Hockey

Maple Leafs goaltender Stolarz out, Woll gets nod for Game 2 against Panthers

Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Joseph Woll will get the start in Game 2 of Toronto's second-round playoff series with Florida on Wednesday. The 26-year-old replaced Anthony Stolarz midway through Monday's opener after Stolarz took an elbow from Panthers centre Sam Bennett.

'He's extremely focused, does all the right things,' team captain Auston Matthews says

Male NHL hockey goaltender.
Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube told reporters at Scotiabank Arena following Toronto's morning skate on Tuesday that Anthony Stolarz, pictured, is 'recovering' and 'doing well.' (Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press)

Joseph Woll is heading back under the post-season spotlight.

It's a place the Maple Leafs goaltender has thrived in the past.

Woll will get the start for Toronto in Game 2 of the team's second-round Stanley Cup playoff series with the Florida Panthers on Wednesday at 7 p.m. ET.

The 26-year-old entered Monday's opener midway through the second period after crease mate Anthony Stolarz took an elbow to the head from Sam Bennett.

"We've got a lot of confidence in him," Leafs captain Auston Matthews said Wednesday of Woll. "He's extremely focused, does all the right things."

Head coach Craig Berube left the door open for Stolarz to play in Game 2 on Tuesday, but told reporters at Scotiabank Arena following Toronto's morning skate the 31-year-old is "recovering" and "doing well."

Veteran netminder Matt Murray, who spent most of this season in the American Hockey League, will serve as Woll's backup over Dennis Hildeby. The rookie was on the bench in the third period of Game 1.

"Experience, I think, more than anything," Berube said of turning to Murray, a two-time Cup winner with the Pittsburgh Penguins.

"He's been there, done it."

The Panthers, meanwhile, will have defenceman Aaron Ekblad available after he served a two-game suspension for a headshot on Tampa Bay Lightning forward Brandon Hagel in the first round.

WATCH | CBC News' Greg Ross discusses Maple Leafs' goalie situation before Game 2:

Leafs’ Stolarz will not play in Game 2 against Panthers

1 day ago
Duration 3:07
Game 2 of the Leafs’ second-round playoff series against the Florida Panthers will resume Wednesday without goalie Anthony Stolarz, who suffered an injury Monday night. CBC’s Greg Ross has the latest.

"I was aiming for his chest and I caught him in the chin," Ekblad said in his first comments since the incident that knocked Hagel out of the series. "I'm never out to hurt anybody on the ice. It's unfortunate the way that the outcome happened.

"It is what it is and we all move on."

The 29-year-old selected first overall at the 2014 draft has had a stop-start second half of the season after getting suspended 20 games for violating the NHL/NHL Players' Association policy on performance-enhancing drugs.

Ekblad returned for Game 3 of the Tampa series before the Hagel incident in Game 4 that led to his most-recent ban.

"Whirlwind of a season," he said. "It's not the way I scripted it, but we're here now. We're in the playoffs. It's a great opportunity to continue playing hockey."

Woll was solid off the bench and held the fort late in a nail-biting 5-4 victory Monday for Toronto, stopping 17 of 20 shots as the visitors pushed after trailing 4-1 through 40 minutes.

"It's not easy to get just thrown into fire like that," Matthews said. "He'll be prepared and ready to go. A lot of confidence in him."

Stolarz, who also took a shot off his mask early in Game 1, was briefly able to continue following the collision with Bennett — a bruising centre and former teammate from last season's Cup-hoisting Panthers roster — before he vomited into Toronto's bench a few minutes later and headed to the dressing room.

Did Stolarz suffer brain bleed?

Stolarz rejoined teammates Tuesday

Stolarz was then transported to a local hospital for evaluation, but was back with his teammates Tuesday morning at the Leafs' practice facility.

Chris Nowinski, chief executive officer of the Concussion Legacy Foundation, said he was concerned with how the situation was handled at Scotiabank Arena.

"Stolarz was hit in the head twice where he exhibited possible signs of concussion and neither time was he removed and assessed," Nowinski told The Canadian Press. "I can't remember the last time I saw a player vomiting on the ice, but it makes you very concerned about what was happening in his brain and whether [he] not only had a concussion, but a possible brain bleed."

Stolarz's mask came off in the first period of Toronto's 5-4 victory when he stopped a shot by Sam Reinhart. Stolarz appeared to shake his head before putting the mask back on and resuming play. In the second period, he was elbowed in the head as Bennett skated through the crease. Stolarz immediately grabbed his head as he fell to the ice.

Woll has a solid .910 save percentage in 78 career regular-season games. His numbers in the post-season are even better.

The netminder from suburban St. Louis has stopped 113 of 119 shots in four career playoff starts for a .950 save percentage.

The 62nd pick at the 2016 NHL draft — the same year Toronto selected superstar centre Auston Matthews — helped the Leafs stave off second-round elimination down 3-0 to Florida in 2023 after Ilya Samsonov went down injury before making 40 stops in a 3-2 overtime loss in Game 5.

Woll started Game 5 in last spring's opening round against the Boston Bruins after Samsonov was again sidelined. He allowed two goals on 59 combined shots over the next two contests to help Toronto force Game 7, but was unable play in the series finale his team dropped 2-1 in OT because of a back issue.

"He's just mentally very resilient, very strong," Matthews said. "Nothing really necessarily gets to him."

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