The Maple Leafs are assigning goaltender Joseph Woll to the AHL’s Toronto Marlies on a conditioning loan, a team release states Wednesday.
The 25-year-old Missourian has been listed as week-to-week with a high ankle sprain after sustaining the injury on a non-contact play against the Senators on Dec. 7. He’s now missed 29 games with the sprain over two and a half months, but a return is now officially on the horizon.
Head coach Sheldon Keefe said earlier this month that Woll was cleared to ramp up his workload in practice and, as such, the team was expecting his return in the middle of February. He’ll miss that benchmark by a bit, but he should be back between the pipes for Toronto by the trade deadline.
The 2016 third-round pick has been solid in his first full NHL season, posting an 8-5-1 record and a .916 SV% in 13 starts and two relief appearances. He had taken the starting role from Ilya Samsonov by the time of his injury, although a recent stretch of above-average play from the Russian makes it more of a battle for Woll to regain starts upon his return.
34-year-old Martin Jones has provided value to Toronto in a third-string role, posting a .908 SV% and 2.69 GAA in 19 games while Woll was out and Samsonov was going through the worst stretch of his career. He’s come back down to Earth after posting a SV% above .920 in five straight games at the beginning of 2024, but Woll’s impeding return and Samsonov’s improvement balances things out in the Toronto crease.
Woll has saved 7.0 goals above expected this year, per MoneyPuck, just shy of Jones’ 7.8 in four more appearances. If he maintains that pace upon this return, he should be on track to be Toronto’s playoff starter.
Woll and his $766.7K cap hit are on long-term injured reserve, so this loan follows the limitations of an LTI-specific conditioning stint. He will remain on LTIR while suiting up for the Marlies and can stay in the AHL for up to six days or three games with a possible two-game extension. If the Maple Leafs deem Woll is ready to return at the end of his loan, they must activate him off LTIR; if not, he’ll remain there until his recovery is complete.