Tag Archives: Fleury

Marc-Andre Fleury Was Mic’d Up During Goalie Altercation, Incredible Audio Released – OutKick

  1. Marc-Andre Fleury Was Mic’d Up During Goalie Altercation, Incredible Audio Released OutKick
  2. Blues’ Jordan Binnington suspended two games without pay after throwing punch at Wild’s Ryan Hartman Fox News
  3. Watch: Marc-Andre Fleury mic’d up during attempt to fight Jordan Binnington Sports Illustrated
  4. Bernie Bits: Berserk Binnington, A Busy Saturday St. Louis City SC, Battlehawks, Praise For Dennis Gates, Raves For Masyn Winn. – Scoops Scoops with Danny Mac
  5. Evan’s Daily: Binnington Suspended, Johansson’s Robbery Colorado Hockey Now
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Minnesota Wild bring back goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury on $7 million, 2-year deal

Marc-Andre Fleury is returning to the Minnesota Wild, on a two-year, $7 million contract extension announced by the club on Thursday.

The 37-year-old Fleury is signed through the 2023-24 season. His new deal also includes a full no-movement clause.

Minnesota acquired Fleury at last March’s trade deadline from Chicago for a second-round draft pick. Fleury was part of a 1-2 tandem with Wild incumbent Cam Talbot and went 9-2-0 with a .910 save percentage and 2.74 goals-against average to finish out the regular season with Minnesota. Fleury was tapped as the team’s postseason starter and posted a 2-3-0 record with .906 save percentage and 3.04 goals-against average in the Wild’s first-round loss to St. Louis.

That was Fleury’s 16th consecutive trip to the NHL playoffs, most in league history by any goaltender. The 2021 Vezina Trophy winner is also a three-time Stanley Cup champion – in 2009, 2016 and 2017 – from his 12-year tenure with Pittsburgh.

The Wild were front-runners to retain Fleury’s services after last season but the netminder was looking for more than just a one-year pact. He has a long-standing relationship with Wild general manager Bill Guerin, which helped Fleury in deciding to waive his no-movement clause last March and facilitate the trade from Chicago. Minnesota is facing a cap crunch over the next few seasons, but Guerin was ultimately able to satisfy Fleury on term and dollar to keep him in the fold.

That solidifies Minnesota’s goaltending situation for the moment, if not long into the future. Talbot is entering the final year of his deal and will become an unrestricted free agent in July 2023.

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Minnesota Wild Signs Goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury to a Two-Year Contract

SAINT PAUL, Minn. – Minnesota Wild General Manager Bill Guerin today announced the National Hockey League (NHL) club has signed goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury to a two-year, $7 million contract ($3.5 million average annual value) through the 2023-24 season.

Fleury, 37 (11/28/84), went 28-23-5 with a 2.90 goals-against average (GAA), a .908 save percentage (SV%) and four shutouts in 56 games with the Chicago Blackhawks and the Wild last season. He reached 25 wins for the 13th time in his career. Only two goaltenders in NHL history have recorded more 25-plus win seasons: Martin Brodeur (15) and Patrick Roy (14).

Fleury was acquired from Chicago in exchange for a second-round selection in the 2022 NHL Draft on March 21, 2022. He went 9-2-0 with a 2.74 GAA and a .913 SV% in 11 regular season games with Minnesota. Fleury won his first three starts to become the first goaltender in Wild history to win his first three games (3-0-0 with a 1.34 GAA and a .958 SV%). He earned a win against every NHL team after his victory against the Vegas Golden Knights on Jan. 8, 2022. Fleury recorded a shutout at Montreal on Dec. 9, 2021 to win his 500th career NHL game and appeared in his 900th career game against the New York Rangers on Dec. 7, 2021.

He made his 16th consecutive trip to the Stanley Cup Playoffs in 2022, the most in NHL history by a goaltender. The 6-foot-2, 185-pound native of Sorel, Quebec, went 2-3 with a 3.04 GAA and a .906 SV% in five playoff contests with the Wild.

Fleury is 520-299-85 with a 2.57 GAA, a .913 SV% and 71 shutouts in 939 career NHL games with Pittsburgh (2003-17), Vegas (2017-21), Chicago and Minnesota (2021-22). He ranks third in NHL history in wins, seventh in games played and T-12th in shutouts. Fleury went 26-10-0 with six shutouts and set career-bests with a 1.98 GAA and a .928 SV% in 36 games with Vegas in 2020-21. He ranked third in the NHL in wins, GAA and shutouts and won the 2021 Vezina Trophy and the William M. Jennings Trophy. Fleury has appeared in four NHL All-Star Games (2011, 2015, 2018 and 2019). He is 92-73 with a 2.54 GAA, a .912 SV% and 16 shutouts in 167 career Stanley Cup Playoff games and won three Stanley Cup championships with the Penguins in 2009, 2016 and 2017. Fleury ranks third in NHL history in games played and T-3rd in wins and shutouts in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He was selected by Pittsburgh with the first overall pick in the 2003 NHL Draft.

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Fleury, Wild ready to chase Stanley Cup after trade from Blackhawks

Marc-Andre Fleury is the reigning winner of the Vezina Trophy, voted the NHL’s best goalie by the League’s general managers. He is not a journeyman.

Yet here he was moments after the 2022 NHL Trade Deadline on Monday, fresh off a private plane after being traded for the second time in less than a year.

Fleury being Fleury, he was smiling and focusing on the positive. Joining the Minnesota Wild means one thing above all: a shot to win the Stanley Cup.

“There’s not much that beats winning,” Fleury said. “You can ask anybody who has won. You’re always chasing that feeling, that achievement.”

This is why the Wild acquired Fleury from the Chicago Blackhawks, along with forward Tyson Jost from the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday, forward Nicolas Deslauriers from the Anaheim Ducks on Saturday and defenseman Jacob Middleton from the San Jose Sharks on Monday.

Minnesota has made the Stanley Cup Playoffs eight times in the past nine seasons but hasn’t won a round since 2014-15. After buying out defenseman Ryan Suter and forward Zach Parise on July 13, the Wild will be squeezed under the NHL salary cap starting next season.

Now is the time to go for it.

The Wild (37-20-4) are tied with the Nashville Predators for second in the Central Division following a 3-0 win against the Vegas Golden Knights at Xcel Energy Center on Monday. Although they entered Monday third in the NHL in goals per game (3.67), they were 22nd in goals against (3.20) and 21st in 5-on-5 save percentage (.913).

 

[RELATED: Fleury traded to Wild by Blackhawks | 2021-22 NHL Trade Tracker]

 

Fleury ranks third in regular-season wins (511) and fourth in playoff wins (90) in NHL history. He won the Stanley Cup three times with the Pittsburgh Penguins, in 2009, 2016 and 2017, and led the Golden Knights to the Stanley Cup Final in their inaugural season in 2017-18.

Last season was the best of his NHL career statistically. He went 26-10-0 with a 1.98 goals-against average, a .928 save percentage and six shutouts, winning the Vezina for the first time. Oh, and he was in net when the Golden Knights defeated the Wild in seven games in the first round of the playoffs too.

“It’s no secret,” said Wild general manager Bill Guerin, who won the Cup with Fleury in 2009 as a trade deadline acquisition himself. “I know ‘Flower.’ I know him very well. He’s had a lot of playoff success, and I think he can help all of us. That experience is key.”

Fleury has had his ups and downs. He had to fight for his job in Pittsburgh and Vegas, each time ending up elsewhere. He considered retiring for family reasons after the Golden Knights traded him to the Blackhawks on July 27, then relented.

The 37-year-old has gone 19-21-5 with a 2.95 goals-against average, a .908 save percentage and four shutouts this season. Chicago (22-32-9) is seventh in the Central Division. 

All of that applies here. He was a great teammate while battling with Matt Murray in Pittsburgh and Robin Lehner in Vegas, and you know he will be a great teammate while playing with Cam Talbot in Minnesota. Guerin said each goalie is expected to play a lot.

“I don’t know him so much, but he just seems like a great guy,” Fleury said of Talbot, who made 28 saves in the shutout Monday. “I have a lot of respect for him and for what he’s done, obviously. To me, I always feel like … I don’t know. I don’t like the competition between the guys. I always think we’re both part of the team and we both want to help, so I think we’ll just do whatever we can to accomplish that.”

Video: Bill Guerin joins NHL Tonight to discuss Fleury trade

Guerin said he spoke to Talbot on Sunday and Monday, and Talbot was one of the first to reach out to Fleury.

“I’m so confident in Cam Talbot as a player and as a person that this will go well,” Guerin said. “And you know what? We’re all after the same thing here, and there’s no room for … There’s no room for petty [stuff]. We’re on a team together, and we’re trying to win.”

Family is still an issue for Fleury, but he said Guerin reassured him after the trade. Minnesota is close to Chicago, so Fleury and his family will be able to see each other.

Fleury can become an unrestricted free agent after the season. Who knows what the future holds? But Fleury said he wants to play at least one more season, and he has been around long enough to know how precious these opportunities are.

Perhaps on a better team, perhaps with added snarl on the back end from Deslauriers and Middleton, he can recapture his old magic. Perhaps his happy-go-lucky attitude and championship resume can relieve pressure and increase confidence for a team trying to take the next step.

How can you squeeze your stick when Fleury’s back there winking, smiling, chirping and patting his goal posts?

“I still love playing,” Fleury said. “I still love the feeling of a win, the feeling of competing on the ice and stuff, so I’m happy to be here and have this opportunity to play a little longer this year.”

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NHL trade deadline 2022 – Winners and losers, including Marc-Andre Fleury, the Rangers and Maple Leafs

The 2022 NHL trade deadline has passed. Some teams got better. Some teams didn’t. One team might have made both the best and worst trades of the deadline by itself.

Here’s a look at the winners and losers of the 2022 deadline, from the players who controlled their fate to the teams that took fate into their own hands. A full 32-team report card will arrive later this week.

More: Trade tracker | Grades on the biggest deals

Wyshynski: The Avalanche took their swing at acquiring Claude Giroux from the Philadelphia Flyers, but he had other plans. So rather than go all in for another top six guy, the Avs smartly addressed a couple of their smaller but glaring needs.

I’ve been screaming since the offseason that the Avalanche had to address their lack of veteran forward depth, having lost a few key players in the past year. They did that and more by acquiring Artturi Lehkonen from the Montreal Canadiens at a steep cost — prospect Justin Barron was likely part of the Giroux package — but with 50% salary retention. The Sharks retained 50% on Andrew Cogliano, who hopefully has some fourth-line contribution left in his tank. Nico Sturm brings more physicality than Tyson Jost.

Meanwhile, they pulled off a great trade in snagging defenseman Josh Manson for the Ducks, who addresses a lack of physicality and defensive zone play that will be vital against the crashing forecheckers from Calgary and (maybe) Vegas. Manson also didn’t cost what Ben Chiarot did for Florida. The rich got richer at the trade deadline. These are the types of moves one looks back on fondly during a championship parade.

Shilton: If GM Jim Nill truly believed Dallas could win a Stanley Cup this season, then not trading John Klingberg and/or not making any notable moves before the deadline would be understandable. But the Stars are not built for that type of success this season (especially not with Miro Heiskanen out indefinitely with mononucleosis). So why is Klingberg, a pending unrestricted free agent who has been publicly sour about the lack of a new contract and would fetch a solid-to-good return on the trade market, still with the team?

We witnessed some serious returns for other rental defensemen. Mark Giordano pulled two second-rounders and a third out of Toronto. Ben Chiarot drew a first-rounder from Florida. So did Hampus Lindholm from Boston. There were options that Nill could have exercised to improve Dallas for the future. Now Klingberg is probably going to walk for nothing and keeping him won’t, in all likelihood, change the Stars’ fate this season.

Shilton: Unlike the GM in Dallas, the new GM in Anaheim knows what he doesn’t want — and it’s pending UFAs.

Pat Verbeek traded away four of them prior to the deadline, finding new homes for Josh Manson (Colorado), Hampus Lindholm (Boston), Rickard Rakell (Pittsburgh) and Nic Deslauriers (Minnesota). In return, Verbeek pulled one first-round pick, four second-round picks, one third-rounder, two prospects (Urho Vaakanainen and Drew Helleson) and two players (Zach Aston-Reese and Dominik Simon).

To top off the deadline, Verbeek grabbed Evgenii Dadonov and another second-round selection from Vegas — assuming the trade actually goes through, after an issue was found involving his no-trade clause.

That’s quite a haul for the Ducks. It not only sets them up in future drafts but it makes room for Verbeek to get a look at more players Anaheim already has in its ranks. That will be crucial to decisions made moving forward as he guides the Ducks out of this rebuild and back towards playoff contention.

Loser: Golden Knights GM Kelly McCrimmon

Wyshynski: The Golden Knights’ salary cap had been an absolute mess well before they added Jack Eichel’s $10 million hit this season. They’ve been living on the edge, making specious cap-impacted deals for the last few offseasons, costing them good players and better teammates.

That cap management hindered their ability to add reinforcements at the deadline or seek to shore up their goaltending. Instead, they were forced to trade winger Evgenii Dadonov to the Ducks to open $3.375 million in salary cap space, hoping it will help them bring back some of their injured stars as they hang on to a playoff berth for dear life.

But wait! In a twist that could only happen to the Golden Knights during this hellish stretch of the season, the trade is being disputed by the NHLPA as Anaheim may have been on Dadonov’s limited no-trade list. Sources told ESPN that the Golden Knights claim that no-trade clause wasn’t disclosed by the Ottawa Senators when they traded Dadonov to Vegas last offseason. There are also questions about whether or not Dadonov and his agent submitted a list before this season. Now, it’s an NHLPA and NHL entanglement that has put the trade in limbo.

If it does eventually go through, consider this asset management: The Golden Knights traded a 2022 third-round pick and defenseman Nick Holden for Dadonov last summer in a deal that didn’t make a ton of sense at the time given their cap crunch. Now they’ve traded him to the Ducks along with their choice of a 2023 or 2024 second-round pick. So that’s a second, a third and an NHL defenseman for 62 games of Dadonov. It’s not a first, second and third for Tomas Tatar in 2018, but it’s still bewildering.

If the Dadonov trade doesn’t go through? Now they have a disgruntled player that’s still taking up $5 million in cap space.

Wyshynski: The Bruins won the Hampus Lindholm derby with a massive offering to the Anaheim Ducks, trading them a 2022 first-round pick and second-round picks in 2023 and 2024 along with defenseman Urho Vaakanainen in the multi-asset deal. Then they signed him to an eight-year, $52 million deal with a no-movement clause through 2026-27.

Lindholm is not the player he once was, but he’s still better than anything the Bruins have had on their left side since they let Torey Krug walk. They could pair him with Charlie McAvoy or have him anchor his own unit. Whatever the case, GM Don Sweeney finally landed the defenseman the Bruins have been chasing.

Shilton: Yes, the Maple Leafs landed Mark Giordano to bolster the blue line. That was a priority. But Toronto did nothing to improve its lackluster goaltending situation, although it wasn’t for complete lack of trying.

On Sunday, GM Kyle Dubas did sign Finnish netminder Harri Sateri — fresh from an Olympic gold medal win — to a one-year deal. Per NHL rules though, Toronto had to place Sateri on waivers in order to add him to the roster. Arizona, of course, claimed Sateri, leaving the Leafs no better off. And Dubas didn’t complete any transactions to add another goaltender before 3 p.m.

So, Toronto is where it is. Beleaguered goalie Petr Mrazek was also placed on waivers Sunday, which Dubas clarified was for cap-related purposes and Mrazek cleared so he’s still around. That doesn’t help the Leafs much, though. Mrazek has allowed four or more goals in each of his last four starts (1-2-1) and was recently usurped by rookie Erik Kallgren. It appears Kallgren (who is 2-1-1 with a .930 SV%) will have to continue carrying the load for now, at least until Jack Campbell is up and running.

Toronto’s starter has been sidelined by a rib injury but returned to the ice this week. Can Campbell return to his previous form, and be the top-end goalie he was early in the season? The Leafs can only cross their fingers and hope.

Shilton: After 24 hours of wheeling and dealing, the Kraken now hold 34 picks in the next three entry drafts. That’s … a lot of choices. It should translate into a whole lot of fun for Seattle’s scouting staff, which will basically be building this franchise from the ground up with their recommendations (both in draftable players and trade candidates). Talk about having an impact!

Wyshynski: One questions the philosophy of GM Lou Lamoriello at their own peril, but … seriously?

The Islanders have been one the biggest disappointments of the season. Lamoriello’s response at the deadline was not only not to move a single player from this roster, but to extend forwards Cal Clutterbuck and Zach Parise in new contract deals. There were no takers for goalie Semyon Varlamov, or any of the forwards with term? Maybe these end up being summertime moves. For now, the Islanders’ deadline paralysis was as baffling as their season’s been.

Wyshynski: The temptation was no doubt there to really push hard for someone like J.T. Miller of the Vancouver Canucks, a former Ranger who would have been an ideal acquisition at the deadline. Instead, the Rangers and GM Chris Drury made a series of smart smaller moves that could add up to something positive come playoff time. They traded for Panthers winger Frank Vatrano, Jets forward Andrew Copp, Canucks forward Tyler Motte and Flyers defenseman Justin Braun.

Copp was a coup. He cost a bit — a 2022 second-rounder that could become a first and another 2022 second-rounder — but he’s one of those players that can be effective down the lineup or playing up with the skilled stars, as was the case with the Jets this season. Braun, meanwhile, is a win-at-all-costs defensive defenseman with 100 games of playoff experience, something in short order on their blue line.

Shilton: The inaction from GM Tom Fitzgerald here is a head-scratcher. The Devils aren’t in the playoff hunt this season so they had some pieces that could have been moved, like Pavel Zacha or P.K. Subban or even Damon Severson, and yet, New Jersey did nothing.

Now, you might argue it’s better to complete no trades than to make a bad move. That’s true. Fitzgerald noted on Monday he wasn’t going to trade a player like Severson just because he’s got one year left on his deal, for example, when Severson is helping New Jersey win games now. It’s just that the Devils aren’t collecting victories that often, and the choice to stand pat is different when you’re a perennial contender or up against the salary cap or have already acquired a boatload of future draft choices. That’s not what the Devils have been up to, either.

As it is, New Jersey will enter the final stretch of this season near the bottom of their division and having made no strides in any direction. Fitzgerald may well like his team. Maybe he just has a lot of patience. But in his results-oriented business, patience only stretches so far, for so long.

Shilton: Everything’s coming up Flower!

Monday couldn’t have played out much better for Fleury. He put his time in with Chicago — a place the veteran clearly enjoyed playing — and now gets to reunite with old teammate Bill Guerin in Minnesota and chase another Stanley Cup. At 37 years old, those opportunities are increasingly rare. While Fleury had some control over a new landing spot, the fact Minnesota is a contending team that could make room (by trading Kaapo Kahkonen), satisfy the Blackhawks in return (with a conditional first-round pick) and offer a fellow veteran goalie (in Cam Talbot) to pair Fleury with … it seems like a great match.

There’s no pressure for Fleury to carry the load immediately, he can ease into the role and figure out getting his family settled if needed. Minnesota has needed a spark to help it climb out of a recent funk, too. Given Fleury’s reputation as the league’s most beloved teammate, this deal was a pretty big winner for the Wild, too.

Loser: Other big-name trades

Wyshynski: We had some players like Sharks center Tomas Hertl and Stars center Joe Pavelski that re-signed with their teams — and another in Filip Forsberg that appears on his way to doing so with Nashville. We had other players like Brock Boeser and J.T. Miller of the Vancouver Canucks and Jakob Chychrun of the Arizona Coyotes that are likely summertime moves.

Then we had players like Phil Kessel, Braden Holtby, Tyler Bertuzzi, Paul Stastny and Jeff Petry that were rumored to be on the move but never moved. There was some star power at the deadline in Fleury and Giroux. But for the most part, the flat salary cap meant a lot more singles than home run swings.

Winner: Player empowerment

Wyshynski: If there’s one takeaway from the 2022 NHL trade deadline, it’s how much player empowerment played a key role. Claude Giroux had a full no-movement clause. According to veteran Philadelphia reporter Anthony SanFilippo, Giroux wanted to leverage that into a guarantee that the Flyers would bring him back in the offseason, agreeing to expand his trade options. Reportedly, they wouldn’t, so he didn’t and would only go to Florida, taking away any leverage from Philly. (Please note that GM Chuck Fletcher and Giroux’s agent Pat Brisson both deny this was the case.)

Marc-Andre Fleury agreed to join the Chicago Blackhawks when they gave him their word that he would have approval over any trade they’d make with him, despite not having a no-move clause. He was presented with a chance to play for former teammate and Minnesota GM Bill Guerin, and he accepted. Seattle captain Mark Giordano had modified trade protection and the team’s backing to choose his next destination, and he ultimately chose to play for the Maple Leafs.

This didn’t make for the most thrilling trade deadline, but was certainly a moment where veteran players gladly controlled the narrative.

Shilton: Brett Kulak and Derick Brassard were the best Edmonton could do, eh? It really felt like this team deserved more.

The Oilers have worked hard to turn a corner in recent weeks. After losing six of eight, Edmonton responded with five straight wins where they scored four or more goals in each. More notably, the Oilers goaltending seems to be (somewhat) stabilized and they’re back to sitting third in the Pacific.

So, why did GM Ken Holland do so little to reward his group for their efforts? McDavid and Draisaitl are in their prime, right in front of you. And there are clear indications of buy-in throughout the lineup to gain ground and maybe make a push in the crowded Western Conference field. It just seems like a missed opportunity by Holland to let the deadline pass and not capitalize on the momentum Edmonton has generated.

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Check out the unconventional but hilarious locations in which Kevin Weekes broke NHL trades throughout the week.

Loser: Decorum

Wyshynski: There’s nothing general managers hate more at the NHL trade deadline than juicy details of deals that didn’t happen leaking out to the media.

The Maple Leafs were engaged in trade talks that involved Marc-Andre Fleury. News and notes about those talks were reported by TSN.

“I’ve never had that in our time here, where conversations on something that didn’t happen are out a day later,” said Toronto GM Kyle Dubas, referring to Chicago GM Kyle Davidson. “We rely on other teams to keep that confidential, so it’s disappointing.”

Wyshynski: There isn’t a team that made a move that I loved and a move that I loathed more than the Panthers did at the trade deadline.

Acquiring Claude Giroux is an absolute coup — a veteran leader with loads of playoff experience, top-line production and lineup versatility. On top of it all, a star that’s dreamed about winning a Stanley Cup for so long that his pillow has etchings on it. Did they luck out by only having to give up Owen Tippett, a conditional first-rounder in 2024 (!) and a third-rounder in 2023, because Giroux — for whatever his reasons — would only play for the Panthers? Absolutely, but that’s hockey: How do you think the Rangers ended up with Artemi Panarin and Adam Fox?

I also liked the trade for defenseman Robert Hagg too.

Unfortunately, I did not like that move they made for another defenseman: Ben Chiarot.

I’ve been told incessantly by Montreal fans that the analytics don’t properly tell the story of Chiarot this season. The Panthers had better hope so because, based on the numbers, that story was written by Stephen King. Even if you believe Chiarot can reclaim what made him a solid defender before this season — and without a functional Shea Weber next to him, that’s not likely — this was an overpayment. Like, a torrid housing market level of overpayment. They gave up a conditional first-rounder (top-10 protected in 2022, unprotected in 2024 if necessary) at a deadline where players like Josh Manson, Mark Giordano and Rickard Rakell moved without a first-rounder being sent the other way. Quinnipiac’s Ty Smilanic isn’t a bad prospect, either, and he was included in the deal. You could argue this is around the same price that Tampa Bay paid for David Savard last deadline. You could also argue that Savard is a better player, or at least was having a superior season.

Again, a lot to like and not to like from Florida at the deadline. But you can’t say they weren’t aggressive, and maybe that pays off in their first playoff round series win since 1996.



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Wild adds Fleury, deals Kahkonen, Rask at NHL trade deadline

Stanley Cup contenders are officially anointed between the boards, but the Wild’s off-ice decisions have it acting the part.

With a severe salary cap pinch looming and the team still hovering near the top of the Western Conference despite a monthlong swoon, the Wild signaled its playoff ambitions by adding future Hall of Fame goaltender and reigning Vezina Trophy winner Marc-Andre Fleury in the NHL’s splashiest acquisition on Monday ahead of the trade deadline.

“It’s because of what these guys have done all year, the way that they’ve played and the way that they’ve changed things around here,” General Manager Bill Guerin said. “This is a credit to them.

“I’m doing my job.”

Marc-Andre Fleury career statistics

The Wild acquired Fleury from Chicago, sending the Blackhawks a 2022 conditional first-round draft pick that’ll downgrade to a second-rounder if the Wild fails to advance to the Western Conference Final and Fleury doesn’t post at least four wins through the first two rounds.

Chicago also retained half of Fleury’s contract, a three-year, $21 million deal that’s up after this season when the 37-year-old is eligible to become an unrestricted free agent.

“It’s a great opportunity for me, coming here to a good team, making the playoffs and having a chance of making a run here,” Fleury said. “I’m excited about that.”

Fleury will fill out a new-look tandem for the Wild in the crease, since the team traded Kaapo Kahkonen and a fifth-round pick to San Jose for edgy defenseman Jacob Middleton.

Prospect Jack McBain was on the move, getting shipped to Arizona for a second-rounder after the Wild was informed the Boston College standout wouldn’t sign with the organization. The team also dealt Victor Rask after he was demoted to the minors last month; he ended up with Seattle for future considerations, and the Wild retained half his contract.

Add in the recent arrivals of fourth-line center Tyson Jost and physical agitator Nicolas Deslauriers, and the Wild was aggressive in a roster makeover that gears up for a rugged race to the postseason.

“They’re built for playoffs,” Fleury said.

After a torrid first half that at one point saw the Wild climb atop the NHL, the team stumbled out of the All-Star break, going 4-9 while getting tagged for a league-high 57 goals in that span.

Guerin settled on making a change in net a couple weeks ago, and that’s when he inquired about Fleury.

Still, Guerin went back and forth the last few days on whether the deal would get finalized. Fleury ended up waiving a no-trade clause to join the Wild, and Guerin felt losing a first-rounder for a conference finals appearance was worth it.

And Fleury has a knack for delivering in the playoffs.

He won his first Stanley Cup when he and Guerin played for Pittsburgh in 2009 before going back-to-back in 2016 and 2017 while Guerin worked in the team’s front office.

“He can help all of us,” Guerin said of Fleury, who has the fourth-most postseason wins all-time (90). “That experience is key.”

In 45 games with the rebuilding Blackhawks, Fleury went 19-21-5 with a 2.95 goals-against average, .908 save percentage and four shutouts after an offseason trade from Vegas, where Fleury shined in four seasons.

“He’s fun to watch,” Guerin said. “He’s like watching Kirill [Kaprizov] except a goalie.”

Not only did Fleury finish third in wins, goals-against average and shutouts a year ago, but he was also crowned the league’s best netminder. Fleury was especially sharp in the first round of the playoffs, leading the Golden Knights past the Wild in seven games amid a sparkling 1.71 goals-against average and .931 save percentage.

Overall, he ranks third in NHL history in victories (511), is seventh in games played (928) and has a career .913 save percentage after getting drafted first overall in 2003 by the Penguins.

“There’s not much that beats winning,” Fleury said. “You’re always chasing that feeling and that achievement. Just want to keep doing it again.”

Wearing his trademark No. 29 with Dmitry Kulikov switching to No. 7, Fleury — whose nickname is Flower — backed up Cam Talbot on Monday night against Vegas at Xcel Energy Center but it’s unclear how the Wild will divvy up the workload the rest of the way.

“It is already a great team,” Fleury said. “I think Cam’s a great goaltender also, and I’ll just try to pull my weight, try to do well and try to help win some games.”

How the Wild’s goaltending looks for next season is also a mystery.

Although Fleury hopes to continue playing, Guerin isn’t sure if Fleury will re-sign. Bringing in Fleury, though, meant cutting ties with Kahkonen, a Wild draft pick who won 31 games over three seasons, including a 12-8-3 recent run.

“I had no idea,” Kahkonen told reporters after he was pulled off the ice Monday morning. “Obviously it was shock at first but now that I’ve had a little bit of time here to think about it, I think it’s gonna be a great opportunity.”

Talbot is under contract for another season, and Guerin expected prospect Jesper Wallstedt to leave Sweden to play in North America.

But that’s not all the Wild has to figure out.

Kevin Fiala is on an expiring deal, and the team currently has limited flexibility — approximately $10 million — for its summer spending because the cost of the Zach Parise and Ryan Suter buyouts are increasing to nearly $13 million; they’ll be just shy of $15 million by 2023-24.

“I know what’s coming,” Guerin said. “I know what we’re going to have to do.”

In the meantime, the Wild plans to carry 14 forwards and eight defensemen along with Fleury and Talbot, exceeding the usual 23-man roster limit that expired at the deadline.

The team assigned forward Connor Dewar to the American Hockey League in a paper move to make Dewar eligible to return to Iowa; Dewar is remaining with the Wild, using up one of the team’s four available recalls the rest of the season.

And that’s the next step in this process, the future.

Management rewarded the performance that has the Wild vying for the second seed in the Central Division.

Now the responsibility shifts back to the players for an encore.

“We think they can all help our team,” Guerin said, “and I’m so confident in the group that we already have that they’ll welcome these guys with open arms, and it’ll be a seamless fit for all of them.”

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Marc-Andre Fleury might not be comfortable coming to Washington in a trade, ‘He’s still very much a Penguin’

The Washington Capitals and Pittsburgh Penguins have one of the biggest rivalries in hockey, but over the years it has cooled. The two teams have not met in the playoffs since 2018 and multiple Penguins players have signed with the Capitals (Orpik, Niskanen, Schultz). Both teams have won Stanley Cups and Alex Ovechkin and Sidney Crosby’s legendary statuses in the NHL are cemented.

But the rivalry still apparently lives on for goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, who has become the subject of trade rumors approaching the NHL’s March 21 deadline.

Tuesday, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported that the Capitals were looking into acquiring the veteran goaltender from the Chicago Blackhawks as its young goaltending duo of Vitek Vanecek and Ilya Samsonov has struggled to provide league-average goaltending.

Wednesday, Friedman spoke more on the topic during Sportnet’s The Jeff Marek Show and revealed a potential MAF-to-DC trade would take a lot of convincing on the Capitals’ end.

“I think the Capitals are interested,” Friedman said. “Do you remember when Josh Gorges was going to be traded from Montreal to Toronto and he refused to go? Yeah, he said I can’t do that. I think that’s a very big thing here.

“I am not convinced that Fleury would be comfortable doing it,” Friedman added. “He’s still very much a Penguin and I think sometimes we underestimate how much passion there is in these rivalries. I do think the Capitals are very interested. I do think they’d love to do it. We have two months here, but I’m not convinced that Fleury would feel comfortable doing that at all.”

MAF will likely have a lot of pull on wherever he ends up landing if the Blackhawks do indeed trade him as a rental at the trade deadline. Fleury has a 10-team no-trade list and, according to the Daily Faceoff’s Frank Seravalli, Chicago agreed to not move the future Hall of Famer anywhere unless he was comfortable with it.

Fleury was on the Penguins in 2016 and 2017 as they beat the Capitals in the second round en route to consecutive Stanley Cups. In 2018, he was the starter for the Vegas Golden Knights as they fell in five games to Ovechkin and the Caps in the championship series.

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Marc-Andre Fleury agrees to play for Chicago Blackhawks rather than retire

Reigning Vezina Trophy winner Marc-Andre Fleury has agreed to play for the Chicago Blackhawks, a source confirmed to ESPN’s Emily Kaplan.

The Blackhawks posted a flower emoji on their Twitter account early Sunday morning, then multiple reports said Fleury had decided to play for Chicago.

The Blackhawks had acquired Fleury from the Vegas Golden Knights for minor league forward Mikael Hakkarainen on Tuesday.

Fleury, however, was contemplating his future after his agent, Allan Walsh, said the three-time Stanley Cup-winning goaltender was caught off guard by the trade, with sources telling ESPN that he found out about it via social media.

Sources had said there was chatter that Fleury, 36, might retire if he was traded from Vegas.

According to sources, Blackhawks president and general manager Stan Bowman and Fleury had a phone conversation Tuesday afternoon. Bowman and the Blackhawks wanted to be respectful and give Fleury the space and time he needs to make a decision, sources said.

Fleury is on the final year of a contract that carries a $7 million cap hit. Had he retired, the Blackhawks would not have been on the hook for his salary.

According to sources, Fleury spent the last several days doing “due diligence” asking around about the Blackhawks organization, making sure he would feel comfortable playing there. A source close to Fleury said he would like to play for Team Canada at the 2022 Olympics.

Fleury, a 17-year NHL veteran, won his first Vezina Trophy in 2021 with Vegas. He went 26-10-0 with a career-best .928 save percentage and 1.98 GAA, helping the Golden Knights post the league’s second-best record in the regular season, trailing only the Colorado Avalanche.

Fleury and Robin Lehner won the William Jennings Trophy as the goalie tandem with the best save percentage this past season. In the playoffs, Fleury led the Golden Knights to series wins against the Minnesota Wild and the Avalanche before falling to the Montreal Canadiens in the semifinals.

Vegas GM Kelly McCrimmon was defensive about how the team handled the trade last week, saying the Golden Knights had communicated with Fleury the possibility of being traded several times, beginning at his exit meeting on June 29.

McCrimmon said he didn’t think there would be the same “appetite” next season for Fleury and Lehner to split the net 50-50, which is what precipitated the trade. Both goaltenders combined for $12 million against the cap.

It’s the first time in 20 years the reigning Vezina winner was traded before the next season. Buffalo traded Dominik Hasek to Detroit on the first day of free agency in 2001.

Fleury, who won all three of his Cup titles with the Pittsburgh Penguins, had been the Golden Knights’ starting goaltender from the team’s inception and led Vegas to the Stanley Cup Final in its first season.

Fleury immediately becomes the No. 1 goalie for the Blackhawks. Chicago parted ways with longtime netminder Corey Crawford ahead of last season and instead turned to a trio of youngsters: Collin Delia, Kevin Lankinen and Malcolm Subban.

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Marc-Andre Fleury trade: Blackhawks acquire goalie from Golden Knights, per reports

Marc-Andre Fleury — the defending Vezina Trophy winner — is now part of the Blackhawks, per reports.

The Hawks acquired the 36-year-old goaltender from the Golden Knights on Tuesday in exchange for minor-league forward Mikael Hakkarainen, taking on Fleury’s one remaining year of a $7 million cap hit in doing so.

It’s the second massive trade splash that Hawks general manager Stan Bowman, quickly abandoning his youth movement, has made in the past week. And in contrast to the Seth Jones acquisition, it cost him essentially nothing to land Fleury.

But it’s unclear if Fleury will actually report to the Hawks for this coming season. Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman reported Tuesday there were “rumblings Marc-Andre Fleury might choose to retire if traded from Vegas — for family reasons.” Fleury had only a partial no-trade clause and could not block a trade to the Hawks.

Fleury’s agent, Allan Walsh, tweeted after the trade broke Tuesday that “Marc-Andre will be taking time to discuss his situation with his family and seriously evaluate his hockey future.”

If Fleury does report, the Hawks would have one of the league’s best goalies to complement young Kevin Lankinen.

Fleury went 26-10-0 with a .928 save percentage in 2021 and went 117-60-14 with a .917 save percentage over his four seasons overall with the Knights. He’s a three-time Stanley Cup champion with the Penguins.

The Hawks would have to be creative to fit Fleury’s huge cap hit. Brent Seabrook and Andrew Shaw would be placed on long-term injured reserve, one or both of Malcolm Subban and Collin Delia would be traded in the goalie crunch and one of defensemen Calvin de Haan or Nikita Zadorov would also likely be traded to free up cap space.

If Fleury doesn’t report, however, the Hawks won’t have lost anything (other than Hakkarainen, who scored zero points in six AHL games last season).

Fleury’s cap hit would be completely wiped from the Hawks’ books in that scenario, much like Corey Crawford’s was after he abruptly retired from the Devils in January.

The Hawks’ biggest issue will be waiting for Fleury’s decision, unsure how much money to set aside for next season and how to manage the suddenly crowded goalie room, while other crucial free-agent negotiations take place. The NHL free-agency market opens Wednesday at 11 a.m. CT.

This story will be updated.

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Fleury, Golden Knights set to face Avalanche at Lake Tahoe

Marc-Andre Fleury, the most impactful player in the short history of the Vegas Golden Knights, this weekend will start the highest-profile regular-season game they have played.

“He deserves to be starting this game,” Vegas coach Peter DeBoer said.

Fleury will lead the Golden Knights onto the ice for the Bridgestone NHL Outdoors Saturday against the Colorado Avalanche at Edgewood Tahoe Resort in Stateline, Nevada (3 p.m. ET; NBC, SN1, SN, TVAS). It’s the first outdoor game for the Golden Knights, and the goalie who started their first regular-season, Stanley Cup Playoff and Stanley Cup Final games will be in the net.

Fleury has started 164 of the Golden Knights’ 249 regular-season games and has 98 of their 143 wins since they began play in the 2017-18 season, when they reached the Final.

“His impact to this franchise from the day that they had the [2017 NHL] Expansion Draft has been immeasurable,” DeBoer said of the 36-year-old, who is in his 17th NHL season and won the Stanley Cup three times with the Pittsburgh Penguins (2009, 2016, 2017). “I think he has the perspective. A lot of guys don’t realize they’re in the twilight of their career or tend to ignore it, and maybe don’t look back and appreciate moments as much, but in talking to him I think he has that recognition and appreciation in the moment that this is a special game and a special day.”

Fleury (7-2-0) has a 1.56 goals-against average and .937 save percentage this season, ranking first and second in the NHL among goalies with five or more starts. He has started five straight games with Robin Lehner sidelined because of an upper-body injury and is 3-2-0 with one shutout, a 1.81 GAA and .931 save percentage. Fleury allowed three goals on 55 shots (.945 save percentage) in back-to-back games against Colorado on Sunday and Tuesday.

“This is a steppingstone for our organization, and I think we’re starting to be known around the League as a destination place,” Golden Knights captain Mark Stone said. “Everybody wants to play for Vegas. He was part of the reasoning and one of the main reasons of creating that culture. He’s excited to play. … He’s played incredible.”

Fleury has played two NHL outdoor games, both for the Penguins: the 2011 NHL Winter Classic, a 3-1 loss to the Washington Capitals at Heinz Field in Pittsburgh; and the 2014 NHL Stadium Series, a 5-1 loss to the Chicago Blackhawks at Soldier Field in Chicago.

This game is not solely about Fleury or his start in Vegas’ first signature regular-season game.

It’s more about the scene, the picturesque setting, the first time the NHL will play a game on a golf course with Mother Nature’s beauty taking the place of fans because of the coronavirus pandemic. The previous 30 NHL outdoor games had a combined 1,622,081 fans in attendance.

Video: Breaking down the challenges for players in Tahoe

This event, which will conclude the next day with the Philadelphia Flyers facing the Boston Bruins in the Honda NHL Outdoors Sunday (2 p.m. ET; NBC, SN, SN1, TVAS) is made for TV, with Lake Tahoe and the Sierra Nevada in the background.

“The surroundings speak for themselves,” Avalanche captain Gabriel Landeskog said. “You can see that in pictures, but it still doesn’t really do it justice. Once you’re out on that ice, it’s probably the purest form of hockey.”

On Saturday, the purity will be bottled into a game between two teams that have shown this week how good they can be and how close they are in the Honda West Division.

Vegas and Colorado were picked by many to finish 1-2 in the division, in either order. The Golden Knights have played 14 games, the Avalanche 13, and they’re first and second in points percentage in the West. Vegas (10-3-1) is at .750, Colorado (8-4-1) at .654.

The Golden Knights defeated the Avalanche 1-0 at home Sunday. Two nights later on the same ice, Colorado won 3-2 on Nazem Kadri‘s goal with 41 seconds left in the third period.

The shots on goal in the two games were 55-53 in Colorado’s favor. The total shot attempts were 120-112 in Vegas’ favor.

“They were two hard-fought games, and I think you saw a little bit of everything, the speed and the talent of both teams, some great goaltending in both games,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. “We still have two more against them (in a four-game set that ends at Colorado on Monday) and this one is obviously in a great setting.”

Video: Golden Knights wear mics for practice at Lake Tahoe

The Golden Knights got healthier Tuesday with the return of defenseman Shea Theodore, who missed three games with an upper-body injury.

On Saturday, Landeskog and defenseman Samuel Girard are expected to return, and defenseman Cale Makar will be a game-time decision. Landeskog, a forward, and Girard missed the two games against Vegas while on the NHL COVID-19 protocol list. Makar was out with an upper-body injury.

“They’re getting their captain back in the lineup and he brings leadership, brings skill, brings grit as an all-around player, and Makar is one of the best defensemen in the League,” Stone said. “So, obviously, you’re going to have to key on those guys a little bit more. … They’re going to get a jump from that.”

Colorado center Nathan MacKinnon said the Avalanche getting healthy should give an even better indication of how the teams match up, how close they are and maybe who has the edge.

“They’re a really tough team to play against,” MacKinnon said. “They have high-end skill. There’s no weaknesses. I’m sure we’ll play them sometime in the playoffs and it’s going to be a tough series.”

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