Joe Pavelski going to ‘step away’ from NHL, hints at retirement

Joe Pavelski is hanging up his skates.

After 1,533 games over 18 seasons, the 40-year-old veteran hinted at his retirement from the NHL on SiriusXM’s NHL Morning Skate on Tuesday.

“I think I’m ready to step away from the game on the playing side of things and go from there,” the forward told NHL Morning Skate on SiriusXM, according to NHL.com. “There’s no plan to play. I didn’t want to use the ‘r’ word, I guess, right away. Just for the fact that there isn’t … nothing set in stone but that is the plan that we’re not playing. I wanted just a little bit of extra time (after the season) to think about it.

“I was pretty comfortable with that plan then, so I didn’t want to keep people hanging and thinking and talking about certain things, but it’s a pretty clear outlook. Over the last month, we’ve given it some more thought. … It’s just a great time for us as a family, as a career.”

The Dallas Stars forward hinted at his retirement in June after his team was eliminated in Game 6 of the Western Conference final for the second year in a row.

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The Wisconsin native, whose 74 playoff goals are the most for a U.S.-born player and were the most among active players, was at the end of his contract with the Stars. He went to the Stanley Cup Final in 2020 in his first season with Dallas, and also got that far with San Jose in 2016.

Selected 205th overall in the seventh round by the Sharks in the 2003 draft, Pavelski made his NHL debut during the 2006-07 season and went on to score 476 goals with 592 assists in 1,332 regular-season games. This season ended with him being fifth among active players for goals and seventh with 1,068 points.

This post-season, Pavelski became the 25th player to appear in 200 playoff games; he finished with 201. He is the only one in that group without a Cup title. He had one goal in 19 games for the Stars in the season’s Stanley Cup Playoffs.

The Stars were the top seed in the Western Conference in these playoffs. After getting through the first two rounds against Vegas and Colorado, the last two Stanley Cup champions, their season ended with a 2-1 loss Sunday night in Edmonton.

“Couldn’t ask for a better opportunity, a better group of guys to be around,” Pavelski said. “There’s been a lot of different emotions down the stretch.”

After 13 seasons with the Sharks, Pavelski was unable to work out a deal to stay in San Jose and instead signed a $21 million, three-year contract with the Stars in the summer of 2019. He then signed consecutive one-year deals, and earned $5.5 million in 2023-24 with a $3.5 million base salary plus incentives based on games played.

He played in all 302 regular-season games for Dallas the past four seasons.

— With files from the Associated Press