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Quick Shifts: What is behind Auston Matthews’ scoring dip?

Quick Shifts: What is behind Auston Matthews’ scoring dip?
Quick Shifts: What is behind Auston Matthews’ scoring dip?


A quick mix of the things we gleaned from the week of hockey, serious and less so, and rolling four lines deep. Your home for soft tampering, soft hands, and a soft response.

1. The puck isn’t falling the way it used to.

And we’re not just talking about the magical 69-goal season, where hat tricks were as routine as garbage day.

And it’s not only because of his nine-game injury break that Auston Matthews is tied for 83rd in the race for the Rocket Richard, the trophy he has become penciled in to win annually now.

Matthews (9-10–19) is on pace to have more assists than goals for just the second time in his career.

Were he to play the full 82, he’d be on pace for “only” 37 goals. A wonderful number for most NHLers. Not so much for a 27-year-old who has crushed 40 six times and 60 twice.

Thing is, the highest-salaried skater in 2024-25 is paid to produce, and the Toronto Maple Leafs could use a few more red lamps.

Fans know it. The coach knows it. And Matthews himself knows it.

Which is why his OT winner Tuesday in New Jersey was celebrated so emphatically.

“Yeah, that felt really good,” Matthews said.

A bunch of reasons could explain the captain’s goal dip. The most obvious is the drop in shooting percentage, from a career-high 18.7 in the 69-goal campaign to a career-low 10.6.

There’s the undisclosed injury, the team’s slumping power play, and an adjustment to a new coach’s system that has deemphasized puck possession and rush chances.

Eventually, though, Matthews will break out.

“Well, I’m not concerned with it. I’d be concerned more if he wasn’t getting opportunities. I think he’s playing good hockey. He’s playing 200 feet defensively — faceoffs, killing penalties. He’s doing a lot of good stuff,” Craig Berube says. “Yes, we need him to produce — and he will.”

The coach praises the superstar’s willingness to take pucks hard to the net, to up his physicality and battle against the opposition’s top lines.

“So, he’s doing a lot of good stuff. And I get that we need him to score,” Berube says. “But I’m not concerned about it. It’ll go in.”

2. The Maple Leafs considered returning to Toronto between last Saturday’s game in Pittsburgh and Tuesday’s game in New Jersey, but surely their head coach appreciated the direct flight to the Newark area and a rare Sunday at home.

Despite signing a four-year deal with Toronto, home, in Berube’s mind, is still New Hope, Pennsylvania — on the Jersey border, about an hour’s drive from the Prudential Center.

The rest of the Berubes have remained there while Craig devotes his time to the Maple Leafs. It was the same deal with the Blues. And much easier, of course, when he was on the Flyers bench.

“It’s great to see the family, the kids and the wife, and just spend some time with them — because I don’t see them very often. So nice, relaxing day. It would have been better if we won a game,” Berube said, referencing the Penguins loss.

“It’s hard. I mean, I’ve done it for a while now, right? St Louis was the same situation. So, you get used to it. I always say it’s harder on them, the kids and the wife, than anybody else.

“You know, it’s difficult for me too. But if you choose to do this, that’s some of the situations you could be in.”