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What retirement? Roenick signs with Sharks

37-year-old, who had said he would retire, gets one-year deal with S.J.

Image: RoenickGetty Images
Jeremy Roenick, who is just five goals shy of 500 for his career, had said July 4 he would retire.

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Jeremy Roenick thinks he still has the skills and the desire to help the San Jose Sharks’ next run at the Stanley Cup.

He’ll even keep his mouth shut to prove it.

The nine-time All-Star signed a one-year, $500,000 contract with the Sharks on Tuesday, postponing retirement for the chance to get his 500th goal while chasing his first championship.

The outspoken 37-year-old center has been a dynamic scorer and a controversial character for most of his 18-year career — but Roenick started his first day in teal with a vow to censor himself.

“It’s going to be a quiet year in terms of the verbal side of me,” Roenick said in a phone interview.

That might be the toughest challenge yet for a 495-goal scorer and a two-time U.S. Olympian who has never been shy about dispensing criticism or praise to any player or coach who crossed his path.

“I’m going to go in there and just really enjoy being on a team that’s run by two of the great players in the league in Patrick Marleau and Joe Thornton,” he said. “I feel like I’ve gotten a second chance at life on a team where I can fit in and just go along with the flow and try to help as much as I can, the ultimate dream being the Stanley Cup.”

The Massachusetts native has 1,170 points in an 18-year career spent with Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Phoenix. Roenick reached the Stanley Cup finals with Chicago in 1992 but hasn’t been back. He signed with Philadelphia in 2001 specifically for a shot at the title, but didn’t get it.

“My motivation is to win a Cup, to try to gain my respectability as a hockey player back, and to give the San Jose Sharks every ounce of Jeremy Roenick that I have in me,” he said. “I might have a lot of people that doubt me, but I think a lot of Jeremy Roenick can be a positive thing.”

Even Roenick acknowledges he seemed finished after he struggled through 70 games last season, saying he lost much of his passion for hockey while scoring just 28 points for the hapless Coyotes.

But after taking most of the summer off, Roenick got a call last month from Sharks general manager Doug Wilson, a Blackhawks defenseman when Roenick broke in as a rookie in 1988. Roenick jumped into 3½ weeks of tough workouts, then signed with the Sharks 10 days before training camp opens in San Jose.

“He knows he’s coming here for hockey, and he knows the other part is not what it’s really about,” Wilson said. “He’s coming in here to earn ice time, and the coach will decide everything. We don’t expect any distractions (from) a guy that comes in willing to play hard.”

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Roenick has feuded with everyone from Patrick Roy to USA Hockey, and he viciously criticized the league and the NHLPA during the 2004-05 lockout. But he already exercised his newfound verbal discipline when he declined to trash Phoenix and Los Angeles, where he chafed at playing on losing teams.

“My opinion is my opinion,” Roenick said. “I do know that I can play this game. I think my energy and my love for the game is very large, and I can bring a lot of excitement into a locker room.”

Roenick is tied with Bobby Hull in 44th place among NHL career scoring leaders. Only Mike Modano (507) and Joey Mullen (502) have more goals among American-born players.

Wilson usually resisted adding veteran players to his young core before last spring, preferring to give every spare minute of ice time to youngsters who might mature into stars. But with San Jose stuck among the NHL’s elite regular-season teams, Wilson is searching for a mental edge that will get the Sharks deep into the playoffs after consecutive second-round exits.

“You bring in guys that are at the end of their run, and they don’t want to look back and have any regrets,” Wilson said. “Nobody can question Jeremy’s willingness to compete. ... We’re building on the experience we had last year. We had some success, but Jeremy — certainly one thing about him, he’s not tentative. He’ll run over his best friend if he has to.”

© 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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