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Stanley Cup Champion Joins Maple Leafs On PTO: Will Lorentz Crack The Roster?

4 September, 2024 - 12:59AM
Stanley Cup Champion Joins Maple Leafs On PTO: Will Lorentz Crack The Roster?
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The Toronto Maple Leafs have added some depth up front by signing centre Steven Lorentz to a professional tryout contract (PTO), according to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman. Lorentz, 28, was a free agent. PTOs allow players to sign with a team for training camp and earn a roster spot ahead of the regular season.

The Kitchener, Ont. native last played for the Florida Panthers, who won the Stanley Cup this past season. Lorentz, acquired from the San Jose Sharks for Anthony Duclair on July 1, 2023, appeared in 38 regular-season games with the Panthers, recording a goal and two assists. He also appeared in 16 playoff games, scoring two goals and adding an assist. Florida went on to beat the Edmonton Oilers in the Stanley Cup final.

Lorentz played 80 games with the San Jose Sharks in 2022-23, finishing with 10 goals and 19 points. Drafted by the Carolina Hurricanes in the seventh round (186th overall) in 2015, Lorentz played two seasons with the Hurricanes (2020-21 and 2021-22), appearing in 82 games combined and 16 playoff games.

Lorentz’s Role

Lorentz is a player who just won a championship on the fourth line, and the Leafs are presumably evaluating if he can fill the same role on their team. This is the third Panther — OEL and Anthony Stolarz are the others — to join the Leafs this offseason.

It’s hard to picture Lorentz as anything more than a fourth liner at this point, given his age and track record of lack of production. At one point last season, Paul Maurice complimented Lorentz for reinventing himself as a fast and physical role player with some penalty-killing ability. In the final few months of the season, he averaged 50 seconds per game on the PK, and in the playoffs, he dropped down to 23 seconds, so he was purely a depth option shorthanded.

In the playoffs, I thought he was noticeable with his speed and aggression on the forecheck, and he generated some good moments on the cycle with his size. He’s a well-liked teammate and was particularly good against the Lightning in the first round.

The Leafs already have 12 NHL forwards signed, and none of them are going anywhere, at least to start the season. Lorentz joins the competition for the final forward to make the team against a collection of young players (barring another addition), including Easton Cowan, Nikita Grebyonkin, and Fraser Minten. If Nick Robertson eventually signs, it’s hard to picture any of those players making the team out of camp given the salary cap and roster crunch in Toronto, save for maybe Easton Cowan, given Cowan will have to go otherwise return to the OHL, a league he has thoroughly dominated.

Competition For A Roster Spot

Should Lorentz make the team as a fourth-line left winger, how the rest of the line would shake out is worthy of consideration. If it’s to play alongside David Kampf and Ryan Reaves, they run the risk of what happened last season with their fourth line when Noah Gregor was on its left wing — which is to say it was a poor unit that didn’t help the team in any capacity. The line was much better after the Leafs acquired Connor Dewar before the deadline.

If Lorentz were to make the team, it’s unlikely he’d be able to push Dewar out of the lineup altogether, although it’s possible Dewar centers the fourth line and Kampf moves up, or Kampf centers the fourth line and Dewar moves up. Either way, it creates a negative domino effect up the lineup.

If the idea is that Lorentz and Reaves will split games, it’s at least feasible, but it’s not truly plugging a hole of note. It’s just giving them another depth option, but it could make the fourth line a little better if Lorentz plays instead of Reaves. The team’s needs upfront — a top-nine center and potentially a top-nine left winger depending on the Robertson/Cowan/any other surprises, to say nothing of McMann needing to prove himself further — would remain in place.

If nothing else, Lorentz is a veteran NHL body for preseason, which means the Leafs can sit a veteran regular on the team and preserve them for opening night

Lorentz’s Recent History

According to Elliotte Friedman, Steven Lorentz is joining the Leafs for a tryout. If he were to earn a contract, this would be the Kitchener native’s fourth team in as many seasons.

Standing at 6’4″, Lorentz is a 28-year-old left-handed winger with some pretty good speed. However, he has struggled offensively in his career, with just 21 goals and 43 points in 230 career games. He will use his body and involve himself physically on the forecheck, although he only has one fight in the NHL.

Coincidentally, the one fight came with the Carolina Hurricanes in the playoffs against Jacob Trouba in response to Trouba running Max Domi. Lorentz played five playoff games that season, and his regular linemates were Domi and Jesper Kotkaniemi (the trio rated well in terms of possession and scoring chances but didn’t score a goal or give one up).

Lorentz spent last season with the Florida Panthers, winning the Stanley Cup and appearing in 16 games of that playoff run. Lorentz averaged just 7:07 in those 16 playoff games, but he did manage to score two goals (three points total) and played in the first four games of the Stanley Cup Finals. In the regular season, he averaged just 8:47 per night (a career low) and scored just one goal (three points) in 38 games. Lorentz’s regular center was Kevin Stenlund on the fourth line.

It is an interesting juxtaposition to last year’s PTO project — Noah Gregor — as the Leafs took a swing on a player moving over from a bad team to see if he would fit on a stronger team with less responsibility and more structure. The Leafs did succeed with Simon Benoit in a similar situation, although he wasn’t on a PTO.

Looking Ahead

Free agent center Steven Lorentz is expected to join the Maple Leafs on a professional tryout, Elliotte Friedman of Sportsnet reports.

Lorentz, 28, remains unsigned over two months into free agency after playing a depth role in the Panthers’ Stanley Cup win last June. He suited up in 16 of their 24 playoff games, scoring twice and adding an assist while averaging a meager 7:07 per game.

The Ontario native played a more limited role in the regular season when he was a frequent healthy scratch. The depth pivot saw some spot duty on the penalty kill and had only one goal and two assists in 38 games.

It was Lorentz’s first and only season in Florida. The Panthers acquired him from the Sharks in a trade last summer that sent scoring winger Anthony Duclair to the Bay Area. He’s coming off a two-year, $2.1MM deal he signed with San Jose in 2022 after being acquired from the Hurricanes in the Brent Burns trade, potentially making Toronto his fourth team in the past four years.

The 6’4″, 205-lb forward will look to prove valuable in a depth role for the Leafs during training camp in hopes of a deal, likely a league-minimum one with a one-way structure. He hasn’t been assigned to the minors since before the COVID-19 pandemic, suiting up with Carolina’s AHL affiliate (then in Charlotte) from 2017 to 2020.

The Leafs aren’t teeming with salary cap space, but they have room for a potential league-minimum pickup like Lorentz. They have $1.275MM in projected space with two open roster spots, per PuckPedia.

In 230 NHL games over the past four seasons, Lorentz has 21 goals, 22 assists, 43 points, and a -26 rating, averaging 10:47 per game. He can play both center and left-wing and has posted a respectable 48.7% win rate in the dot through nearly 1,100 faceoffs.

Lorentz will compete with more veteran depth pieces like Alex Steeves and prospects like Easton Cowan and Fraser Minten for a spot on Toronto’s opening night roster.

Final Thoughts

Lorentz signed a professional tryout agreement with the Maple Leafs on Tuesday, according to Max Miller of The Hockey News. After speculation that Lorentz would sign a PTO with Toronto on Tuesday, it is now official. Lorentz will look to occupy a spot in Toronto's bottom six, and he'll be a candidate to kill penalties if he makes the team. The 28-year-old forward registered just three points in 38 regular-season appearances in 2023-24, but he did manage to score twice and add an assist in 16 postseason outings with Florida en route to winning the Stanley Cup.

Stanley Cup Champion Joins Maple Leafs On PTO: Will Lorentz Crack The Roster?
Credit: clutchpoints.com
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Steven Lorentz Toronto Maple Leafs Steven Lorentz PTO NHL Hockey
Nneka Okoro
Nneka Okoro

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