When Steven Lorentz glanced at the lineup chart on Monday morning ahead of Toronto Maple Leafs practice, he was a little surprised. Instead of his name being down on the fourth line beside David Kampf and Connor Dewar,
H eading into the game, a lot of the hyper surrounding the Toronto Maple Leafs game against the Dallas Stars centered around Steven Lorentz's promotion to the top line to play alo
Toronto Maple Leafs forward Steven Lorentz is having the time of his life right now. He is playing for his hometown team which he promised himself as a kid he would one day make a reality, thriving in his role as a dependable defensive player,
Toronto Maple Leafs forward Steven Lorentz received his first penalty of the season in Saturday's 7-3 comeback win over the Montreal Canadiens.
Winners of their last three consecutive games, the Leafs are aiming to extend their streak to four, while forward Steven Lorentz took time to discuss the end of his own personal streak – avoiding the penalty box.
For Toronto Maple Leafs forward Steven Lorentz, the 2024-25 season has been full of surprises, but his latest accomplishment takes the cake. Originally
Lorentz, who was not a full-time member of the Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers last year, has been in all 44 games for Toronto so far, putting the E in Energy Line, killing penalties and amazingly avoiding the penalty box all year despite his role requiring a degree of the dark arts.
The Toronto Maple Leafs shook up their forward lines at practice following a 3-0 shutout loss to the Vancouver Canucks on Saturday. Although it wasn’t
Steven Lorentz said on Thursday that Knies was in good spirits after leaving Wednesday's game with an upper-body injury.
NHL team bonding has moved away from partying in public settings to the quiet privacy of online gaming. At the same time, the drinking culture that was once pervasive across the league is waning while the use of cannabis products is on the upswing.
NHL Insider Elliotte Friedman on his recent "32 Thoughts" podcast revealed that San Jose center Luke Kunin would be the perfect addition to the Maple Leafs roster.
“Noise is noise, every building can be quiet or loud. Home or road, energy is energy, so the louder the building, the more guys get up for it. It can be quiet at times going through a rough patch, but when the building is rocking — it could be booing you at an away rink or your fans trying to lift your spirits — we feed off that energy.”