New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Caps’ Pacioretty makes his return

- By Stephen Whyno

WASHINGTON — For more than two months, New Canaan’s Max Pacioretty considered hanging up his skates and retiring from the NHL.

Tearing his right Achilles tendon twice in less than a year left him in bed after another surgery awaiting more rehab, unable to travel with his kids to their hockey tournament­s or live a normal life. Then he came to the realizatio­n he wasn’t ready to give up on playing.

On Wednesday night, Pacioretty played his first game since Jan. 19 when he and the Washington Capitals hosted the New Jersey Devils.

“It’s important for me to do this for myself but also for my family and my kids to kind of show them that we can get through this together,” the 35-year-old veteran said recently. “I know I have so much more hockey in the tank.”

That’s what the Capitals were banking on when they signed Pacioretty last summer, fully understand­ing he wouldn’t be ready for at least the first quarter of the season, if not longer. The six-time 30-goal scorer jumps in 35 games in, with Washington among the lowestscor­ing teams in the league.

“We got to find a way to score more goals, and that’s what he does,” general manager Brian MacLellan said upon signing Pacioretty to an incentivel­aden one-year contract.

The Capitals did their due diligence, MacLellan said, with head trainer Jason Serbus and Dr. John Klimkiewic­z talking to the surgeon who repaired Pacioretty’s tendon. There’s still some risk involved, but he and the team have taken things slowly after concerns he rushed back last January to play for Carolina.

“Obviously, I had to do something different than the first time,” Pacioretty said. “We’re handling this entirely differentl­y from the surgery to the rehab to the treatment to the progressio­ns . ... It’s just an entirely different program.”

The program involved Pacioretty resuming skating in early November and gradually ramping up to practicing with the team. The Connecticu­t native at the time said getting back on the ice gave him some welcome normalcy.

“Definitely have much more of a smile on my face now,” he said. “I feel like I’m getting my life back.”

Pacioretty is back with a different right skate boot than before because the surgically-repaired tendon is bigger now. But that hasn’t stopped him from feeling like his old self shooting the puck, something he’s done among the NHL’s best since making his debut for Montreal in 2008.

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