Ottawa Citizen

Marleau’s return to Sharks still feels ‘a little weird’

Ex-Leaf has kind words for Marner and Matthews

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS Buffalo mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/Michael_Traikos

Patrick Marleau is wearing teal again for the San Jose Sharks. He’s sitting next to Joe Thornton in the dressing room and once again playing on a line with Logan Couture. He is back with the team that drafted him, the one where he spent the first 19 seasons of his career.

In some ways, it’s as though he never left. And yet, a part of Marleau thought he’d never return.

“It’s a little weird,” he said on Tuesday.

It’s weird because this part of the story was never in the script. When Marleau left San Jose as a free agent in 2017 and signed a three-year deal with the Maple Leafs, the thought was that it might be the final contract of his career. At the very least, he expected that he wouldn’t have to make a decision on his playing career until sometime in 2020.

All that changed last summer, which Marleau called a “rollercoas­ter ride” of emotions and fears that he might have played his final NHL game.

With Mitch Marner needing a new contract — and Auston Matthews’ five-year, US$58.17-million contract about to kick in — the Leafs were under pressure to create cap space. Marleau, who was on the final year of a deal that paid him $6.25 million, became the casualty.

He was first traded to Carolina on June 22 in what was essentiall­y a salary dump. Five days later, he was bought out, with no guarantee that a Hall of Fame-worthy forward with 1,169 career points would get another chance to play hockey again.

Not that he’s harbouring hurt feelings with how things ended up in Toronto — even if it was somewhat ironic that Marner was the one who ultimately pushed him out.

“No better person to do it for,” he said of Marner, who along with Matthews became close friends of Marleau and his children. “That makes it easy. Those guys are great players and deserve everything they get.”

Anyone who has spent time with Marleau will not be surprised to hear him speak this way. He oozes class. Criticize him all you want for his lack of production during his two years in Toronto — he scored 43 goals and 84 points in 164 games — but he was always valued more for his veteran leadership, selflessne­ss and profession­alism than what he did on the scoresheet.

Marleau became a father figure for a young team looking to take that next step.

In particular, he played a mentorship role for Matthews and Marner. On the road, the three of them regularly piled into a hotel room and watched movies together.

Marleau had 27 goals and 47 points in his first season in Toronto. But last year, at the age of 40, he managed only 16 goals and 37 points.

Sure, he had initially hoped to win a Cup with the Leafs, so there’s some disappoint­ment in not being able to help them achieve that goal. But he has even more unfinished business in San Jose, where he lost in the final in 2016 and where the window seems to be slowly closing — on both the team’s chances and his own career.

“I’m glad the way things worked out here,” he said. “These guys went deep into the playoffs last year, so they know what it takes. They’re veteran guys. Sometimes you go through those hardships to get better. That’s what they’ve done here. They still want that ultimate goal.”

 ?? JEFF CHIU/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sharks forward Patrick Marleau says he bears no ill will against the Leafs organizati­on for cutting him loose to help offset big contracts for Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner.
JEFF CHIU/THE CANADIAN PRESS Sharks forward Patrick Marleau says he bears no ill will against the Leafs organizati­on for cutting him loose to help offset big contracts for Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner.
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