The Toronto Maple Leafs continue to search for consistency this season. They’ve slipped to the bottom of the Atlantic Division with a 15-14-5 record. They have now dropped four of their last five games, adding to the growing concern around the team.
Saturday’s 5-3 loss to the Nashville Predators only intensified that feeling, especially after postgame comments revealed a clear difference in how the result was viewed by the Leafs’ captain and head coach.
Auston Matthews and Craig Berube See the Leafs’ Loss Differently
Toronto got off to a strong start when Roy opened the scoring early in the first period. Nashville answered in the second with a power-play goal from Haula. But John Tavares put the Leafs back in front midway through the frame. Then, Wilsby scored late in the period to send the game into a tie in the third.
The Predators took the lead early in the final period with Evangelista’s goal. Steven Stamkos later added an empty-net goal. McMann briefly pulled Toronto within one. But Cole Smith sealed with another empty-netter in the final moments.
After the loss, NHL analyst Steve Glynn drew attention to what he saw as mixed messaging from Toronto. By posting the coach’s and captain’s remarks together and labeling them “Read these back-to-back,” he invited fans to notice the contrast on their own.
Head coach Craig Berube said, “I think that the late goal we gave up in the second period was avoidable. The third goal was avoidable.”
When asked whether those errors were mental, he agreed, “It is mental, for sure. We have to get through it. We have to get over that. We have to make better decisions throughout the game.”
Auston Matthews, however, offered a much more positive outlook. He said, “I think mentally, we are fine. I thought tonight, as shitty as it is losing, I thought the process was better. I thought we had good energy all night.”
Matthews pointed to strong energy and effort, suggesting there were positives the Leafs could carry forward even without getting points.
While Berube also mentioned some encouraging signs. Such as puck movement and stretches of solid offensive-zone play. But the numbers tell a tougher story. Nashville outshot Toronto 34-22, and the Leafs lost to a team near the bottom of the standings.
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Matthews has been held off the scoresheet in the last two losses and now sits at 23 points in 29 games this season. The Leafs will next face the Dallas Stars on Sunday.