Selected by the St. Louis Blues in the third round (No. 85) of the 2005 NHL Draft, Bishop was 222-128-36 with a 2.32 goals-against average, .921 save percentage and 33 shutouts in 413 games (397 starts) in 11 seasons with the Blues, Ottawa Senators, Tampa Bay Lightning, Los Angeles Kings and Stars.
A three-time Vezina Trophy finalist in voting for the best goalie in the NHL (2014, 2016, 2019), Bishop helped the Lightning reach the Stanley Cup Final in 2015, when they lost to the Chicago Blackhawks in six games. He is second in wins (131) and shutouts (17) in Lightning history, behind Andrei Vasilevskiy in each (204 wins, 28 shutouts).
"It's very sad personally to see what's happened," Stars coach Rick Bowness said. "Ben was a big reason I came here three years ago, because you don't win in this league without Grade A goaltending. You don't, and he gives us that. Our goaltending this year has been very good, fortunately, but 'Bish,' the way he handles the puck back there and his reads, he has a great hockey IQ for a goalie.
"He reads the play really well. And his ability to get out of the net and handle the puck, you spend less time in your zone. There's a lot of qualities on the ice we're going to miss, and a lot of qualities off the ice because he's a wonderful teammate and he's fun to be around. So he'll be greatly missed."
Bishop said he's heard from several teammates since Nill announced Saturday he could no longer play, and a few attended his press conference Tuesday.
"When it first happened, nothing really hit me," Bishop said. "It wasn't really until I started getting text messages from the guys I played with, the coaches, and hearing from people I haven't heard from in 13 years, 14 years … people that have reached out from all teams I've played with. It hits you, and it's kind of just been waves."
Bishop said he'll remain in the Dallas and stay close with his Stars teammates.
"I'm going to stay in the game," he said. "This is what I love, this is what I know. We'll take a little Christmas break here and then come back and see."
NHL.com independent correspondent Taylor Baird contributed to this report