Calgary Herald

Vegas has a big decision to make on Marchessau­lt

Original Golden Knight will be free agent after putting up a career-best 42 goals

- MARK ANDERSON

Vegas defenceman Brayden Mcnabb was asked if he could imagine not having Jonathan Marchessau­lt in the Golden Knights' locker-room next season.

“No,” he said succinctly, letting that word hang in the air before more fully answering the question days after the Knights were eliminated in the first round of the NHL playoffs by Dallas.

Mcnabb, who was sitting next to Marchessau­lt, could have stopped at no. His short initial answer more than conveyed the feelings among teammates regarding a player who epitomizes what it means to be a “Golden Misfit,” the name the original Knights bestowed on themselves.

Marchessau­lt, who went from undrafted to the Conn Smythe Trophy winner last year as the playoff MVP, is one of just five players remaining from that 2017-18 team. The winger is an unrestrict­ed free agent who just put together his finest season, scoring 42 goals, one shy of William Karlsson's team record.

“I've done everything I can to stay here,” Marchessau­lt said. “I know I'm a big part of that organizati­on. I've proved it along the years. I would love to stay. It's my home. I've been part of the guys that we started this with. It's the most proud thing I've done in my life, profession­ally for sure. I'm happy to be a Golden Knight. I would like to be the rest of my life, but it's not necessaril­y in my control.”

Marchessau­lt said he spoke with general manager Kelly Mccrimmon earlier and the GM told him he would like to bring him back.

“It depends if this is important to them or not,” Marchessau­lt said of whether a deal gets done. “I want to be in an organizati­on that wants me. I have a couple of years left. I don't play it for fun. I play it because I want to win. I want to be in a place that's going to help me win.”

Mccrimmon spoke glowingly of Marchessau­lt.

“He had a career year, so he's done everything possible to put himself in a good position,” Mccrimmon said. “We really like the player, and his value extends beyond what you see on the ice. He's an important guy in our dressing room, so there's certainly a real strong willingnes­s from both sides to have real good discussion­s. That's what we're going to work on.”

Whether the 33-year-old Marchessau­lt returns is not the only significan­t off-season story facing the Golden Knights.

Forward William Carrier is another “misfit” who's an unrestrict­ed free agent, and the Knights have to make decisions on UFAS Chandler Stephenson, Michael Amadio and Anthony Mantha at forward and Alec Martinez on defence.

Mantha was one of three trade-deadline acquisitio­ns, but his future appears shaky with the Golden Knights after he was a healthy scratch during part of the playoffs.

The next few months will determine what kind of team Vegas puts on the ice next season, and the Golden Knights have never shied away from taking big swings.

They could still be playing, but lost a 2-0 series lead to the Stars and fell in seven games, ending the Knights' chances to repeat. The players are still processing the loss.

“I'll probably take a week or so, but then I'll start watching the playoffs again,” goalie Adin Hill said.

“It's kind of hard seeing teams out there that we feel like we were better than if we got to our game. I'm not going to make any excuses, but I never felt like we got to where our game can be. Last year, we saw what we can do in this locker-room. I think you can argue we might've had a better team on paper this year.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Golden Knights forward Jonathan Marchessau­lt is out of contract, but says his preference is to remain with Vegas.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Golden Knights forward Jonathan Marchessau­lt is out of contract, but says his preference is to remain with Vegas.

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