What might Marc-Andre Fleury’s Golden Knights career have looked like if it never ended?
That question hangs over Vegas because Fleury wasn’t just another goalie in franchise history. He was the first real star in the crease for the Golden Knights, and as of 2026, he remains the only Vegas netminder to win the Vezina Trophy.
He is also the second-winningest goalie in NHL history. Yet after that lone Vezina season, Vegas sent him to the Chicago Blackhawks for Mikael Hakkarainen, even though Fleury was only 36 and still had four seasons left in him.
The timing of that move set off a long trail of alternate-history possibilities. Fleury opened his Blackhawks stint on October 13, 2021, in a 4-2 loss to the Colorado Avalanche. On the same night, Vegas played its first game without him and beat the Seattle Kraken 4-3.
Through 45 games, Chicago sat near the bottom of the standings, and Fleury had a 19-21-5 record with a 2.95 GAA, .908 SV%, and four shutouts. Vegas, meanwhile, was 26-16-3 with a plus-18 goal differential.
Chicago eventually moved him again, sending Fleury to the Minnesota Wild in March 2022. Once he landed with a playoff team, the results changed fast.
He won his first three starts with Minnesota and finished that season 9-2-0 with a 2.74 GAA and .910 SV%. Across his time with both clubs, he went 28-23-5.
Vegas, using Robin Lehner, Laurent Brossoit, and Logan Thompson, combined for a 43-31-8 record, and only Lehner topped 20 wins with 23. The Golden Knights missed the playoffs, while Fleury and the Wild lost to the St.
Louis Blues in six games.
The next season brought another sharp contrast. At 38, Fleury helped Minnesota finish third in the Central Division in 2022-23, while Vegas went on to win the Stanley Cup.
Fleury shared the net with 24-year-old Filip Gustavsson and played 46 games, going 24-16-4 with a 2.85 GAA and .908 SV%. Gustavsson went 22-9-7.
Vegas, by comparison, cycled through five goalies that season: Adin Hill, Thompson, Brossoit, Jonathan Quick, and Jiri Petera. Thompson and Hill were the only ones to play more than 25 games, and they were also the only two to reach double-digit wins. The Golden Knights’ goaltenders finished 51-22-9 behind a loaded roster.
Fleury’s postseason that year was rough. He appeared in two games during Minnesota’s first-round loss to the Dallas Stars and posted a 5.48 GAA and .811 SV% in 76 minutes. Hill, on the other hand, took over for Vegas and went 11-4 on the way to the Cup, finishing with a playoff-best .932 SV%.
Even after that championship, the what-if only gets louder. Vegas did not repeat as Pacific Division champion, and Minnesota slipped to sixth in the Central.
At 39, Fleury played 40 games and went 17-15-5, while Gustavsson played 45 games and went 20-18-4. Jesper Wallstedt also made his NHL debut that season, going 2-1-0 in three games.
Neither team made a deep playoff run. Minnesota missed the postseason, and Vegas lost to the Stars in seven games in the first round.
The Golden Knights leaned on Thompson, Hill, and Patera, with Patera the only one who did not finish with a winning record. Thompson went 25-14-5, and Hill was 19-12-2, a line that looks a lot like Fleury’s numbers in front of a stronger roster.
In Fleury’s final NHL season, 2024-25, he played 26 games and went 14-9-1. Gustavsson was one of the league’s best goalies that year, posting a .914 SV% and 2.56 GAA in 58 games. Minnesota reached the playoffs as a wild-card team and drew Vegas in the opening round.
That same regular season, Hill led the Golden Knights with 50 games and a 32-13-5 record, while Ilya Samsonov went 16-9-4 and Akira Schmid went 2-0-1. Vegas advanced to the second round before losing to the Edmonton Oilers in five games. Fleury played his final NHL game on April 29, 2025.
The numbers make the alternate ending easy to imagine. If Fleury had stayed in Vegas, he would have added another championship to his résumé, giving him one more than Martin Brodeur and tying Patrick Roy at four.
He already owns 117 regular-season wins with the Golden Knights, and based only on what he did with Chicago and Minnesota, he could have added 80 more to reach 197. With a stronger team in front of him, he might even have crossed 200, and Vegas might not have missed the playoffs in 2021-22.
For a player as beloved as Fleury, the “what if” list is long. But the biggest one is easy to see: what if he had finished his career in Vegas instead of lining up against the Golden Knights?
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The catch, of course, is that Vegas is not bringing him back for his all-around game. Olofssons offensive touch has long been the selling point, but the concerns around his defensive impact have followed him as well, and that is where the fit gets more complicated. The Golden Knights know exactly what they are getting in a one-year reunion, which makes the decision feel both practical and a little revealing about how they plan to balance scoring upside against the rest of the ice. [Read more 🡒]
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The what-ifs from that spring keep circling back to one pivotal stretch in the Western semifinal, when a single sequence changed the feel of the series and left the Golden Knights chasing the rest of the way. From there, the discussion turns to whether a different call in net might have altered Vegas path, and whether even a cleaner finish there would have been enough to get through the next round of obstacles waiting in front of them. [Read more 🡒]
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The awkward part for Vegas is how little control the front office had once the issue started to spiral. McPhee and general manager Kelly McCrimmon were reportedly not aware of the decision until it was too late to head off the punishment, leaving the team to absorb the fallout and move on while still dealing with the sting of a costly administrative mistake. [Read more 🡒]
