Anthony Stolarz Injury Update: Understanding NHL Goalie Upper Body Injuries, Neck Trauma, and Recovery Options

Date: January 26, 2026

Introduction: The Anthony Stolarz Upper Body Injury That Sidelined the Maple Leafs Goalie

Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz suffered an upper body injury on November 11, 2025, during a game against the Boston Bruins that has kept him off the ice for an extended period. While the team has not disclosed the exact diagnosis, Maple Leafs coach Craig Berube confirmed the injury is not a concussion, leading many to speculate about possible neck, shoulder, or upper cervical spine involvement.

When NHL goalies sustain upper body injuries—particularly in the neck and shoulder region—the potential diagnoses can range from whiplash-associated disorders and cervical facet joint sprains to brachial plexus stretch injuries and soft tissue trauma. Understanding these injury patterns is crucial for fans following Stolarz's recovery and for athletes who may face similar injuries.

At Pain Free Health Clinic in Surrey, British Columbia, we specialize in treating complex neck and upper body injuries similar to what professional goalies experience. Our evidence-based approach combines cervical traction, advanced manual therapy, neuromuscular rehabilitation, and sport-specific return-to-play protocols.

This comprehensive guide explores the types of upper body and neck injuries that NHL goalies like Anthony Stolarz can sustain, how these injuries are diagnosed and treated, and what recovery timelines typically look like for elite athletes.

Anthony Stolarz Injury Timeline: What We Know

November 11, 2025: The Initial Injury

Anthony Stolarz left the Toronto Maple Leafs game against the Boston Bruins on November 11, 2025, with what the team classified as an upper body injury. The 30-year-old goaltender had been performing exceptionally well for Toronto before the injury sidelined him.

Mid-December 2025: Specialist Evaluation

By mid-December, Maple Leafs coach Craig Berube provided an update stating that the organization did not believe Stolarz had sustained a concussion. Berube mentioned that Stolarz was being evaluated by a specialist, though no specific structural diagnosis was publicly released.

Context: Stolarz's Previous Injury History

It's important to note that Anthony Stolarz suffered a concussion during the 2025 playoffs in May 2025—a separate injury from his current upper body issue. This history makes the team's careful approach to his current injury particularly prudent.

The Importance of Privacy in Medical Diagnoses

NHL teams often classify injuries as "upper body" or "lower body" without providing specific details to protect player privacy and prevent opponents from targeting vulnerable areas. While fans and analysts speculate about the exact nature of Stolarz's injury, the lack of specific information is standard practice in professional hockey.

Understanding Upper Body Injuries in NHL Goalies: Possible Diagnoses

When a goaltender sustains an upper body injury that keeps them out for weeks or months, several potential diagnoses should be considered. While we cannot diagnose Anthony Stolarz specifically without examining him, we can discuss the common injury patterns seen in professional goalies.

Whiplash-Associated Disorders (WAD)

Whiplash injuries occur when the head and neck are rapidly accelerated and decelerated, or when forceful contact causes extreme flexion, extension, rotation, or lateral bending of the cervical spine.

Mechanism in Goalies: When a player collides with a goalie in the crease—particularly if an arm, shoulder, or body makes contact with the neck region—whiplash-type forces can injure multiple cervical structures simultaneously.

Structures Injured: Facet joints, cervical ligaments, intervertebral discs, muscles, and potentially nerve roots can all be damaged during a whiplash mechanism.

Symptoms: Neck pain and stiffness, reduced range of motion, headaches originating from the base of the skull, shoulder blade pain, upper back discomfort, and in some cases, radiating arm symptoms.

Recovery Timeline: Grade I-II whiplash injuries typically improve over 6-12 weeks with appropriate treatment, though some athletes experience persistent symptoms requiring longer rehabilitation.

Cervical Facet Joint Sprains and Irritation

The cervical facet joints are small paired joints connecting each vertebra to the one above and below. These joints guide neck movement and are richly innervated with pain-sensitive nerves.

Mechanism in Goalies: Forceful rotation, extension, or lateral bending can sprain or irritate the facet joint capsules, causing significant pain and dysfunction.

Symptoms:

  • Localized neck pain, often one-sided
  • Sharp pain with rotation or extension (looking up)
  • Referred pain into the shoulder blade, upper trapezius, or base of the skull
  • Muscle spasm and guarding
  • Reduced cervical range of motion
  • Pain that worsens with certain head positions

Diagnosis: Facet joint injuries can be challenging to diagnose with standard imaging. MRI may show joint effusion or capsular swelling, but clinical examination findings—including provocation tests and motion palpation—are often more diagnostic.

Treatment Response: Facet injuries typically respond well to manual therapy, cervical traction, and targeted rehabilitation, though recovery can take 4-12 weeks depending on severity.

Brachial Plexus Stretch Injuries (Stingers/Burners)

The brachial plexus is a network of nerves originating from the cervical spine (C5-T1) that provides motor and sensory function to the entire arm and hand. These nerves are vulnerable to stretch injuries when forceful contact separates the head from the shoulder.

Mechanism in Goalies: When a player's arm or body forcefully contacts the goalie's neck/shoulder area, it can stretch or compress the brachial plexus, particularly if the head is simultaneously forced in the opposite direction.

Symptoms:

  • Immediate burning or electric shock sensation radiating from neck to arm
  • Numbness or tingling following specific nerve distributions
  • Temporary or persistent weakness in shoulder, arm, or hand muscles
  • Pain that radiates down the arm rather than staying localized to the neck
  • Symptoms may resolve in seconds/minutes (mild) or persist for weeks/months (severe)

Severity Grading:

  • Grade I (Neurapraxia): Temporary nerve conduction block; recovery in days to weeks
  • Grade II (Axonotmesis): Nerve fiber damage; recovery over weeks to months
  • Grade III (Neurotmesis): Complete nerve disruption; may require surgical intervention

Recovery Considerations: While many brachial plexus injuries resolve quickly, those with persistent weakness or sensory changes require thorough neurological evaluation and specialized rehabilitation.

Cervical Radiculopathy (Nerve Root Compression)

Cervical radiculopathy occurs when a nerve root exiting the spinal cord is compressed or irritated by a herniated disc, bone spur, or post-traumatic swelling.

Mechanism in Goalies: Axial loading, disc injury, or inflammatory swelling following trauma can compress nerve roots as they exit the cervical spine.

Symptoms:

  • Radiating arm pain following dermatomal patterns (specific nerve distributions)
  • Numbness or altered sensation in fingers, hand, or forearm
  • Weakness in specific muscle groups (myotomal patterns)
  • Reduced or absent reflexes
  • Positive provocation tests (Spurling's sign, upper limb tension tests)
  • Symptoms often worse with certain neck positions

Diagnosis: MRI is the gold standard for identifying disc herniations or nerve root compression. EMG/nerve conduction studies may be used to assess nerve function and rule out other conditions.

Treatment: Most radiculopathies improve with conservative care including traction, manual therapy, anti-inflammatory measures, and neural mobilization techniques. Persistent cases may require epidural injections or surgical consultation.

Myofascial Pain and Protective Muscle Spasm

Following neck trauma, the cervical muscles often go into protective spasm to splint and guard injured structures.

Muscles Commonly Affected:

  • Upper trapezius
  • Levator scapulae
  • Scalenes (anterior, middle, posterior)
  • Sternocleidomastoid
  • Suboccipital muscles
  • Deep cervical stabilizers

Symptoms:

  • Diffuse neck and shoulder pain
  • Palpable muscle tension and trigger points
  • Limited range of motion
  • Headaches (particularly tension-type and cervicogenic)
  • Referred pain patterns from trigger points
  • Muscle fatigue and weakness

Perpetuating Factors: Muscle spasm creates a self-perpetuating cycle—spasm causes pain and restricts blood flow, which prevents healing and maintains the spasm.

Treatment Focus: Manual therapy, trigger point release, heat/cold therapy, gentle stretching, and progressive strengthening are essential to break this cycle.

Cervical Disc Injuries

Intervertebral discs act as shock absorbers between vertebrae. High-energy impacts can cause disc injury ranging from annular tears to disc herniations.

Mechanism: Axial loading, rotational forces, or combined flexion/rotation can damage the disc's outer ring (annulus fibrosus) or cause the inner gel (nucleus pulposus) to herniate.

Symptoms:

  • Central neck pain, often worse with flexion
  • Possible radiating arm symptoms if disc material compresses a nerve root
  • Pain with coughing, sneezing, or Valsalva maneuver
  • Stiffness and reduced mobility

Diagnosis: MRI is required to visualize disc pathology accurately.

Recovery: Conservative care is successful for most disc injuries, though herniated discs with significant nerve compression may require more aggressive intervention.

Cervicogenic Headaches

Cervicogenic headaches originate from cervical spine pathology—typically facet joint irritation, upper cervical dysfunction, or muscle trigger points—rather than primary headache disorders.

Symptoms:

  • Unilateral head pain (though can be bilateral)
  • Pain starting at the base of the skull and radiating forward
  • Neck pain and stiffness accompanying the headache
  • Headache triggered or worsened by neck movements or positions
  • Reduced cervical range of motion

Treatment: Addressing the underlying cervical dysfunction through manual therapy, joint mobilization, and muscle release typically resolves cervicogenic headaches.

Why NHL Teams Don't Disclose Specific Diagnoses

Medical Privacy and Player Protection

Professional sports teams have valid reasons for keeping injury details private:

HIPAA and Privacy Laws: Medical information is protected, and teams cannot disclose details without player consent.

Competitive Disadvantage: Revealing specific injuries could allow opponents to target vulnerable areas.

Contract and Career Implications: Detailed injury information could affect contract negotiations, trade value, or future employment.

Avoiding Speculation: Specific diagnoses lead to public debate about recovery timelines and return-to-play decisions that may not reflect the individual athlete's situation.

"Upper Body Injury" Classification

The NHL's standard practice of classifying injuries as "upper body" or "lower body" provides general information while protecting specifics. For Anthony Stolarz, "upper body injury" could encompass:

  • Neck/cervical spine
  • Shoulder/clavicle
  • Chest/ribs
  • Upper back/thoracic spine
  • Arm/elbow
  • Wrist/hand

The team's statement that it's "not a concussion" rules out brain injury but leaves numerous musculoskeletal possibilities.

How Pain Free Health Clinic Treats Upper Body and Neck Injuries in Athletes

At Pain Free Health Clinic in Surrey, BC, we have extensive experience treating complex neck and upper body injuries in athletes, including injuries similar to those seen in professional hockey players.

Comprehensive Initial Assessment

Our assessment process includes:

Detailed History: Understanding the mechanism of injury, symptom onset, progression, and aggravating/relieving factors.

Red Flag Screening: Identifying signs of serious pathology (fracture, spinal cord injury, vascular injury) that require immediate medical referral.

Physical Examination:

  • Cervical range of motion testing
  • Foraminal compression tests (Spurling's, cervical compression)
  • Upper limb tension tests for neural involvement
  • Muscle palpation for spasm, trigger points, and tenderness
  • Segmental mobility assessment
  • Orthopedic and neurological testing
  • Functional movement screening

Concussion Screening: When appropriate, we perform balance testing, cognitive screening, and vestibular/ocular motor examination.

Coordination with Medical Team: We communicate with physicians, sports medicine specialists, and other providers to ensure comprehensive care.

Evidence-Based Treatment Approaches

1. Cervical Traction Therapy

Cervical traction is one of our most effective tools for treating neck injuries involving facet joint irritation, disc pathology, or nerve root compression.

Mechanical Traction: Uses controlled force to gently separate cervical vertebrae, reducing pressure on facet joints, discs, and nerve roots.

Manual Traction: Hands-on traction applied by skilled therapists, allowing for precise targeting and real-time adjustment based on patient response.

Benefits:

  • Reduces facet joint compression and pain
  • Opens intervertebral foramina (nerve exit points)
  • Decreases disc pressure
  • Promotes fluid movement and tissue healing
  • Relieves muscle spasm
  • Improves cervical mobility

Treatment Protocols: Traction parameters (force, duration, angle) are individualized based on diagnosis, symptom response, and treatment goals.

2. Advanced Manual Therapy

Joint Mobilization: Gentle, graded movements applied to cervical facet joints, costovertebral joints, and thoracic segments to restore normal mobility and reduce pain.

Soft Tissue Mobilization: Hands-on techniques to release muscle tension, break up adhesions, and improve tissue quality.

Myofascial Release: Sustained pressure and stretching techniques targeting fascial restrictions and trigger points.

Muscle Energy Techniques: Active patient muscle contractions followed by stretching to restore length and function.

Neural Mobilization: Gentle techniques to improve nerve gliding and reduce neural tension, particularly beneficial for brachial plexus and radicular symptoms.

3. Trigger Point Therapy

Cervical and shoulder girdle muscles frequently develop trigger points following trauma. We use:

  • Ischemic compression
  • Dry needling (where appropriate and licensed)
  • Spray and stretch techniques
  • Trigger point pressure release
  • Instrumentation-assisted soft tissue mobilization

4. Therapeutic Modalities

Heat Therapy: Increases blood flow, relaxes muscles, and prepares tissues for manual therapy.

Cold Therapy: Reduces inflammation and pain in acute phases.

Electrical Stimulation: TENS, IFC, or neuromuscular electrical stimulation for pain control and muscle re-education.

Ultrasound: Deep heating for chronic muscle spasm and tissue healing.

Laser Therapy: Promotes cellular healing and reduces inflammation.

5. Neuromuscular Re-Education and Strengthening

Post-injury, athletes often develop altered movement patterns, muscle inhibition, and compensatory strategies that must be addressed.

Deep Cervical Flexor Training: The longus colli and longus capitis provide critical neck stability but are often inhibited after injury. We use specific exercises to retrain these muscles.

Scapular Stabilization: The shoulder blade position affects neck mechanics. Strengthening lower trapezius, serratus anterior, and rhomboids improves posture and reduces cervical strain.

Progressive Loading: Gradual introduction of resistance exercises to rebuild strength, endurance, and power.

Sport-Specific Training: For hockey players, we incorporate movements that mimic goaltending positions and demands.

6. Vestibular and Vision Rehabilitation

When neck injuries involve concurrent concussion or when cervicogenic dizziness is present, we provide:

  • Gaze stabilization exercises
  • Balance and proprioception training
  • Visual tracking exercises
  • Habituation protocols for motion sensitivity

7. Postural and Ergonomic Correction

Many athletes have underlying postural issues (forward head posture, rounded shoulders) that predispose them to injury and slow recovery. We address:

  • Workstation setup
  • Sleeping positions and pillow recommendations
  • Activity modifications during recovery
  • Long-term postural awareness and correction

Return-to-Play Protocols

For athletes recovering from neck injuries, we follow evidence-based return-to-play progressions:

Phase 1: Acute Management

  • Pain and inflammation control
  • Gentle range of motion
  • Muscle relaxation techniques
  • Education and activity modification

Phase 2: Subacute Rehabilitation

  • Progressive manual therapy
  • Cervical traction
  • Neuromuscular re-education
  • Gradual strengthening

Phase 3: Functional Restoration

  • Sport-specific exercises
  • Power and endurance training
  • Proprioceptive challenges
  • Simulated game situations

Phase 4: Return to Sport

  • Full practice participation
  • Game-ready conditioning
  • Preventive strategies
  • Ongoing monitoring

Each phase requires meeting specific criteria before progression, ensuring the athlete is truly ready for the next level of demand.

Multidisciplinary Coordination

We work closely with:

  • Primary care physicians
  • Sports medicine specialists
  • Orthopedic surgeons
  • Neurologists and neurosurgeons
  • Athletic trainers
  • Strength and conditioning coaches
  • Mental performance coaches

This team approach ensures comprehensive care and optimal outcomes.

Anthony Stolarz Recovery Timeline: The Complete Story

BREAKING UPDATE - January 24, 2026: Anthony Stolarz returned to NHL action on January 23, 2026, after a 73-day absence, starting against the Vegas Golden Knights. After months of uncertainty, the Toronto Maple Leafs goalie has finally made his comeback.

The Injury Revealed: A Nerve Issue

Stolarz confirmed he was dealing with a nerve injury, which explains the extended recovery time and why the injury took much longer to heal than initially expected. In mid-December, coach Craig Berube stated that Stolarz was not making the progress they had hoped and was seeking a second opinion from a specialist.

The Recovery Timeline

November 11, 2025: Stolarz leaves game against Boston Bruins with upper body injury after first period

Mid-December 2025: Berube announces Stolarz is not progressing as expected and will see a specialist. Team confirms it's NOT a concussion.

December 17, 2025: Berube states "He's not making the progress that we thought he would make." Fans grow increasingly concerned about the lack of transparency.

Early January 2026: Stolarz begins skating on his own, first signs of progress after nearly two months.

January 13, 2026: Stolarz joins the Maple Leafs on their West Coast road trip for practice. Berube says he's "getting pretty close" and "there's a chance" he could return before the Olympic break.

January 21, 2026: Stolarz sent to AHL Toronto Marlies on conditioning loan to get full practice time and conditioning work.

January 23, 2026: Stolarz activated from long-term injured reserve and starts against Vegas Golden Knights - his first game in 73 days.

January 24, 2026 (Game Performance): In his return, Stolarz made 25 saves on 30 shots in a 6-3 loss to Vegas. Coach Berube noted that only the third goal was one Stolarz "would probably want back," suggesting rust rather than structural issues held him back.

What Made This Injury So Prolonged?

Stolarz confirmed the injury was a nerve issue, which explains several key aspects of his recovery:

Why Nerve Injuries Take Longer: Peripheral nerves heal slowly, regenerating at approximately 1-2 millimeters per day. Nerve injuries can involve:

  • Neurapraxia (temporary nerve conduction block): Days to weeks
  • Axonotmesis (nerve fiber damage): Weeks to months
  • Neurotmesis (complete disruption): Months or may require surgery

The "Not Progressing" Update: In mid-December, Berube stated Stolarz was not making expected progress, which is common with nerve injuries where symptoms can plateau before improving.

Why He Couldn't Skate: Nerve injuries affecting the cervical region can cause:

  • Radiating arm pain or weakness
  • Balance and coordination issues
  • Loss of fine motor control
  • Difficulty tolerating neck movements required for goaltending

The Specialist Consultation: Stolarz saw a specialist for a second opinion, standard practice for complex nerve injuries to confirm diagnosis and optimize treatment approach.

Stolarz's Post-Return Comments

After his first game back, Stolarz revealed insights about his recovery and return:

On the conditioning challenge: "It's just about getting my conditioning back where it is. I feel really good. The training staff has done a great job of taking care of me and the strength and conditioning coaches have done a great job of creating a plan to strengthen it and get everything back up. You lose some muscle so you have to get some of that back, but there's no cardio like playing hockey in a full 60-minute game, especially as a goalie."

On game speed: "Probably just the tempo and the speed. You can obviously do your best to replicate those in practice, but once you get out there in a game at the NHL level, the tempo of the play is a lot quicker. And tonight, especially early on, I was a little behind."

On when he knew he'd return: "I think we kind of had a plan, you know, around this time. And a few days ago I started to feel really good and obviously having the opportunity to go down with the Marlies and get those full practices kind of a little longer than our practices are."

What This Means for the Maple Leafs

With 32 games remaining in the regular season, Stolarz's return is crucial for Toronto's playoff push. The team currently sits three points out of the final wild card spot and needs him healthy for the stretch run.

The Goaltending Situation: Joseph Woll and Dennis Hildeby held down the fort admirably during Stolarz's absence:

  • Woll: 11 wins, .912 save percentage in 21 games
  • Hildeby: 5 wins, .912 save percentage in 17 games (12 starts)

With Stolarz back, Dennis Hildeby has been sent back to the AHL Toronto Marlies, giving the Leafs their expected tandem of Stolarz and Woll for the playoff push.

General Nerve Injury Recovery Timelines

For athletes experiencing similar nerve-related neck injuries:

Grade I Nerve Injuries (Neurapraxia): 2-8 weeks

  • Temporary nerve conduction block
  • No structural damage
  • Full recovery expected

Grade II Nerve Injuries (Axonotmesis): 8-16 weeks or longer

  • Nerve fiber damage requiring regeneration
  • Stolarz's 73-day recovery suggests this level of severity
  • Progressive improvement as nerve regenerates

Grade III Nerve Injuries (Neurotmesis): 4-6 months or may require surgery

  • Complete nerve disruption
  • May not recover without surgical intervention

Why Cervical Traction Is Particularly Effective for Goalie Neck Injuries

Cervical traction deserves special attention as one of the most effective treatments for many types of neck injuries that NHL

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