NHL News

‘The Mistakes Gotta Go; They Have To Get Cleaned Up’: Maple Leafs’ Lapses Proving Costly Against Top Contenders

Mar 8, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Brandon Carlo (25) and Colorado Avalanche center Martin Necas (88) battle for the puck behind goaltender Anthony Stolarz (41) as defenseman Oliver Ekman-Larsson (95) and left wing Artturi Lehkonen (62) defend in the second period at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Isaiah J. Downing-Imagn Images

The Toronto Maple Leafs are finding out the hard way that costly mistakes against elite competition can be unforgiving – especially against top contenders like the Colorado Avalanche and Vegas Golden Knights.

After blowing a 4-2 lead against the Colorado Avalanche in a 7-4 loss on Saturday, Toronto has now dropped three straight games, with miscues, lapses, and inconsistency proving to be the difference.

Considering how tight the race is in the Atlantic Division standings, Head coach Craig Berube didn’t mince words following the loss, emphasizing the need for his team to clean up its play.

“It’s just mistakes for me,” said Berube. “It’s a tough place to come in and play, and when you can hold a lead going into the third, we’re right there to shut it down. Just gotta clean up the mistakes.”

The bench boss acknowledged that against top-tier teams like Colorado and Vegas – who dominated the Leafs in a 5-2 loss earlier in the week – any version of a mistake can be detrimental.

“We gotta stop making mistakes because they capitalize on them,” Berube added. “They’re good teams, they’re good players. We did a good job against MacKinnon tonight. I know he got the power-play goal, but we need more guys to step up and do a job. The mistakes gotta go; they have to get cleaned up because that’s what’s costing us right now, these last two games. It’s just mistakes.”

The Leafs entered the third period against the Avalanche with a one-goal lead but saw it disappear as Colorado struck twice in under five minutes, taking control of the game on the scoreboard. Two empty-net goals sealed the deal, but truth be told, the collapse was brewing long before that. Despite leading for most of the contest, Toronto was under constant pressure, getting outshot 27-11 after two periods.

It was only a matter of time before Colorado broke through.

John Tavares admitted the team made too many errors, allowing the Avalanche to dictate the game despite the high pace of play.

“Few too many mistakes that led to opportunities for them, and we weren’t…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at NHL Hockey News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games…