TORONTO — The Toronto Maple Leafs have signed Karri Ramo to a professional tryout, but general manager Lou Lamoriello insists that there is no plan right now for the 30-year-old goaltender.

Ramo has been cleared to medically return from a left knee injury (torn ACL and meniscus) and will play later this week for the Toronto Marlies, the Leafs' AHL affiliate. The decision would appear to set the stage for Ramo to replace Jhonas Enroth as the Leafs backup goaltender, but Lamoriello said that's not the case.

"There is no plan right now. In other words, we don't know where (Ramo is) at," Lamoriello told the Canadian Press in an interview on Tuesday afternoon. "He hasn't played in a while. We'll keep every option open. We wouldn't be doing our job if we didn't keep every option open, but there is no plan in place..."

Enroth cleared waivers on Tuesday afternoon, but Lamoriello said Ramo's signing was unrelated.

"It has nothing to do with the decision on Jhonas Enroth," he said. "Things just weren't working out to this point for whatever reason on the starts that he was giving."

Enroth will join Ramo and Garret Sparks with the Marlies.

Twenty-two-year-old Antoine Bibeau, who's yet to play an NHL game, will back up Frederik Andersen at the NHL level.

The Leafs were unhappy with Enroth's early season performance, during which the 28-year-old registered an .872 save percentage, albeit in only four starts (all of them on the second half of a back-to-back). The five-foot-10 Swedish goaltender was signed to a one-year deal in the summer.

"It just wasn't working," Lamoriello said of Enroth, who gave up three goals on 29 shots in his last start against Calgary. "You make these decisions and it's not that you over-react or not that you push a button, it's just that you have a feeling for this."

Toronto has been relying heavily on Andersen with Enroth struggling. Andersen will start for the 21st time in 25 games Wednesday night when the Leafs host the Minnesota Wild.

In the meantime the Leafs will try to determine Ramo's fitness in the net. He was serviceable as a part-time starter with the Calgary Flames last season, posting a .909 save percentage in 37 games before the injury. Whether he's able to regain that past form post-injury remains the question.

"Our Marlies team is for development and it's also to see where players are at and what potentially can help the Maple Leafs," Lamoriello said.