With good reason.
The Toronto Maple Leafs are 4-4-1 in their past nine games heading into a home-and-home against the Pittsburgh Penguins, which begins at PPG Paints Arena on Tuesday (7 p.m. ET; NBCSN, SN, TVAS, ATTSN-PT, NHL.TV) and concludes Thursday in Toronto.
Facing Penguins center Sidney Crosby and his teammates is never an easy task. Doing it when you are struggling to find any kind of identity and consistency in a playoff race makes the job that much tougher.
"This is the worst we've been in a really long time," the Maple Leafs coach said after Toronto's 5-2 loss to the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Center on Sunday. "It's certainly not a one-off, because we have not put our game together for quite some time."
The loss to Buffalo, their second defeat in the past three games, left the Maple Leafs (31-21-8) 13 points behind the second-place Tampa Bay Lightning in the Atlantic Division, and four ahead of the fourth-place Florida Panthers.
"We have to be better, we got to deal with the adversity, the things that we are going through, a little bit better," Keefe said. "We need to find more solutions to our depth, injuries and things that we've had."