"I hope I'm around long enough to benefit from this; that's what I'm trying to do right now," Gionta said. "Obviously you want to be the guy to help bridge the gap. But you want to stick around after it happens too."
Gionta, 37, has one season remaining on a three-year contract he signed with the Sabres on July 1, 2014 but said he isn't thinking of retirement. He likes what Sabres management has done in building the organization through the draft and a few free-agent acquisitions and sees a promising future.
"Things change but you evolve," he said. "I feel good. The body feels good. I intend to play as long as I can. I'm a guy who leads by example so I like being that guy that can come in and do it the right way. I hope that people see that too."
Gionta said he wasn't surprised that Eichel wasn't in the top three in voting for the 2016 Calder Memorial Trophy, awarded to the League's top rookie. Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere, Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid and Chicago Blackhawks forward Artemi Panarin were named finalists for the award Monday.
Eichel was second among rookies in goals (24) and points (56) in 81 games. His points per game average of 0.69 was fourth among rookies to play at least 40 games.
"You think he should be a part of it but you can't argue with the three that are there," Gionta said.
Gionta said Eichel was the most impactful rookie he has played with in his 14 NHL seasons.
"His explosiveness is unreal, his poise with the puck and the way he can separate himself from guys," Gionta said of Eichel. "When he starts to play that give-and-go game is when he's going to be really hard to stop. Sometimes as a young guy you try and do too much, and when he figures that out he's going to be at the top of our League."