Larcos_Unal
Excuses are for losers
Put up or shut up time big boy...pressure is on:I have never seen a Toronto athlete get more of a free pass than Matthews. Shits his pants spring after spring and nobody says a word.
This year is different however. It might be the fact that he's got the C, but media is asking for more and the chatter is building. Overdrive has had entire segments on him and his performance all week.
He cannot elevate his play when it's needed most.
Leon Draisaitl, Nathan MacKinnon and Mark Messier share something rather incredible that seems so very far away from Auston Matthews.
All three have scored more goals per Stanley Cup playoff game than they have ever scored in their National Hockey League regular season careers.
Rarely do players, stars in particular, equal regular season numbers with playoff numbers — especially those with high end stats. But to surpass the goal numbers is simply remarkable.
In the case of Matthews, the Maple Leafs captain who has yet to find his way as a playoff goal scorer, his playoff numbers aren’t anywhere close to that of his goal-scoring statistics from regular seasons.
And even in a down season for him scoring wise such as this one, his playoff numbers have still dropped considerably this time around.
Matthews has two goals in nine playoff games this Stanley Cup season, this coming after scoring just one last year against Boston and no goals the year before that in the second round against the Florida Panthers.
In his last 19 playoff games, Matthews has three goals. Seven of those games went to overtime, and the Leafs won two of them. Over an 82-game stretch, three goals in 19 games is equivalent to a 13-goal season. In Matthews’ career, his seasonal scoring average is 52 goals.
Career-wise, Matthews has scored at a 32-goal pace at playoff time, down 20 goals from his usual scoring. The drop is even larger this year.
The biggest shock in this group of excellence might be the MacKinnon numbers. Never a giant goal-scorer like Matthews or Draisaitl, MacKinnon has averaged 34 goals over the course of his career, but has scored at a 47-goal pace in the post-season.
The Maple Leafs surely need a shot from their captain, especially now in this series with Florida. Sunday night — and every night after that this playoff season — will represent the biggest game of Matthews’ career. Can he cash in? Odds say no.