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Which Maple Leafs Goalie Is Tradable: Under What Conditions?

Let’s walk through this the right way, because not all goalies — or situations — are created equal. The Toronto Maple Leafs don’t just have decisions to make; they have timing to consider. Who you move matters, but when and why you move them matters just as much.



Goalie One: Anthony Stolarz

Strengths:
When he’s right, he’s brilliant. Big presence, elite rebound control, strong reads — and he can steal games with the kind of saves that change momentum. Put him in during a condensed stretch, and he can carry you through it.

Caveat:
Durability. His body hasn’t shown it can handle a full season. Ask him to be a 60-game workhorse, and you’re likely to get injuries and missed time. That caps his real-world value for a team trying to build consistency.

Goalie Two: Joseph Woll

Strengths:
Steady, composed, and trending upward. Woll isn’t flashy every night, but he’s technically sound and calm under pressure. He’s shown incremental growth and can handle a heavier workload more reliably than Stolarz.

Caveat:
Ceiling. He might top out as a solid No. 1 in the right system — or a very good No. 2. He’s not obviously elite, which may limit his appeal to teams chasing a true franchise goalie.

Joseph Woll Maple Leafs goalie NHL
Joseph Woll is a Maple Leafs goalie.

Goalie Three: Dennis Hildeby

Strengths:
Reliable and available. He’s already shown he can step into NHL games and hold his own. Physically durable, which matters when your top options carry injury risk. He gives you a steady floor.

Caveat:
Upside. Is there another level, or is he a long-term backup? If it’s the latter, he’s still useful — just not a game-changer.

Goalie Four: Artur Akhtyamov (Prospect)

Strengths:
Flashes are there — quick reflexes, good movement, and composure. At 25, he’s not a raw project, so the tools are intriguing.

Caveat:
Development time. He still needs seasoning on North American ice, and size is a question. He’s not ready for full NHL duty yet. This is a “let him cook” situation with the Marlies.

So Which Maple Leafs Goalie Do You Trade — And When?

The short answer is that Stolarz is the most logical trade candidate right now — and it’s a bit of a paradox. He’s valuable because of his upside, but also limited because of his durability. That combination makes him attractive to teams looking for a short-term boost — injury insurance, playoff depth, or a tandem upgrade. That’s where you can extract value. You move him while the upside still sells.

Woll is next, but only under the right conditions. If someone offers a strong return — a legit prospect or a piece that improves the blue line — you consider it. But moving Woll creates a reliability gap, so you don’t do it unless you’ve already solved that problem elsewhere.

Hildeby and Akhtyamov? You keep them. Hildeby gives you stability at a reasonable cost. Akhtyamov needs time, and there’s no benefit to rushing that process. You don’t know for sure what you have yet.

Final Thought on Toronto’s Goalies

This has to be about purpose, not movement for its own sake. Stolarz likely holds more value to other teams than he does to Toronto over a full season. But the return has to matter. Not another goalie. Not another short-term patch.

The Maple Leafs don’t need a different mask in net — they need fewer problems in front of it. Fix the blue line, clean up the defensive structure, and suddenly the crease looks a whole lot calmer.

Related: What Toronto Does Next With Sundin Really Matters


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