It's a good bet they will face the Boston Bruins in the Eastern Conference First Round. A leaky defense will be the recipe for disaster against a lethal Boston team. Toronto coach Mike Babcock knows it, the Bruins know it, everyone knows it.
It's important that coaches and players maintain perspective when slogging through a funk like this. Every team goes through it over the course of the season. An 82-game schedule will have blips. That's just the way it works.
You can get out of these down times, even when they occur so close to playoff time.
The first thing is, identify the warts in your team's game. When momentum starts going against you during the course of a season, it exposes a team's weaknesses. As the losses build up, it even exaggerates them.
At this point, a coaching staff is well aware of a team's positives and negatives. Part of the solution is to find practice time to work on those things. Sure, you don't want to overwork your guys in the weeks heading into the Stanley Cup Playoffs, especially if you've already qualified for them. At the same time, you don't want to enter the first round struggling and still trying to find solutions.
This is the time to get answers, not three weeks from now.
I can't emphasize enough how important it is to look at your remaining schedule and block off the appropriate practice time. It's the only way you are going to work out the kinks.
Part of the bugaboo that teams like the Maple Leafs went through recently involves the fact that they pretty much know where they are going to be slotted come playoff time; they're not going up in the standings, nor are they going down. As such, maybe between Games 65 and 75 of the season they can step back and take a deep breath while preparing for the playoffs.
Everybody knows that once the playoffs arrive, it's a different game with a different approach. Open ice disappears and becomes a premium. It's an old adage, but it's true: You do have to fight and scratch and claw for every inch of space.