Concern is growing as a recent revelation surrounding Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews has come to light, creating unrest in Toronto.
From last Thursday through this past Tuesday, Auston Matthews went four straight games without recording a single point, something that had not happened since October 2018. For a player who defines Toronto’s offensive identity, that kind of silence lands with weight.
James Mirtle highlighted the rarity of the drought, noting it had been over seven years since Matthews last went four games without a point. That context is what turns a cold streak into a talking point.
The numbers are uncomfortable. Over that four game stretch, Matthews carried a minus seven rating, often getting caught on the ice for goals against during momentum turning sequences. Even when chances appeared, that elite finishing ability that he is known for was missing.
Matthews, 28, still draws top matchups and starts plenty of shifts in the offensive zone, but the results have not followed. His five-on-five impact has slipped, and opponents are exploiting small gaps off the rush and making him look silly. He really does not appear to be himself.
Toronto’s structure has also wobbled with Matthews on the ice. When exits fail or forechecks stall, the Leafs are spending too much time defending, and that has shown up clearly on the scoreboard.
Auston Matthews’ scoring drought tests Maple Leafs core
From a fan standpoint, this feels different than a normal slump. Matthews usually scores his way out of trouble, but this stretch has looked heavier, with fewer clean looks and more frustration or bewilderment after whistles.
The Leafs depend on Matthews to tilt ice, not just finish plays. When he is quiet offensively and bleeding goals against, the entire lineup feels compressed and predictable.
The coaching staff have tried small tweaks, different looks on the power play, and matchup adjustments, but nothing has flipped the switch yet. Matthews still competes, but the edge has not translated to results. Marc Savard has even lost his job as a result of the PP struggles.
This is not about panic or questioning talent. It is about acknowledging that Toronto’s margin for error shrinks dramatically when its captain is not driving outcomes.
The next response matters. Matthews has answered adversity with strong performances before, but this stretch has exposed how fragile the Leafs can look without his dominance. Toronto does not need perfection, but it does need its captain back on the scoresheet soon.
Previously on Toronto Hockey Daily