Lethbridge Herald

Lack of scoring no worry for Leafs

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John Tavares moved in on a 2-on-1 break and inexplicab­ly saw the puck roll off his stick at the critical moment.

Mitch Marner was there for the follow-up chance only to flub his initial attempt before whipping a second, wild effort high and wide.

That third-period sequence from Toronto’s stars summed up the Maple Leafs’ frustratin­g 2-1 home loss to the Dallas Stars on Thursday.

The chances and the effort were there — the Leafs held a 64-39 edge in attempts on goal — following Monday’s listless performanc­e in a 3-1 defeat to the Calgary Flames at Scotiabank Arena.

The finish and the bounces for a team suddenly struggling to score, however, was not.

“When you play good, sometimes it doesn’t go your way ... we probably stole a game we didn’t deserve to win earlier,” Toronto head coach Mike Babcock said after Friday’s practice. “I liked how hard we played, I liked how we eliminated their opportunit­ies.

“Just stay with the process and keep doing good things.”

The Leafs opened the season 6-1-0, scoring an NHL-high 33 times, but have found the back of the net on just 10 occasions since, including three combined goals in four home losses.

“We’re happy with our game (against Dallas),” Marner said. “It’s making sure we keep that work ethic up.”

Getting a power play that was lethal early back on track is also key.

After going a ridiculous 9 for 19 on the man advantage over their first seven games, the Leafs are just 2 for 17 since, with both goals coming while Toronto was effectivel­y up two players — a 5-on-3 power play that had just ended against Calgary and a 6-on-4 edge with netminder Frederik Andersen pulled late against Dallas.

“We need to get more pucks (to the front of the net),” Marner said of the power play. “Eventually they’ll go in. “We’ve just got to try to get those dirty ones.” Minus star centre Auston Matthews, who will be out until at least Nov. 26 with a sore shoulder, and the still-unsigned William Nylander, the Leafs are without two-thirds of what was projected to be their top line.

But there were indication­s Toronto’s offence was starting to dry up even before Matthews went down.

The 21-year-old, who registered 10 goals and six assists in his first seven games, had been held off the scoresheet in four straight before last weekend’s injury.

Tavares, who bolted the New York Islanders in free agency to sign a seven-year, US$77-million contract with Toronto, has seven goals and seven assists in 13 games, but the centre has scored just once in his last nine.

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