Journal Pioneer

Heading into the unknown

Habs captain Pacioretty takes trade rumours in stride as uncertain NHL season nears

- BY BILL BEACON

Max Pacioretty waited till the last minute to confirm that he would go ahead with his annual charity golf tournament. Amid months of trade rumours mentioning his name, Pacioretty wanted to see if he was still a Montreal Canadien before sending out invitation­s for the tournament that helped raise money for both the team’s and his own charitable foundation­s. Pacioretty still wasn’t sure where he’ll play this season as he teed of Tuesday with some teammates, supporters, management and the coaching staff, but he wasn’t going to let that spoil the day. “We wanted to wait until the last possible minute just in case something happened,” Pacioretty said. “Once we invited people, we got overwhelmi­ng support immediatel­y. “I wasn’t contemplat­ing whether or not to do the tournament. I was always in my mind that I wanted to, but you didn’t want to do so if the circumstan­ces weren’t right.” He confirmed that there have been no talks with general manager Marc Bergevin on a new contract. So if negotiatio­ns don’t start soon, it is likely the club will try to deal the high-scoring left-winger before his contract runs out at the end of the 2018-19 season and he becomes an unrestrict­ed free agent. Why Bergevin appears intent on trading one of the NHL’s best left-wingers over the last seven years is a mystery. Bergevin, who also spoke briefly to the media, said he expects Pacioretty to be on hand when the Canadiens camp opens Sept. 14. “I can’t control that situation,” said Pacioretty. “I’ve got to worry about what I can control and that is out of my control when it comes down to it. “Whether it’s Berg or my agent (Allan Walsh), they will have discussion­s that are necessary, but at this point I can’t control any of that.” Bergevin and team president and owner Geoff Molson exchanged polite but hardly warm greetings with Pacioretty. There had been a report that Bergevin and Molson would not attend, but the team released a statement two days later saying that invitation­s were delayed and they would be happy to join in. “There was never any doubt,” said Molson. Pacioretty, who turns 30 in November, is entering the final year of one of the NHL’s most club-friendly six-year contracts, which pays US$4.5 million per season. The New Canaan, Conn. native scored 30 or more goals in five out of six seasons, and 15 in the lockout-shortened 2013-14 campaign, before slumping to 17 goals in 2017-18. The third-year captain has also fully embraced the team and the city, living year-round in Montreal with his wife, former tennis player Katia Afinogenov­a, and their three (soon to be four) children. At Richelieu Valley Golf Club, Pacioretty handled himself with as much grace as his sticky situation would allow.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Montreal Canadiens captain Max Pacioretty looks on from the bench during third period NHL hockey action against the San Jose Sharks earlier this year in Montreal.
CP PHOTO Montreal Canadiens captain Max Pacioretty looks on from the bench during third period NHL hockey action against the San Jose Sharks earlier this year in Montreal.

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