Sunday 22 November 2015

Reborn: The resurgence of James Reimer


Follow us on Google+!
Follow us on Facebook!
Follow us on Twitter!


It could not happen to a nicer guy. Struggling to get a chance in net since the acquisition of the highly touted Jonathon Bernier. A man who helped the Toronto Maple Leafs end what had become the longest playoff drought in the National Hockey League.

James Riemer has been the man not only in this story but on the ice where it matters most. Despite a 2-0 loss to Boston that included an empty netter Reimer has been the Maple Leafs saving grace. Once considered a candidate to finish 30th in the league the Maple Leafs on the back of Reimer and his stellar play that have the hockey world thinking about the potential for playoff hockey.


Sporting a .933 save percentage and a 2.08 GAA Reimer is now in the top 5 in the league leaders at the goaltending position and is second only to Montreal Canadien superstar Carey Price in win percentage among starting goaltenders with a .778 win percentage.

Leading up to this year all eyes were on Bernier as he won the job out of training camp but he has struggled mightily out of the gate with an 0-7-1 start and an ugly .895 save percentage. His disastrous play has opened the door for the resurgence of James Reimer and he once again becomes the go to guy in the Toronto pressure cooker.

While his team has improved under new Head Coach Mike Babcock the club is still struggling to score goals and Reimer has given them a chance every night he's been in net since taking the starting job. A couple nights ago Reimer let in a shaky goal against the Hurricanes and Nazem Kadri came to the rescue by scoring his first goal in 63 shots to break his own slump while pushing the game to OT. A scoreless OT with some big saves led to the shootout and Reimer would return the favor with a huge save in the shootout



The Leafs would go on to win shortly after that save and the rest is history. A comeback win and another stunning performance for Reimer. He allowed one goal against Carolina and one goal against Boston when Zdeno Chara had a wide open slapshot from the faceoff circle that beat Reimer 5-hole. Despite that Reimer stopped 35-36 and has no doubt solidified his claim as the undisputed number one for the Maple Leafs going forward.

As for what's changed? Reimer has said he's a part of a goaltending focus group along with some other NHL goalkeepers and you can't discredit the work of new Goalie Coach Steve Briere. Reimer hasn't changed that's a certainty as the big smile win or lose hasn't gone away and the desire and compete to retake the Leafs top spot in net hasn't faded one bit.


No comments:

Post a Comment