With some luck, maybe they’ll find their scoring touch in Western Canada and Seattle on a four-game trip that begins on Saturday in Edmonton.
For third game in a row, this time against the visiting Minnesota Wild on Wednesday at Scotiabank Arena, the Leafs scored a single goal.
It’s no coincidence that they have lost each game in regulation. Taking a wider view, it has been a tough run for the Leafs, as they’ve lost six of their past nine games.
As a result, Toronto fell out of first place in the Atlantic Division on Wednesday night when the Florida Panthers beat the Los Angeles Kings 3-0. Florida has 63 points and the Leafs have 62, though Toronto has a game in hand.
Our takeaways:
THE RIELLY FACTOR
Perhaps public acknowledgement by coach Craig Berube will help spark a turnaround in defenceman Morgan Rielly’s game.
The longest-serving current Leafs player has been feeling it, and not in a good way, for a while now on both sides of the puck.
There was some embarrassment on the Wild’s first goal of the game when fourth-line forward Jakub Lauko outmuscled Rielly behind the Leafs net to set up Marat Khusnutdinov. When the game ended, it was another pointless night for Rielly, who has just one goal and three assists in his past 18 games.
“Can Morgan play better?” Berube said afterward. “Yes, he can. We all know that. He knows that, and he’s trying to work through it right now. It’s a team game, it’s not all on Morgan. He’s a guy that we need offence from, from the back end.
“He’s a good pro. He comes to work and he keeps it pretty quiet to himself. He knows that he wants to be better, and he’s just trying to work through it. We try to help him. As coaches, that’s our job.”
Rielly is the only Leafs defenceman to play in all 51 games and he has 22 points. He’s on pace for 35 points in 82 games, a far cry from the 58 points he had in 72 games in 2023-24. And being taken off the top power play has to be a blow to his pride.
Rielly is minus-18 at even-strength, though it’s not as bad at five-on-five, as he is minus-4. Still, not great.
Part of it is getting accustomed to a system that doesn’t allow for free-wheeling by the D-men (or anyone else), but the drop-off still shouldn’t be as sharp as it is.
“Trying to keep everything in check,” Rielly said. “I feel good despite numbers and whatnot. So it’s a battle right now, just trying to compete and play the best I can.
“That’s what we’re all trying to do. That’s what we’re here to do. I think we all put a lot of pressure on ourselves to perform, and I’m no different. We’re all striving to be the best we can be, and when it’s not going your way, you do everything you can to change that. It starts with hard work and being a good teammate and committing to what’s going on and just staying focused.”
This was Berube’s thinking on the first Minnesota goal, which came at 7:07 of the first period: “We have to win that battle below our goal line. We had coverage in front, but I guess it just got through us. We have to be better there.”
Berube is right. It’s on the coaches to help Rielly get out of his funk at both ends of the ice. At the same time, it’s the responsibility of the player as well.
Rielly is a better player than he has shown.