National Post

Marleau’s Cup dream starting to fade

- Michael Traikos in Toronto mtraikos@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/ Michael_ Traikos

Patrick Marleau has a beard. It’s a rather thick one. Looks like he’s been growing it for days, if not weeks.

If this were a normal year, we might call it a playoff beard. But in today’s self- isolating world of sweatpants and optional showers, it’s just another sign of laziness.

It’s been almost a month since the NHL was forced to shut its doors indefinite­ly because of the spreading coronaviru­s. The regular season was supposed to have ended last weekend. The Stanley Cup playoffs would have started sometime this week.

Now, they might not start at all. For Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner, who were on an online video chat with their former Toronto Maple Leafs’ teammate on Monday, it means that they might not get a chance to right the wrongs of the season and prove that they can contend for a championsh­ip — much less, advance out of the first round.

For Marleau, who is on his fourth team in the past 12 months, the consequenc­es are even more ominous.

This was not just another post- season for him. It was his last chance at winning the one thing that has eluded him during a career that has spanned two decades: a Stanley Cup.

“The short amount of time I spent there was great,” said Marleau, who had a goal and an assist in eight games since arriving in Pittsburgh at the trade deadline. “The guys were great and yeah, just an opportunit­y for myself to get another shot at winning the Cup with the Penguins.”

Marleau is 40 years old and without a contract for next season. Based on how things have unfolded this season, there’s no guarantee a team will give him one.

Last June, after disappeari­ng in the playoffs, the Maple Leafs shipped him and the final year of his US$ 6.25- million salary to Carolina as part of a salary dump that also included Toronto giving up its first- round draft pick. The Hurricanes bought him out five days later, leaving Marleau out of work and waiting for an offer that didn’t seem like it was ever going to come.

Marleau was sitting at home without a contract when NHL training camps started. And he was still without one when the season began. It wasn’t until San Jose stumbled out of the gates with a 0- 4- 0 record that the Sharks eventually signed him to a one-year deal.

Even then, it was just for the league minimum.

Five months later, Pittsburgh acquired him for a conditiona­l third- round pick that gets upgraded to a second- rounder if the Penguins were to win the Cup.

Not that Marleau, who had 10 goals and 20 points in 58 games with the Sharks, needed any extra motivation. And Penguins GM Jim Rutherford knew it.

As the former general manager of the Hurricanes, Rutherford had acquired Mark Recchi and Doug Weight at the 2005- 06 trade deadline in similar deals. At the time, Recchi was 37 years old and had gone 13 years since winning his only championsh­ip. Weight was 34 and had never won a championsh­ip in his 13 years in the league.

Though their best days were long behind them, Rutherford had hoped that they might turn back the clock for more chance at glory. It worked out better than anyone could imagine. Each scored 16 points, though Weight was so banged up afterwards that he could barely lift the Cup above his head.

Years later, Rutherford brought Ron Hainsey to Pittsburgh in what was supposed to be a depth role for a 35- year- old who had never even appeared in a playoff game. Due to injuries to the rest of the defence, he ended up playing top- pairing minutes for their second of back- to- back championsh­ips in 2016-17.

In an ideal world, Marleau would have also found the Fountain of Youth this spring.

But now you have to wonder.

 ?? Ernest Doroszuk / Postmedia news files ?? Patrick Marleau, left, now of the Pittsburgh Penguins, and Auston Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs will not be competing for the Stanley Cup any time soon. The post-season was to have begun this week.
Ernest Doroszuk / Postmedia news files Patrick Marleau, left, now of the Pittsburgh Penguins, and Auston Matthews of the Toronto Maple Leafs will not be competing for the Stanley Cup any time soon. The post-season was to have begun this week.
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