Sharks’ Patrick Marleau likely to stay

More and more it appears Patrick Marleau will be with the San Jose Sharks when he makes NHL history later this month.

Entering the final weekend before Monday’s trade deadline, there have been few — if any — indications that Marleau is being pursued by Stanley Cup contending teams.

Should he remain with the Sharks and be in the lineup for every game, Marleau, 41, will pass Gordie Howe and become the NHL’s all-time leader in games played April 19 when San Jose plays the Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Marleau will play in the 1,762nd game of his NHL career tonight when the Sharks host the Los Angeles Kings. Gordie Howe played in 1,767 games over a 26-season NHL career, with his last NHL regular-season game coming on April 6, 1980, a week after he turned 52.

Marleau’s name is presently not on TSN’s 45-player trade bait board, a list that includes goalie Devan Dubnyk and forward Marcus Sorensen.

Could there be a market for Marleau’s services before Monday’s noon (PT) deadline? It’s possible — but less likely than last season when he had 22 points in 66 regular-season games.

Although Marleau’s skating remains at an elite level and he has played a variety of positions for the Sharks this season, there is a question as to whether he can still produce. Going into Friday’s game with the Los Angeles Kings, Marleau has just three goals and four assists in 38 games.

Some of that has to do with his present role, as he’s mainly been used by Sharks coach Bob Boughner as a fourth-line winger or centermen, playing with less experienced and prolific players than even last season. Marleau, though, did score a goal Tuesday against Anaheim when he was part of the Sharks’ top power-play unit.

Marleau was almost exclusively used as a top-nine forward in 2019-2020 after he joined the Sharks a week into the regular season and had 10 goals and 10 assists in 58 games with San Jose.

With the Sharks well out of a playoff position last February and Marleau seeking another opportunity to be in the postseason and chase the Cup, general manager Doug Wilson worked to find a match. On the day of the 2020 trade deadline, Marleau was dealt to the Pittsburgh Penguins for a conditional 2021 third-round draft pick.

Just five points back of the fourth and final playoff spot in the West Division, the Sharks (17-17-4) are still in the mix for a postseason berth this season but can hardly be considered Cup contenders. If they were to finish fourth, they would be heavy underdogs in the first round against either the Colorado Avalanche or Golden Knights.

Marleau has said last month he would have to consider a trade to another team if the opportunity arose, “but it’s something that we’ll have to think about and see if it’s the right situation.”

That’s an important point because there are teams that could use a reliable bottom-six forward.

The Carolina Hurricanes might be one.

In 2019, they wanted to keep Marleau after they acquired him, plus first and seventh-round draft picks in 2020, from Toronto in exchange for a 2020 sixth-round pick. The key to the deal was Carolina absorbing Marleau’s full $6.25 million salary-cap hit for the 2019-2020 season. Marleau, though, wanted to return to San Jose, and the Hurricanes bought out the final year of the contract.

Carolina, though, has ample deadline salary cap space to add a more high-profile forward if it so chooses. Still, there is a bit of familiarity there.