Regina Leader-Post

LEAFS ADDRESS LACK OF EFFORT

Toronto squad holds long discussion following third consecutiv­e home loss

- LANCE HORNBY lhornby@postmedia.com

When you keep getting beat, it’s time to meet.

Friday morning’s off-ice agenda for the Toronto Maple Leafs was a long one, starting with addressing the most embarrassi­ng of three straight setbacks, a 7-3 loss to the Tampa Bay Lightning on Thursday. Then there’s the psychologi­cal damage of dropping three games at home, beginning with last Saturday’s late-game letdown against the Montreal Canadiens and losses to the defending Stanley Cup champion St. Louis Blues and the Presidents’ Trophy-winning Lightning, two teams the Leafs think they can run with.

“We thought the meeting was more important than the practice,” Leafs coach Mike Babcock said. “It was like a family discussion, just honest. The reality was we weren’t good enough and we showed the areas (via video) where we weren’t.

“There’s nowhere to hide here and like any good family, you keep yourself accountabl­e. The first thing is the coach didn’t do his job. We were up 2-1 (against Tampa Bay) with eight minutes to go in the first period, but we got rattled and didn’t keep digging in. Then it goes through your leadership group and everybody. We’re all involved. We didn’t have enough detail, enough battle, enough work.

Any way you look at it, they were better than us and that’s unacceptab­le.”

While the Leafs have lost as many as four in a row in October under Babcock, that was during the first year of his arrival when such slip-ups were expected. The retooled Leafs, with new players and an offensive arsenal, aren’t supposed to give up four goals to Montreal late in a game or get pushed around in their end like they were by the Bolts.

“You expect to have better efforts at home this time of year,” said alternate captain Morgan Rielly. “There’s no reason not to be fresh. We want to take pride in the way we play at home. That was not a game we look back at fondly, but we’ll apply the lessons and move forward.

“I don’t think you can point the finger at one thing, be it effort or execution. It’s both. You’d like to think it was dealt with last night in the room. You could tell that (in the players’ faces) and then it was talked about multiple times today. I would expect that would not happen again.”

Don’t dismiss the Detroit Red Wings as an easy mark for the Leafs, who travel to Little Caesars Arena Saturday. The teams split a close series last year, three of four encounters decided by a goal, two won by Detroit in extra time.

The Wings have won three out of four this month under new general manager Steve Yzerman, including road games in Nashville and Montreal.

Perhaps getting humbled will help the Leafs on Saturday.

“It can be eye-opening if you think you’re better than you are,” said new defenceman Tyson Barrie, a minus-4 against the Bolts. “You go into a game against a team such as Tampa Bay and think you’ll trade chances. That’s not the recipe for success and we learned that the hard way.”

Barrie and Jake Muzzin have been together on the blue-line since camp, as have Rielly and Cody Ceci.

“With new faces, it will take a bit to get the chemistry, but there’s no excuse to get beat up like that,” Barrie said.

With new faces, it will take a bit to get the chemistry — but there’s no excuse to get beat up like that. This is the NHL, it’s our job.

“This is the NHL, it’s our job. You go back to the Montreal game, we let that one get away and it’s disappoint­ing, but we had a good (one-goal) game against the Blues. Nothing like last night where we all came away a bit embarrasse­d by that. They outworked us in our own building and made us look silly. It wasn’t fun today at the rink.”

When the Leafs did practice, Babcock zeroed in on the penalty kill, which gave up two goals in the first period.

“We thought we got stuck in mud, didn’t do anything,” Babcock said of the unit. “(Overall) the other team was hungrier, faster and better than us last night. We gave up chances we don’t usually give up. Maybe we were feeling so good about the way we played against St. Louis, we forgot to play last night.”

 ?? CRAIG ROBERTSON ?? Maple Leafs forwards John Tavares, left, and Auston Matthews go over details during practice Friday following three straight losses.
CRAIG ROBERTSON Maple Leafs forwards John Tavares, left, and Auston Matthews go over details during practice Friday following three straight losses.
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