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Posted on 2:43pm Monday 29th Apr 2013 The Leafs' playoff road will start in Boston in a matchup of teams that have both seen better days this season.The Bruins lost 4-2 to the visiting Ottawa Senators on Sunday night in a game postponed by the Boston bombings.The loss means the Montreal Canadiens (29-14-5, 63 points) win the Northeast Division and finish second behind Pittsburgh in the Eastern Conference. Boston (28-14-6, 62 points) finishes fourth in the East, five points head of the Toronto Maple Leafs (26-17-5, 57 points). The result means No. 1 Pittsburgh will play the eighth-seeded Islanders, No. 2 Montreal meets No. 7 Ottawa, No. 3 Washington takes on the No. 6 Rangers and No. 4 Boston faces No. 5 Toronto in the East.Had Boston beaten Ottawa, Toronto would have faced Montreal in the first round. It's the first Boston-Toronto playoff series since 1974 when the Bruins, who eventually lost to the Philadelphia Flyers in the Stanley Cup final, swept the Leafs in the first round. Both teams have lost more than they have won recently. The Bruins enter the playoffs having lost seven of their last nine outings (including one loss in overtime and another in a shootout). They have also had little rest -- Sunday's game was their sixth in eight nights. The Leafs have lost four of their last six, during which they have been outshot 213-135 and outscored 20-15. Ahead of Toronto's regular-season finale, coach Randy Carlyle was asked to assess his squad heading into the playoffs. "We know we can compete with good teams if we play our game to our level," he said. "When we stray away from it, we're very very ordinary or less than ordinary." Toronto was less than ordinary Saturday night in a sluggish 4-1 loss to the visiting Canadiens. It was a flat, error-riddled performance the Leafs can't wait to put behind them. Posted on 2:42pm Monday 29th Apr 2013 An explosion ripped through a film and TV school building in the Czech capital of Prague while classes were in session Monday morning, injuring dozens of people and prompting evacuations of nearby buildings, city fire officials said. At least two people were unaccounted for, and authorities were working on stabilizing the Film and TV School of Academy of Performing Arts building so rescuers could search for them in the rubble, fire department spokeswoman Pavlina Adamcova said.
The blast at the school in the center of the city was "most likely a gas explosion," Prague police spokesman Tomas Hulan said on state-run Czech TV. Up to 55 people were injured, Adamcova said. Thirty-five were taken to various hospitals, and others with less serious injuries were treated at the site, Prague emergency services representative Jirina Ernestova said. Much of the building's first floor collapsed, and windows of neighboring buildings were damaged. Nearby buildings including the National Theatre, across the street from the school, were evacuated.
Marianna Zapotilova was in an office in a nearby building when the blast happened. The office's window was open, and the force of the blast "pushed me away from my computer," she said. "There was a lot of dust" immediately after the explosion, Zapotilova said. "People in the area were injured, mainly by broken glass from the windows, they had their heads bandaged."
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