Devils 2, Maple Leafs 1, OT

Jacques Lemaire earned a milestone and the Devils remained on a roll.

Ilya Kovalchuk scored at 4:36 of overtime and the Devils coach became eighth coach in NHL history to reach 600 wins in New Jersey's 2-1 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs on Thursday night.

''Not really,'' Lemaire said when asked if he's proud of the mark. ''I'm only as good as the players are and I've been fortunate to have a lot of good people around me. I thank them.''

The 65-year-old Lemaire knows something about good players, he was one.

He spent 12 seasons with the Montreal Canadiens in the 1960s and '70s, winning eight Stanley Cups. His 835 career points are seventh in Montreal history and helped him get inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1984.

Dainius Zubrus also scored for New Jersey (21-30-4), which improved to 11-1-2 in its past 14 games.

Nikolai Kulemin scored for the Maple Leafs (23-26-6), who moved within seven points of Carolina for the final playoff spot in the East. The Hurricanes lost 2-1 to Philadelphia on Thursday.

''I don't count it as a loss, we got a point,'' Leafs coach Ron Wilson said. ''We moved another step closer - now we're seven points back of Carolina because they lost in regulation. Obviously, I wish we'd had the two points, but the Devils are playing great right now.''

Lemaire is a two-time Jack Adams Award winner as NHL coach of the year and has another Cup as a coach under his belt, during his first go-around with New Jersey in 1995.

He has helped turn the team around since taking over from John MacLean on Dec. 23, leading the Devils to a 12-8-2 record that has lifted them out of the NHL's basement.

''I know we can play better than we are right now,'' Lemaire said.

The Maple Leafs wasted an excellent outing by James Reimer. It was hardly the fault of Toronto's rookie goaltender, who finished with 37 saves and was responsible for the game getting past regulation.

''If it wasn't for Reimer, we could have put the game away earlier,'' said Devils goalie Johan Hedberg who made 31 saves.

''He played really well,'' Leafs captain Dion Phaneuf said of the goaltender. ''Like he has every game that he's played, he's given us a chance to win. He did that again tonight.

''We're not happy with the loss, we'll take the point (and) we've got to move forward quick.''

Kovalchuk's winner came at the end of a nice solo rush where he took a shot that sneaked behind Reimer helping Lemaire hit the milestone.

''He played great, this kid,'' Kovalchuk said. ''I think we'll see him more often. He's a big guy, covers a lot of space and controls rebounds well.''

''It went high and then it kind of dipped a bit,'' Reimer said of the winning goal. ''Just got by my blocker. Tough goal I didn't want to let in. I mean, I thought it was right there.

''It was a weird shot.''

Scotty Bowman, Al Arbour, Dick Irvin Sr., Pat Quinn, Mike Keenan are also among the coaches also in the 600-club.

''I think he's the best coach I've ever played for,'' Kovalchuk said of Lemaire. ''It's a pleasure to play for him. We really hope he's going to stay next year.''

Joffrey Lupul had plenty of jump one day after being acquired by the Maple Leafs in a trade from Anaheim, but saw the puck bounce over his stick on a 2-on-1 break in the third period. That was his best scoring chance.

As has often been the case of late, Toronto was let down by its power play. The team went 0 for 5 against the Devils and is 3-for-40 during the past 11 games.

''We have to move the puck,'' Wilson said. ''We've got pointmen who won't hit the guys open or get the puck up the ice in a hurry. That's something we'll spend a lot of time working on (in practice Friday).''

Toronto led 1-0 after 40 minutes but Zubrus tied it up 3:23 into the final period. He redirected a Mark Fayne point shot over Reimer's shoulder for his 11th goal of the season.

But the Leafs' goalie was strong from there, denying Zubrus with his glove from in close before getting in front of a Kovalchuk one-timer on the power play. Reimer also got his shoulder on Fayne shot through traffic with about four minutes left in regulation.

Toronto's Phil Kessel was denied on a couple chances just before setting up Kulemin's 21st goal of the season at 5:18 of the second period. The winger managed to slide the puck in front while being bodied by Devils defenseman Colin White, and Kulemin had a wide open net.

New Jersey had a chance to tie it during a 4-on-3 power play, but Reimer came out and stopped a Brian Rolston shot with his blocker.

Rookie defenseman Keith Aulie was also in Toronto's lineup after being called up earlier in the day. He took shifts on the top pairing with Dion Phaneuf - essentially replacing the departed Francois Beauchemin - and was a physical presence.

''I'm 6-foot-6 and that's not good for much if you're not throwing around your body and using your stick to your advantage,'' Aulie said. ''I try to do that every game.''

Notes: Devils defenseman Anton Volchenkov sat out the first game of his three-game suspension ... Kessel hasn't scored in 13 games. His career-worst drought lasted 15 games - it happened twice during his rookie season in 2006-07.