Islanders add insult to injury with loss to Maple Leafs as spiral continues

As per usual, the loudest boos were reserved for John Tavares when the Maple Leafs visited UBS Arena. 

Public Enemy No. 2 on Thursday night for the Islanders, though, was Max Domi. 

And the Islanders, who were steaming mad at Domi for an elbow to the head of Isaiah George that knocked the rookie out of the game during the second period, let the bad guy win on Thursday night, failing to come back on the Maple Leafs in a 2-1 defeat. 

Bobby McMann (74) scores on Ilya Sorokin during the Islanders’ 2-1 OT loss to the Maple Leafs on Jan. 2, 2025 at UBS Arena. Robert Sabo for NY Post

The loss drops the Islanders to four games under NHL .500 for the first time since Dec. 19, 2021.

As for this late in the season, the last time they were this far below NHL .500 after the calendar flipped to January was March 31, 2018 — when Doug Weight was the head coach, Garth Snow was the general manager and Tavares was the captain. 

That this loss wasn’t so bad — the Islanders competed hard against the Maple Leafs, kept it close and maybe could have won if a bounce or two had gone the other way — is almost beside the point.

The Islanders may not be falling apart in spectacular fashion, a la the Rangers, but make no mistake, their season is headed in the same direction after Bobby McMann netted a third-period winner for Toronto. 



The Islanders had a series of chances to break a one-all tie in their favor, including on a power play after McMann was sent off for tripping and with a Brock Nelson look after Joseph Woll misplayed the puck. 

And, on what may have been the toughest miss of the night, Adam Pelech followed up a clutch Ilya Sorokin save on Matthew Knies by hitting the crossbar on the other end, mere seconds before taking an offensive-zone penalty for tripping Philippe Myers behind Toronto’s net. 

The Islanders’ penalty kill — dead last in the league — then struck as McMann ripped home Oliver Ekman-Larsson’s feed that bounced off the end boards and right to him, catching Sorokin out of position for a decisive 2-1 lead. 

Hudson Fasching gets tripped by Max Domi during the Islanders’ OT loss to the Maple Leafs. Robert Sabo for NY Post

It looked like the Islanders had tied the game at six-on-five when Anders Lee poked one in from underneath Joseph Woll, but it was ruled out upon review — the play having been whistled dead for lack of continuous motion. 

Another kick to the teeth for the Islanders — though at least this one wasn’t an elbow. 

Seeing the Maple Leafs for the third time in less than two weeks and the second time in two days, there was a fair bit of animosity built up here. 

That boiled with Casey Cizikas’ first-period hit on Chris Tanev, but it spilled over completely with Domi’s elbow to George’s head in the lead-up to McMann’s opening goal in the second. 

Unlike with Cizikas, there was no penalty called on Domi — and as George skated to the bench slowly before going straight to the dressing room, McMann walked into what was an open spot on the ice to give the Leafs a 1-0 lead at the 10:43 mark of the second. 

George — a bright spot this season for the Islanders as a rookie — didn’t return to the game and when Hudson Fasching stood up for his teammate by laying a hit on Domi shortly thereafter, he was tripped and tackled by the Maple Leafs’ instigator. 

Casey Cizikas (53) gets a bit chippy with Matthew Knies (23) during the the Islanders’ loss. Robert Sabo for NY Post

The Islanders could not score on what became nearly four straight minutes of power play time after the Leafs took a too many men call to go with Domi’s trip, but consistent pressure on Woll’s net finally paid off at the 18:15 mark of the second when Mathew Barzal found Scott Mayfield with a cross-ice feed. 

That sent the game into the final period tied at one, but despite holding all the momentum, the Islanders couldn’t come up with the sort of 20 minutes needed to secure two points. 

On a night when the Islanders had the sort of response you would want after Domi appeared to be getting under their skin, that carries an extra sting.

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