The Hamilton Spectator

FRUSTRATED

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

BOSTON — Auston Matthews described scoring in the playoffs like feeling “an earthquake in your feet” following his winner in Game 3 of Toronto’s series with the Boston Bruins.

Unfortunat­ely for the Maple Leafs and their star centre, there wouldn’t be any aftershock­s.

Matthews could only muster that one goal to go along with a solitary assist as the Leafs fell in seven games to the battle-tested Bruins in the first round of the National Hockey League playoffs.

Toronto fought back from a 3-1 deficit in a series that started off with embarrassi­ng 5-1 and 7-3 losses in Games 1 and 2 before blowing a 4-3 lead in the third period of Wednesday’s 7-4 defeat in Game 7.

Asked to assess his overall play in a quickly-emptying Leafs’ locker-room following his team’s eliminatio­n, Matthews was blunt.

“I thought the first half of the series probably wasn’t good enough,” the 20-year said. “The (second) half of the series, had chances. I thought I did things right for the most part and couldn’t capitalize on the opportunit­ies. Sometimes that happens. That’s the way it goes.

“You always want to contribute on the scoresheet. It’s frustratin­g,” he said.

That frustratio­n can be borne out simply by looking at the numbers.

Matthews directed 27 pucks on goal against Boston — tied for fourth in the entire first round — but had a shooting percentage of just 3.7 over the seven games. He also saw eight more of his shots blocked, while 10 missed the net.

Compare that to the regular season where Matthews had an shooting percentage of 18.2, scor- ing 34 times despite missing 20 games through injury.

While the stats suggest he was unlucky in the series, the former No. 1 pick received extra attention from the Bruins, with Boston head coach Bruce Cassidy deploying centre Patrice Bergeron and hulking defenceman Zdeno Chara as much as possible when Matthews was on the ice.

The line of Bergeron, David Pastrnak and Brad Marchand not only kept Matthews and his linemates off board in the first two games, they also put up 20 combined points in successive routs.

Fellow youngster Mitch Marner had two goals and seven assists to lead Toronto in the series, but the Bruins still focused on Matthews, who had four goals and an assist in the Leafs’ sixgame loss to Washington in last springs’s first round.

“The bottom line is the league is a real good league and when you’re a real good player, you play against the best players who check you the hardest,” Leafs head coach Mike Babcock said. “They’ve got the scouting report on you, they work hard. That’s just the way it is. Part of your growth process is learning to fight through that . ... you’ve got to find a way to get to the next level.”

While the Leafs were disappoint­ed to crash out in the first round after setting franchise highs for points (105) and wins (49), they took a step forward after squeaking into the playoffs last season ahead of schedule in their rebuild.

Babcock hopes Matthews learned some lessons from the series.

“Some of these hard knocks are a growth opportunit­y for you in life because you’ve got to embrace it. You’ve got to dig in and you’ve got to grow your craft in the off-season.”

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Leafs’ Auston Matthews had just two points in the series against Boston.
GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Leafs’ Auston Matthews had just two points in the series against Boston.
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