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How the Maple Leafs’ Troy Stecher Surprised the Oilers
Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Troy Stecher probably didn’t mark this one on his calendar, but the timing is hard to ignore. Tonight he’s in Toronto Maple Leafs blue, facing the Edmonton Oilers — the team that let him go just a few weeks ago. But, perhaps what’s most interesting is that he does it while playing the best hockey he’s played all year.

Are the Oilers Surprised By How Well Stecher Is Playing?

Maybe the Oilers are surprised. Maybe they aren’t. But they should at least be paying attention.

Stecher’s time in Edmonton never truly gained stability. He was frequently scratched, struggled to get ice time when he did play, and was mainly seen as a placeholder. When he did see the ice, he faced limited usage, limited trust, and little opportunity to find any rhythm. That’s not a knock on Stecher as much as it is a reality of how Edmonton operates.

The Oilers are built around stars. Their margin for patience — especially on the blue line — is thin. If you’re not driving offense or riding shotgun with elite talent, you’re often just surviving shifts. Stecher survived plenty. He rarely hurt them. But he was never really used.

With the Maple Leafs, It’s a Different Deal for Stecher

Then Toronto claimed him, quickly, off waivers. What’s happened since hasn’t been loud, but it’s been surprising. Stecher isn’t suddenly a different player. He hasn’t reinvented himself. What he’s found, however, is a place where he’s flourished. Perhaps it’s the structure, clarity, and a coach who knows exactly what he wants from him.

Craig Berube doesn’t ask his depth defencemen to freestyle. He asks them to be reliable, predictable, and hard to play against. That fits Stecher almost perfectly. Give him a role, give him consistent minutes, and let him read the game. Then, what you get is reliable, honest hockey.

In Toronto, Stecher Has Been Racking Up Some Big Minutes

Look at the usage. In Toronto, his ice time climbs into the low-to-mid 20s. He’s trusted late. He’s on the ice protecting leads. And, he’s not chasing offence. Still, somehow, the offence has shown up anyway. A three-game, four-point stretch isn’t who Stecher suddenly is, but it is what happens when a player feels settled instead of auditioning every shift.

With the Oilers, Stecher always felt like he was one mistake away from the press box. With the Maple Leafs, he looks like someone who knows where he’ll be tomorrow.

That difference matters more than fans sometimes admit.

Edmonton Didn’t Mess Up, or Did They?

This isn’t really about Edmonton “messing up” a waiver decision. It’s about fit. Kris Knoblauch’s Oilers rely on talent to tilt the ice and trust their stars to clean things up. Berube’s Maple Leafs lean on layers, spacing, and accountability. One environment asks Stecher to keep his head above water. The other lets him swim.

So yes — he’s playing better in Toronto than he did in Edmonton. Not because he suddenly found a new gear, but because the road in front of him finally makes sense.

If you’re the Oilers watching tonight, the revealing feature isn’t that Troy Stecher looks good. It’s that he seems comfortable. And sometimes, that’s the thing you didn’t realize you took away.

This article first appeared on NHL Trade Talk and was syndicated with permission.

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