TORONTO – Craig Berube saw a team on the upswing.
The Toronto Maple Leafs came off a successful road trip looking to make inroads at Scotiabank Arena in a congested Eastern Conference playoff race.
Following a disastrous, uninspiring week, they’re again searching for answers — and confidence.
The Colorado Avalanche got a pair of goals off the stick of Brock Nelson inside the game’s first eight minutes before grinding out a 4-1 victory Sunday afternoon to hand the Maple Leafs a fourth straight loss on their ice (0-3-1) in what could be quickly turning into a season-defining stretch of the schedule.
“We gotta to fix the execution part,” said Berube, sporting a black eye and nasty gash on his forehead after a gym incident Thursday. “And then the battle level. When you get down in the game, we gotta come together as a team, and we gotta fight through that.
Story continues below advertisement“Because it’s going to happen … I think losing at home here, it’s worn on our team a little bit. But that’s pro sports and we gotta all pull it together.”
Related Videos
2:40
Toronto Maple Leafs hold state of the union amid middle of winless skid
Previous Video
Next Video
Toronto occupied the East’s first wild-card berth Jan. 12 on the heels of a 4-3 overtime triumph over the Avalanche in Denver. The Maple Leafs (24-19-9) woke up five points below the playoff cutline Sunday and sit 11th in the conference with a .548 points percentage.
Get breaking National news
For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy.“Well, that’s a choice,” Berube said when asked how the group can regain confidence. “Like, come on. They’re NHL players. You’re paid to play in the NHL, you gotta go out and play. Confidence comes from just hard work. Confidence comes from just playing the system, being direct. Confidence comes from work and compete.”
“You can tell we’re not playing with a ton of confidence,” Toronto defenceman Jake McCabe added. “It can be fleeting at times. You’ve got to generate it when you don’t have it.”
Story continues below advertisementThe Maple Leafs’ ugly homestand has included slow starts in 6-3 losses to the Minnesota Wild and Vegas Golden Knights that bookended a 2-1 OT defeat to the Detroit Red Wings ahead of Sunday’s setback against the NHL’s top team. Toronto was coming off a 2-2-1 road trip and was 8-0-2 over its previous 10 contests before dropping six of its last seven (1-3-3).
“Just coming out flat,” said Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews, who started the month with 10 goals in 10 games before firing blanks across the last three. “It didn’t feel like we had the energy that we needed to compete at a high level, and other teams did. We came out better (Sunday), we forechecked better in the first period.
Trending Now-
Read the full transcript of Carney’s speech to World Economic Forum
-
Dingoes found circling B.C. teen to be culled, Australia says
- Raptors’ Poeltl remains without return timeline
- ‘Leave Greenland alone!’ U.S. anthem heckler at NBA London game draws cheers
- Dick hopes to improve shooting with better defence
- Harden powers Clippers past Raptors 121-117
“And then just mistakes and the puck ends up in the back of your net … you’re just chasing it.”
Toronto quite simply has been unable to put the pieces together at home.
“We haven’t executed,” Maple Leafs centre John Tavares said. “We just have to raise our level of play and be more consistent. Whether it’s our structure, whether it’s our execution with the puck, all those things, it has to be at a high level, consistently.”
Toronto goaltender Joseph Woll said despite the recent skid, belief remains high inside the locker room’s four walls.
Story continues below advertisement“We have good leaders,” he said. “It’s a little up and down … little more down than up than maybe I’d like. But it really just takes one to get momentum. I trust this group to feed on that.”
The clock, however, is ticking with 52 games already chalked off and a huge Atlantic Division matchup with the Buffalo Sabres on deck Tuesday — the Maple Leafs’ final home date before the Olympic break.
“It’s all about coming together,” Berube said. “No individual is going to play you out of it. It’s the team.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 25, 2026.
Toronto sports fans prepare for double-header of Leafs, Blue Jays game tonight
Brendan Shanahan out as Toronto Maple Leafs president
Toronto Maple Leafs look to finish job back at home in Game 7
Leafs force Game 7, look for series win at home on Sunday
NHL benches Florida Panthers executive over ‘inappropriate’ social media comments
Round 2 returns to Toronto with Leafs and Panthers tied
Pucks, pints and profits: The ‘hockey-nomics’ of NHL playoffs
Read the full transcript of Carney’s speech to World Economic Forum
Dingoes found circling B.C. teen to be culled, Australia says
Oilers alumni hit the ice in Shoresy Classic
Canada’s chef de mission Jennifer Heil on the push to the 2026 Olympic Winter Games
Countdown to the Scotties Tournament of Hearts
Call of the Wilde: Habs fall again to Sabres