Ex-Penguins goalie Marc-André Fleury bids farewell to Pittsburgh fans on retirement tour
Wild netminder, Quebec native won 3 Stanley Cups in 13 seasons in Steel City
Marc-André Fleury stopped 26 shots in what will likely be his final game in Pittsburgh as the Minnesota Wild beat the Penguins 5-3 on Tuesday night.
Fleury, who turns 40 next month, indicated this season would be his last. Fleury, now in his 21st NHL campaign, played his 100th game with Minnesota on Tuesday.
The native of Sorel, Que., spent the first 13 seasons of his career with Pittsburgh and won Stanley Cups in 2009, 2016 and 2017.
Still a fan favourite in Pittsburgh, Fleury acknowledged the crowd following a video tribute during the first television timeout with the game scoreless as the beloved goaltender received a standing ovation and loud chants in an emotional moment.
"I didn't want to watch or look," Fleury, whose wife, three children and mother were in attendance, later told The Athletic. "My first time back here, I looked [at the video] and I had watery eyes and then I couldn't see. So, I didn't want to look. I just told the ref, 'Drop the puck. Let's go.'"
Fleury receives a standing ovation in his final return to Pittsburgh. 🥹<br><br>(🎥: <a href="https://twitter.com/penguins?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@penguins</a>)<a href="https://t.co/YRl4rYlb9G">pic.twitter.com/YRl4rYlb9G</a>
—@theScore
With Minnesota leading by a goal in the second period, Fleury thrust forward on one save, The Athletic described, used his glove like an oven mitt on another and then did a snow angel to freeze a puck after a mad flurry ended with Lars Eller clanking a shot right off the iron from point-blank range.
When the horn sounded on Fleury's 563rd career victory and a 5-1-1 road trip for the Wild, Fleury received a rousing ovation from the remaining 18,195 fans inside PPG Paints Arena.
While their Penguins teammates headed to the dressing room, team captain Sidney Crosby, who had three assists, and veteran defenceman Kris Letang watched from the bench.
Fleury embraced them and got some advice: "Enjoy the lap," they said before giving him a paddle to the back of his breezers. "And enjoy the moment."
The first star tonight in Pittsburgh:<br><br>Marc-Andre Fleury 🌸 <a href="https://t.co/1lRzaEzHmZ">pic.twitter.com/1lRzaEzHmZ</a>
—@NHL
Fleury then tossed his stick into the stands to a fan and did an on-ice interview.
Before the game during warmup, he posed for a picture with Evgeni Malkin, Crosby and Letang and read signs pressed against the glass that said "Prank 4 a Puck," "I was named after the GOAT," "Fleury Fan Forever" and "Thanks for the Memories."
"I have to say, as a young player in this league, there isn't a single guy, probably ever, who could be a better role model for a young player in the league," Wild second-year defenceman Brock Faber told The Athletic.
"The person he is, the player he is — his day-in, day-out habits, the way he treats his teammates, his family, how hard he works. It's just literally the best role model I could have ever asked for, and it's the same with every guy in this locker room.
"He even moved out the alarm clocks, plugged them in, set the time, moved pictures out. Like, it was to the max." 😂<a href="https://twitter.com/Rupper17?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@Rupper17</a> shares his memory of Marc-Andre Fleury's extremely detailed hotel prank when they played for the <a href="https://twitter.com/penguins?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@penguins</a>.<a href="https://twitter.com/KathrynTappen?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@KathrynTappen</a> | <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/NHLNow?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#NHLNow</a> <a href="https://t.co/VApEfDP01N">pic.twitter.com/VApEfDP01N</a>
—@NHLNetwork
"It's a complete honour," Faber went on, "to be able to share the same sweater as him."
Pittsburgh traded up to select an 18-year-old Fleury first overall in the 2003 NHL draft and he responded by stabilizing the franchise during a tumultuous time in its history.
Fleury leads virtually all major goaltending categories in Penguins' history, including wins (375), games played (667), shutouts (44), playoff wins (62), playoff games (115) and playoff shutouts (10).
With files from CBC Sports