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The Leafs have scored just one goal at 5-on-5 in their last five games despite scoring 12 goals in that span.

Toronto Maple Leafs superstar center Auston Matthews took the ice for the club's optional morning skate on Saturday. But when will he return to game action?

The Toronto Maple Leafs hit a frustrating wall Tuesday night, blanked 3-0 by the Ottawa Senators at Scotiabank Arena. This marked the team’s second shutout loss of the season, cutting short their recent three-game winning streak. While Toronto has found recent success on special teams, answering the bell to that dry spell at the beginning of the season, the Leafs’ struggles at five-on-five have now surfaced as an issue, with only one even-strength goal in their last five games.

“Yeah, they have dried up quite a bit,” William Nylander acknowledged post-game. “I think we just got to be more connected. Sometimes we get one shot and we're done, the puck is out of the zone. I mean, window secondary, pucks back, and then keep the pressure rolling. Try to sustain the pressure in the other one. I think right now we're very much one and done.”

The club’s last multi-goal game at even strength came against the St. Louis Blues on November 2 in a 4-2 loss, where Mitch Marner and Steven Lorentz found the back of the net. Since then, the Maple Leafs have scored 12 goals over five games and only one at 5-on-5. The Leafs’ lone goal at even-strength came from the stick of Conor Timmins against the Montreal Canadiens in a 4-1 win on Saturday.

The Maple Leafs’ offense, typically among the league’s most dynamic, has sputtered at even strength and seems to be increasingly aware of the need for a more cohesive approach. Going scoreless on Tuesday against Ottawa, John Tavares pointed to execution and level play in all areas of the ice as a primary factor to the lack of success.

“I think today at first it starts just the way we needed to execute and play all over the ice instead of just worrying about the offense,” Tavares explained. “So just the execution, the level of structure and detail.”

“And then, you start to connect your game through all the three zones. You're able to exit better. You get through the neutral zone well. You get on the forecheck. Build offensive zone sequences. Get pucks to the net. And obviously, you have to make it difficult on the goalie and getting bodies there and finding screens and second and third opportunities.”

Sustained pressure can be appointed as a prominent issue, especially considering injuries to players up front. Specifically speaking, the club was without their superstar forward Auston Matthews for the fourth straight contest with an upper-body injury, and veteran forward Max Pacioretty was also absent (week-to-week) with a lower-body injury. However, Connor Dewar made his 2024-25 regular season debut with the Leafs, but that too, did not help with production at 5-on-5.

How to get back to top-level production at even strength? Head coach Craig Berube believes in generating more traffic and maintaining puck control.

“Tonight we didn't have the puck. It was pretty tough to get the scoring goals when you don't have the puck. We didn't have the puck the whole game until the third period,” Berube explained before adding, “We got to generate more attempts at the net with people at the net and creating offense that way. We just didn't do a good enough job tonight. Overall, it was just not a good game.”

As the Leafs prepare for a quick turnaround, they’ll look to re-establish their five-on-five presence with a balanced attack in hopes of regaining their offensive rhythm at even strength and avoiding becoming overly reliant on special teams.

The club will have another kick at the can on Wednesday when they take on the Washington Capitals in the second half of a back-to-back at Capital One Arena.