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He hasn’t played a competitive hockey game in more than two years,
but Slovak goaltender Jaroslav Halák never
officially ended his career … until now.

“I’m
done,” he said in a recent interview with
Tomáš Prokop of Denník
Šport
. “I’ll never wear the pads again.”

Halák
played 25
games for the New York Rangers
in 2022-23 backing
up all-star goalie Igor Shesterkin. Since then, there was a PTO with
the Carolina Hurricanes in the
autumn of 2023 that lasted only two weeks. Then in February of 2024
he signed with his hometown club, Slovan Bratislava of the Slovak
Extraliga, but that didn’t lead to any games either.

“We
agreed on the last day of the transfer period, which was already a
pretty crucial date in the season,” Halák was quoted last summer.
“After signing, I evaluated all the pros and cons.”

His last
real shot was last summer, when he was hoping to get one final chance
to try out for an NHL team.

“Last year I completed summer training,”
Halák said.
“I wanted to go on the ice in Boston, but when nothing came
of it, I told myself it was pointless. After that I didn’t even try
anymore. I’m officially ending my career. I would like to thank my
family, friends, fans and especially my wife Petra, who has been by
my side my entire career.”

Former Knights, Sens Goalie Signs In Slovakia
Canadian goaltender
Dylan Ferguson, 26, has signed a one-year contract with HK Nitra,
the
Slovak Extraliga
club announced on Thursday.

As recently as two weeks ago, there were
rumblings that a Czech team was interested in Halák.

“Maybe there was something, but it went away,”
Halák dismissed.
“I wanted to stay in America, especially for the kids,
since they go to school there and the sports training there is better
than in Europe.”

So Halák, who turned 40 in May,
won’t play long enough to match the uniform number 41, which
he wore for much of his career.

A native of Bratislava, Halák was
a ninth-round pick of the Montreal
Canadiens in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft. Between 2006 and 2023, he
played 581 NHL regular-season games and 39 more in the playoffs for
the Canadiens, St. Louis Blues, Buffalo Sabres, Washington Capitals,
New York Islanders, Boston
Bruins, Vancouver Canucks and Rangers.

The defining year of Halák’s
career was 2010. That February, he backstopped Slovakia to a
fourth-place finish at the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, playing all
seven of his team’s games while posting a 2.41 goals-against
average and .911 save percentage. Then in April and May, he led
eighth-seeded Montreal to playoff upsets over Alexander Ovechkin’s
Capitals and Sidney Crosby’s Pittsburgh
Penguins in the first two rounds.

Slovak Ex-Rangers Goalie Returns To KHL
Slovak
goalie Adam Húska, 28, has signed a one-year contract with Admiral
Vladivostok, the
KHL club
recently
announced on social media.

Halák finishes with 295
career NHL wins. He admitted last summer that getting to 300 wins was
part of his motivation for wanting to continue, but he’s since
backed off that stance.

“It’s been two years and I’ve come to terms with not
reaching 300,” he admitted. “Looking
back on my career, it’s been a good one. It would have been nicer
with 300 wins, but I’ll be happy with 295.”

Now, his focus is primarily on his children. At
least two of them are trying to follow in his footsteps.

“Since my son Nathan has been a goalie for
three years, I’ve been focusing on him,” said Halák.
“This year, my older daughter Inna joined him. Since January, she’s
been trying to be a goalie as well.”

Photo © Eric Bolte-Imagn Images.

Another Goalie Moves From NHL To KHL
Canadian goaltender Louis Domingue, 33, has signed a one-year
contract with Sibir Novosibirsk, the KHL club announced on Thursday.


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