LONDON, ONT.—Antoine Bibeau is a name that is rocketing up the charts.

Bibeau backstopped the Maple Leafs rookies to a 2-0 shutout of the Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday as the Toronto prospects finished their four-team tournament with a 2-1-0 record.

It was perhaps fitting that Bibeau got the 25-save shutout at Budweiser Gardens. This is the home of the OHL’s London Knights and here in May he recorded a 51-save shutout in a 1-0 win by his Val d’Or Foreurs over the Knights in the Memorial Cup.

It was a performance that made the hockey world say, “Wait. Who?”

The 20-year-old was drafted 172nd overall by the Leafs in the 2013 draft and though he might be fifth on the depth chart — maybe even sixth if training camp invitee Cal Heeter catches on — he won’t be that far down for long.

“Whenever I have a chance to make an impression, I want to,” said Bibeau. “Today was that day. I’m going to try to do the same thing every day for training camp.

The six-foot-two goalie made a few outstanding saves in his only performance here, including a reaction glove save that kept the game scoreless in the first period. But his hallmark seems to be holding his ground, with little extra movements.

“I’m a big goalie. I like playing that way,” he said.

Bibeau is most definitely in the mix for the Marlies job, competing with Garret Sparks and Christopher Gibson.

“He is calm and at times we had a few barrages in our own end and that’s what you want from a goalie,” said Marlies assistant coach Derek King, who handled the bench Tuesday. “There was no panic to his game.

“He was very composed.”

Leafs camp opens Thursday with medicals. Outside of Bibeau’s performance, there were a few other players who had a solid rookie tournament.

William Nylander, F

The eighth overall pick from the June draft played only one game, but showed his explosive speed and talent that separated him from the rest of the players. He wanted the puck, he set up plays and he backchecked, twice stopping scoring chances. He picked up one assist on a great pass to David Broll.

Viktor Loov, D

Outside of Nylander, he was the Leaf most were talking about. He’s an imposing physical player at six-foot-two, 194 pounds. A Swede taken in the seventh round in 2012, he is not afraid to lay out a check and looks like he might thrive on smaller ice. “When he hits, he goes through people,” said Marlies coach Gord Dineen. He may have to learn to fight, given the reaction of the opposition whenever he got off a big hit. If he doesn’t make the Leafs, he’ll be sent to Sweden. The AHL is not an option, give his contract with Modo.

Connor Brown, F

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He played twice and had a goal and an assist. At six feet, the 20-year-old, sixth-rounder from the 2012 draft has put together a complete two-way game and feels increasingly comfortable with the pro life that awaits. “I want to play as best as I can at camp and end up in the best place possible.” He could go back to junior as an over-age player, but if he can get serious minutes with the Marlies, that might be the best fit for him.

Brett Findlay, F

You probably haven’t heard of him, but the 21-year-old led the Leaf rookies in scoring with two goals and two assists. He has signed with the Marlies, but is aiming higher. “I came in here with nothing to lose,” said Findlay. “A lot of people didn’t know too much about me and I just tried to make a good impression.” One executive who does know about him: Leafs assistant GM Kyle Dubas, who had Findlay on his Soo Greyhounds roster.