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Toronto Maple Leafs goalie Vesa Toskala (L) and Andrew Raycroft celebrate their win against the Nashville Predators during the third period of their NHL hockey game in Toronto December 4, 2007. REUTERS/ Mike Cassese

Friday, November 6, 2009 7:54 PM

Raycroft responds to Leaf nation

Matthew Sekeres

Andrew Raycroft was an Air Canada Centre whipping boy for two years in Toronto, but he has been a godsend for the Vancouver Canucks, winning four of five starts in place of an injured Roberto Luongo (fractured rib).

Back in Canada and in the NHL spotlight again, Raycroft was asked why his name alone draws such a visceral reaction from Leaf Nation.

“I’m still a little confused with the way it ended up in Toronto,” the goaltender said this week. “I know I didn’t have a good season my second season there, but I never really understood why no one really liked me.”

When asked if it was his comment that he doesn’t actually watch NHL games on television, Raycroft said he was aware that the remark didn’t go over well with Leaf fans.

“My wife doesn’t let me watch hockey,” he said. “I’m on the road 100 days per year. When I’m at home, I can’t sit around watching hockey all night. I want to hang out with my family. It’s not that I don’t love the game or love my job. That’s what people interpreted. I never really made a point to go back on it. It’s what I said. It came out of my mouth. And I guess that’s what I don’t understand, that people would think I don’t love what I do.”

Rewind to training camp, when Canucks head coach Alain Vigneault said he would need his backup goaltender to play 15 to 20 games this season because of the condensed NHL schedule.

In Vancouver, the comment raised eyebrows because a healthy Luongo wouldn’t normally miss that many games. In Toronto, it drew guffaws.

I had written about Leafs-turned-Canucks before, but Kyle Wellwood’s battle against the bulge, and Mats Sundin’s turncoat signing, didn’t generate near the response. My inbox – subject line: Raycroft – heard from many Blue and White supporters, who said the Canucks were doomed if Vigneault’s words proved prophetic.

Then, earlier this week, Raycroft was asked about the strong defensive play in front of him, and answered with a reference to his last three years, spent with terrible teams in Toronto and Denver.

“I haven’t enjoyed this for a few years, and I forgot how much fun it is,” he said. “I’m used to the last few years, when you get three or four or five good chances a period. It makes a big difference when you only get three to six chances over the game, just because you don’t get down in games two- or three-to-nothing, and it gets ugly.”

Door open after the subtle dig, I asked about his frayed relationship with Leaf fans. Raycroft was Toronto’s starter in 2007-08, playing 72 games, but he lost the job to Vesa Toskala a season later and posted some ghastly numbers (3.92 GAA, 87.6 save %).

“I didn’t get off to a good start, Vesa played well, and [former coach] Paul [Maurice] loves to ride goalies,” he said. “That’s the way he does it, and I was fine with that. I understood it. But I didn’t understand how us collapsing was my fault. I never understood it, and I always took the heat for it.”

Raycroft, a former Calder Trophy winner and still just 29 years old, made some spectacular saves in a 5-2 win over Minnesota on Thursday. His goals-against average is 1.60, and he is stopping 93.6 per cent of shots.

Cory Schneider will start for the Canucks Friday in Dallas, and Luongo could return on Tuesday in St. Louis, so it appears that Raycroft’s time as No. 1 has come to an end – at least for now. But as he attempts to revive his career on the West Coast, give Raycroft an A on the first test.

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Globe On Hockey Contributors

David Shoalts

David Shoalts, a native of Wainfleet, Ont., joined The Globe in 1984 as a layout and copy editor in the sports section. He attended the University of Waterloo and Conestoga College. After graduating from Conestoga with a journalism diploma in 1978, Shoalts worked at the Calgary Herald and the Calgary Sun, and later the Toronto Sun.

In 1986, Shoalts went back to the writing side of the business. He was the CFL reporter for The Globe for four years and then switched to hockey. He has covered the Toronto Maple Leafs and the NHL ever since and became a hockey columnist in 2003. Among the most memorable events Shoalts has covered are the final hockey game at the old Chicago Stadium (between the Maple Leafs and Blackhawks) and the men's and women's gold-medal hockey games at the 2002 Winter Olympics. He is also the author of a book of humour, Tales From The Toronto Maple Leafs, and co-author with retired Globe columnist William Houston of Greed and Glory, The Fall of Hockey Czar Alan Eagleson.

 
Allan Maki

Allan Maki

Allan Maki joined the Globe in 1997, after spending 19 years as a reporter and columnist at the Calgary Herald. Born in Thunder Bay, Ont., Maki graduated from the Ryerson School of Journalism in 1977.

A past president of the Football Writers of Canada, Maki has covered every Grey Cup since 1980. He's been to seven Olympic Games and covered everything from rodeos to the World Series to the Super Bowl.

A regular commentator on radio and television, Maki hosted a sports program for two years on CBC Newsworld. He has won several awards for his writing and was nominated for a National Newspaper Award in 1995.

 
Eric Duhatschek

Eric Duhatschek

Eric Duhatschek was the winner of the Hockey Hall Of Fame's Elmer Ferguson award for "distinguished contributions to hockey writing" in 2001. A graduate of the University of Western Ontario's grad school of journalism, he began covering hockey in 1978 and after spending 20 years covering the NHL and the Calgary Flames, joined globeandmail.com in September, 2000, where he writes a five-time-a-week NHL column.

A frequent contributor to Hockey Night in Canada's Satellite Hot Stove segment, he has covered four Winter Olympics, 19 Stanley Cup finals, every Canada Cup and World Cup since 1981, plus two world championships. Most recently, he was appointed as the newest member of the Hockey Hall Of Fame's annual Selection Committee.