By Nikolas Sargeant
March 22nd, 2021
BURLINGTON, ON
It has been some 52 seasons since the Toronto Maples Leafs navigated their way to NHL’s Stanley Cup, an unwanted record, it is fair to say. The long wait could be over because the Maple Leafs are flying high in the Scotia North division and are only two points behind Florida Panthers in the overall league.
Toronto Maples Leafs have 13 Stanley Cup titles to their name, but winning their 13th was unlucky because it was the last time the Maples Leafs reached the final. They won the coveted trophy during the 1966-67 season but have failed to reach the final since then.
The NHL looks a little different this season, courtesy of all the Canadian teams bundled together in the North division. League officials came to this decision after the Government of Canada imposed cross-border travel restrictions. The change has done the world of good for the Maples Leafs, so much so that the best Canadian sports betting sites price them as the third-favorites for Stanley Cup glory.
A third-place finish in the Atlantic Division equated to an eighth-place finish in the Eastern Conference for the Maple Leafs last season. The Maples Leafs faced Columbus Blue Jackets in the Eastern Conference Qualifying Round, where they fell to a 3-2 defeat.
A Solid Start But Terrible March For The Maples Leafs
The Maple Leafs started the reduced game 2021 season at a blistering pace. They accumulated 15 points in January thanks to a 7-2-1 record and improved on that start in February by banking 19 points from their 9-2-1 record.
March has been a difficult month for the Maple Leafs, and they have slipped down the league standings as a result. A 3-5-0 record has seen them reel in only six points, but five defeats in six games is a record that needs fixing and rectifying soon.
Twenty-three goals conceded in their last six times on the ice shows where Maples Leafs’ problems are right now. They score plenty of goals themselves (15 in the previous six games), but their defense is like Swiss cheese. You do not win many hockey games if you ship an average of 3.83 goals per game.
You would expect the Maples Leafs to return to winning ways when they take on Calgary Flames in back-to-back fixtures. The Flames are nine points behind the Maple Leafs in the Scotia North division but are on the back of a three-game winning streak. They then travel to division whipping boys Ottawa Senators before a pair of tricky ties against the Edmonton Oilers. The second-placed Winnipeg Jets are the team the Maple Leafs last take on in March.
Oilers Need More Consistency
The Oilers are another Canadian NHL team that has been away from the Stanley Cup finals’ excitement for too long. They won their fifth Stanley Cup in 1990 and last competed in a final back in 2006, where they lost 4-3 to the Carolina Hurricanes.
January saw the Oilers finish with a disappointing 5-6-0 record. Still, everything came together in February, where they finished 9-3-0, including five straight victories between Game 18-22, which included a 7-1 demolition of Calgary Flames.
Oilers won four games on the spin in February but are currently 4-4-0 thanks to back-to-back defeats at Vancouver Canucks and the Flames.
Of all the Canadian hockey teams, Ottowa Senators look certain not to even reach the playoffs. They have only 22 points from 32 games, with the teams under them having played at least five games less (New Jersey Devils have played seven fewer). The Senators have been highly inconsistent, and their dreadful 1-7-0 start to the season has left them with a mountain to climb.