November 7, 2024

Desperate Maple Leafs look to stay alive as Matthews’ illness lingers ahead of Game 5

TORONTO — Auston Matthews gave everything he had for two periods.
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TORONTO — Auston Matthews gave everything he had for two periods.

Before departing Saturday’s bitterly disappointing 3-1 home loss with an illness as the Boston Bruins pushed the Maple Leafs to the brink of playoff elimination, Toronto’s sniper and two of his star teammates also gave it to each other — verbally — on the bench.

And despite the sequence getting dissected by media and fans alike in the aftermath, head coach Sheldon Keefe tried to put a positive spin on the high-profile exchange between Matthews, Mitch Marner and William Nylander in the second period that included some choice words and tossed gloves.

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“That happens when things aren’t going well,” Keefe said Sunday at the Leafs’ practice facility following a team meeting. “In the past, quite honestly, that wouldn’t have happened. Guys wouldn’t have talked it out … that wouldn’t have happened. I look at that as progress. Those guys care. I don’t look at it as frustration.

“I look at them being upset and pissed off that they didn’t deliver for the team. They’re pushing and challenging each other to get it right.”

The Leafs, meanwhile, now have no wiggle room in their search to get things right.

Toronto has its back against the wall down 3-1 in its best-of-seven series heading into Tuesday’s Game 5 at TD Garden.

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Keefe, whose group has just seven goals in 12 periods, said the margins have been small. The main issue for his disjointed roster has been special teams.

The Leafs’ power play is an ugly 1-for-14, while the penalty kill has been almost as bad with the Bruins connecting on six of 13 chances.

“These games that we’ve been in, they’re far closer than it may appear,” Keefe said. “We need little things to shift over into our favour, starting with special teams, whether we’re one finished chance away or one extra save away.”

Having things go in Toronto’s favour would include getting Matthews — the owner of 69 regular-season goals — back healthy.

 

Keefe said the illness that saw the 20240428140420-37985261adf770cf2f76610da9623ba270170c6c46324de8b2e983b9b785ed9e

centre pulled from Game 4 in the second intermission by doctors is “lingering” for a player who didn’t look like himself in a 4-2 loss in Game 3 following a monster two-goal, one-assist performance in a 3-2 victory two nights earlier that evened the series 1-1.

“Not one of those run-of-the-mill, everyday type of illnesses that sort of come and go,” said Keefe, whose job security could be in doubt if Toronto can’t turn things around. “This one has lingered and the effects have lingered and gotten worse when he’s getting on the ice and asserting himself.

“We’ve just got to manage that and give him the time that he needs. We’re hopeful that it’ll turn.”

The Leafs, who have lost 10 of their last 11 games against the Bruins dating back to last season, don’t have much time to get things figured out.

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