Trouncing in Pittsburgh leaves Leafs looking for answers (maple leafs)

For the latest Leafs updates or on Twitter The Toronto Maple Leafs were looking for a better effort in the second of back-to-back games with Kasimir Kaskisuo making his first NHL start, but the Leafs fell behind early and did not show much effort in a 6-1 thrashing by the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG Paints Arena on Saturday. The Penguins bombarded Kaskisuo with 19 first period shots and took a 2-0 lead on goals by Jake Guentzel and Evgeni Malkin, and put a stake through the heart of the Leafs with a pair of goals by Dominik Kahun and another by Jared McCann early in the middle frame. After playing with energy in a 4-2 loss to Boston on Friday, Toronto was listless and lacked any motivation against the Pens, who were also playing in the second of back-to-back games and without team captain Sidney Crosby and Kris Letang. “There was no reason for us to look the way we did tonight. (Pittsburgh) played last night, we played last night. They've got some injuries, we've got some injuries. A level playing field. The bottom line is they were better than us.… Leafs head coach Mike Babcock said after the game. The game capped off what is undoubtedly one of the worst weeks for Toronto in the Babcock era, with five consecutive losses and the last four coming in regulation. The Leafs now find themselves two points out of a Eastern Conference wildcard spot and with a record of 9-9-4 and they are 0-5-1 in the second of back-to-back games. That record cannot be blamed on subpar goaltending from Michael Hutchinson or Kaskisuo (who made 32 saves in his NHL debut), but the team in front of them, who are now 30th in the NHL in goals-against (77). “We need a regroup, because that (performance is) not good enough. We didn't play hard enough for long enough.… Babcock said. “In the end, as an athlete, you put on your sweater and you want to be proud of how hard you compete and how hard you play for one another. We didn't look after that. We have to take a look at each other and get this fixed, obviously. No one outside is going to fix it, we've got to fix it.… The question utmost on the minds of Leafs fans after the game is will Babcock be the one to fix the problem or whether he is part of the problem. Toronto continues to struggle with slow starts that have them playing catch-up, special teams that are performing well below expectations, and borderline inept in their own zone.

*******If you are interested in sponsorship or advertising your business in the Greater Toronto / Southern Ontario area on this column, please send a message for more information by clicking on the “Contact… button at the top of the page.*******

Loading...
Loading...