The Globe and Mail (BC Edition)

Weegar committed to Calgary Flames despite veteran exodus

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Defenceman set career highs with 20 goals and 52 points in 2023-24

MacKenzie Weegar wasn’t bitter or upset as he watched friends live out their dreams. The Calgary Flames defenceman just hopes to experience the same feeling one day. He also knows the road leading to that moment, if it does arrive, will likely be long and winding – much like his own path.

A seventh-round pick by the Florida Panthers at the 2013 NHL draft, Weegar climbed the ranks to become an important piece of a roster that captured the Presidents’ Trophy as the league’s top regular-season club in 2021-22.

Two months later after a second-round playoff exit, he was traded to the Flames along with Jonathan Huberdeau for Matthew Tkachuk. And less than two years after that, the Panthers were hoisting the Stanley Cup.

“Happy for the city and for the team,” Weegar said of Florida’s June victory over the Edmonton Oilers.

His sole focus, he insists, is squarely on eventually getting the Flames to the same spot. The landscape, however, has changed drasticall­y since Weegar committed to Calgary on an eight-year, US$50-million contract extension in October, 2022.

Weegar has watched a list that includes goaltender Jacob Markstrom, defencemen Chris Tanev, Noah Hanifin and Nikita Zadorov and forwards Elias Lindholm and Andrew Mangiapane shipped out of town since the start of last season – largely for picks, prospects and young players as part of a rebuild.

Despite that exodus, he remains committed to the Calgary project steered by general manager Craig Conroy.

“It’s easy to get all out of whack when you see guys trying to leave or wanting new contracts,” the 30-year-old from Ottawa said at last week’s NHL/NHLPA player media tour in Las Vegas. “I just focus on where I am and where I want to be, and that’s Calgary.

“I believe in this team. The city has taken me in right away. I feel like I owe it to them to stick around and grind through these years and get a Stanley Cup.”

The hard-nosed blueliner certainly knows what it is to grind.

After winning the Memorial Cup alongside Nathan MacKinnon with the Halifax Mooseheads in 2013, Weegar toiled in the ECHL and American Hockey League for three seasons before making his NHL debut late in the 2016-17 campaign with the Panthers.

He would spend the next five years in South Florida as one of the players tasked with shifting an organizati­onal culture that had experience­d little success over the previous two decades.

“There’s always going to be a piece of my heart and loyalty to that team,” Weegar said. “But now I’m in a different situation … I compete against all 32 teams, not just Florida.”

Weegar set career highs with 20 goals – eight was the most he had ever previously registered – and 52 points in 2023-24 as part of a breakout offensive performanc­e.

“I think my buddies cared a lot more than I did,” he said with a smile. “All I hear is, ‘fantasy, fantasy, fantasy.’ ”

Weegar, however, isn’t punting on 2024-25. He pointed to the NHL’s parity and the fact a couple of teams surprise every season.

It’s the same approach that took him from the ECHL a decade ago to hockey’s premier preseason event inside a swanky hotel on Sin City’s famed strip, where he stood shoulder-to-shoulder with the game’s best.

 ?? DERIK HAMILTON/AP ?? The Flames’ MacKenzie Weegar skates during NHL action against the Flyers in Philadelph­ia in January. He says he feels like he owes it to his team to ‘grind through these years and get a Stanley Cup.’
DERIK HAMILTON/AP The Flames’ MacKenzie Weegar skates during NHL action against the Flyers in Philadelph­ia in January. He says he feels like he owes it to his team to ‘grind through these years and get a Stanley Cup.’

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