
The Toronto Maple Leafs‘ American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Toronto Marlies, is now one loss away from seeing its season end. And, the deeper this series goes, the more the whole series starts to feel eerily familiar to anyone who spent the year watching the Maple Leafs.
Toronto dropped Game 3 of the North Division Final to the Cleveland Monsters by a 4-0 score Wednesday night, and now trails the best-of-five series two games to one. But beyond the result itself, it’s the way these games have unfolded that really stands out. Cleveland has controlled long stretches of all three games, particularly early, and the Marlies simply haven’t had many answers.
The pattern has become almost predictable at this point. Cleveland storms out early, controls possession, outshoots Toronto, and forces the Marlies into defensive survival mode. In all three games, the Monsters built a 2-0 lead before Toronto generated much offence. The difference is that in Game 1, the Marlies somehow flipped the script and scored five unanswered goals. Since then? Not much has been done offensively.
In Game 2, Toronto’s lone goal came off a gift turnover by Cleveland goaltender Zach Sawchenko, who basically handed the puck directly to Bo Groulx in front of an open net. In Game 3, even that kind of break never came.
And when you look at the numbers, the concern becomes pretty obvious. Cleveland has outshot the Marlies 88-50 through three games. The first periods have been especially rough, with a combined 40-15 edge for the Monsters. That’s more than a small gap; it’s territorial control.
Here’s where some of this gets interesting. Because AHL teams are usually designed to mirror their NHL parent clubs, the results in Cleveland mirror the Maple Leafs’ results over the past season. It’s intentional that organizations want players to develop within the same structure they’ll eventually play in if they get called up. In theory, it makes sense.
But sometimes systems that can withstand average competition start to break down against stronger teams that can apply relentless pressure. And that’s exactly what this series is starting to expose.
Like their parent club, the Marlies spent much of the regular season surviving rather than controlling games. They finished exactly .500 with 36 wins in 72 games, still grabbed fourth place in the division, and battled through the first two playoff rounds by sticking to a defensive, patient style. There’s nothing inherently wrong with that. Plenty of teams win low-event hockey games.
But there’s a difference between playing responsible defensive hockey and simply spending too much time trapped in your own zone. Eventually, that plan catches up to you. And it has for the Marlies.
Right now, Cleveland looks faster, more aggressive, and far more comfortable carrying the play. The Marlies, meanwhile, look like a team constantly reacting instead of dictating. And when your offensive talent level isn’t overwhelming to begin with, that becomes a dangerous way to live in playoff hockey.
At this point, Toronto probably needs one of two things to happen to survive. Either Artur Akhtyamov or Dennis Hildeby has to absolutely steal a game, or the Marlies somehow find a completely different level offensively that really hasn’t been visible much in this series.
Could the Marlies still come back? Sure. This group has shown resilience before during this playoff run.
But the honest truth is that Cleveland has looked like the better hockey team for most of the series. And unless something changes quickly in Game 4 tonight, the Marlies’ season — and perhaps some bigger organizational questions about style and identity — may be ending together.
[Note: I want to thank long-time Maple Leafs fan Stan Smith for collaborating with me on this post. Stan’s Facebook profile can be found here.]
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