot of guys who'll compete," Gallagher said. "When you bring that into a series, we're confident."

Top plays from Toronto vs. Montreal matchup

Game breakers

Maple Leafs: Auston Matthews leads the NHL with 41 goals, including 10 on the power play. The forward was second on Toronto with 66 points (41 goals, 25 assists), one behind forward Mitchell Marner. He led Toronto with 14 points (seven goals, seven assists) in 10 games against Montreal.
Canadiens: Tyler Toffoli led the Canadiens with 28 goals, seven power-play goals and 158 shots. He tied forward Josh Anderson for the most game-winning goals on the team with five and forward Artturi Lehkonen for the most shorthanded goals with two. The forward scored seven points (three goals, four assists) against the Maple Leafs this season.

Goaltending

Maple Leafs: Jack Campbell had a breakout season, going 17-3-2 with a 2.15 goals-against average, .921 save percentage and two shutouts in 22 games (all starts). Frederik Andersen, who played one game since March 19 because of a knee injury, was 13-8-3 with a 2.96 GAA, .895 save percentage in 24 games (23 starts) and said he feels healthy. David Rittich was 1-1-1 with 2.72 GAA and .888 save percentage in four games (three starts) for the Maple Leafs since being acquired in a trade with the Calgary Flames on April 12.

TOR@MTL: Campbell makes big blocker save on Chiarot

Canadiens: Price went 12-7-5 with a 2.68 GAA, .901 save percentage and one shutout in 25 games (all starts). Jake Allen is a solid option behind Price. In 29 games (27 starts), he went 11-12-5 with a 2.68 GAA and .907 save percentage. Price went 1-2-1 with a 3.48 GAA and .868 save percentage in four starts against the Maple Leafs. Allen was 2-3-0 with a 2.66 GAA and .907 save percentage, and rookie Cayden Primeau started one game, allowing four goals on 11 shots (.733 save percentage) before being pulled after the first period in a 5-2 loss May 6.

Numbers to know

Maple Leafs:Toronto had a .688 points percentage this season, the highest in Maple Leafs history. The previous high was .679 by the 1950-51 Maple Leafs, who finished second during the regular season and went on to win the Stanley Cup by defeating the Canadiens in five games in the Final.
Canadiens:Jeff Petry scored 10 points (all assists) in 10 games against the Maple Leafs. He scored 32 points in his other 45 games, averaging .711 points per game. Petry finished second on the Canadiens with 42 points (10 goals, 32 assists), two behind Toffoli.

X-factors

Maple Leafs: Rasmus Sandin, who fractured his foot during a game with Toronto of the American Hockey League on Feb. 15, is poised to start the series running the Maple Leafs' second power play unit. The defenseman had returned from the injury and played two games for the Maple Leafs when veteran Zach Bogosian, who was on the third pairing with Travis Dermott, sustained a lower-body injury April 23. He will not be ready for the series. Sandin, who had four assists in nine games, will start in Bogosian's place and get plenty of power-play minutes.
Canadiens: Corey Perry, who turned 36 on Sunday, has shown there still is something left in the tank. The forward scored 21 points (nine goals, 12 assists) in 49 games and has been effective on the power play, especially digging pucks out of the corner. His forecheck will be a key in keeping Maple Leafs defensemen on their heels and disrupting their breakouts.

MTL@TOR: Perry fires puck in to knot score in 1st

They said it

"I think there are guys in the room that feel like we have a lot to prove come playoff time after last year. We've been a hungry team since losing to Columbus [last season] and now it's our time to kind of show that we've matured as a group. We've played better hockey and we've focused on things that we knew were weaknesses last year." -- Maple Leafs forward Jason Spezza
"I think anybody that's been around long enough and watched a lot of hockey and watched playoff runs understands that you don't go through 16 wins and four rounds with the exact same lineup every night … We're going to need everybody. I'm sure there will be guys banged up, injuries, moments for different guys to step up at different times. It's about making sure you're ready and committed to doing the right things when you're out there and get your chance." -- Canadiens forward Eric Staal, who won the Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006.

Will win if …

Maple Leafs:They can suffocate the Canadiens offense. Tightening up play in the defensive zone was Keefe's mandate from the opening of training camp and now comes the real test. Only one Montreal forward (Toffoli) had more than 17 goals; the Maple Leafs had three (Matthews 41, Marner 20, John Tavares 19). Toronto outscored Montreal 34-25 in their 10 regular-season games and would like that trend to continue.
Canadiens: They can score goals in the dirty areas in front of the Toronto net. They have the players to do just that. Perry, Gallagher and Anderson can give opposing goalies fits with their screens and penchant for creating rebounds. Montreal does not have the horses to keep up with Toronto in a run-and-gun style, so greasy goals will be the name of the game for Montreal.

How they look

Maple Leafs projected lineup
Zach Hyman - Auston Matthews - Mitchell Marner
Nick Foligno - John Tavares - William Nylander
Alex Kerfoot - Riley Nash - Ilya Mikheyev
Joe Thornton - Jason Spezza - Wayne Simmonds
Morgan Rielly - TJ Brodie
Jake Muzzin - Justin Holl
Rasmus Sandin -Travis Dermott
Jack Campbell
Frederik Andersen
Scratched: David Rittich, Alex Galchenyuk, Pierre Engvall, Adam Brooks, Mac Hollowell, Timothy Liljegren
Injured: Zach Bogosian (shoulder)
Canadiens projected lineup
Tomas Tatar -- Phillip Danault -- Brendan Gallagher
Tyler Toffoli -- Nick Suzuki -- Joel Armia
Paul Byron -- Jake Evans -- Artturi Lehkonen
Corey Perry -- Eric Staal -- Josh Anderson
Ben Chiarot -- Shea Weber
Joel Edmundson -- Jeff Petry
Alexander Romanov -- Jon Merrill
Carey Price
Jake Allen
Scratches:Michael Frolik, Jesperi Kotkaniemi, Cole Caufield, Erik Gustafsson, Charlie Lindgren, Brett Kulak
Injured:Jonathan Drouin (personal)