Jagr became the third player in NHL history to score 750 goals, joining Gordie Howe (801) and Wayne Gretzky (894), on Oct. 20. Exactly two months later, he scored his 1,888th NHL point to pass Mark Messier for second behind Gretzky (2,857). On Feb. 15, his 45th birthday, Jagr scored his 1,900th NHL point.
"We watched a lot of his shifts from last year,'' Treliving told the Flames website. "Correction, we watched all of his shifts from last year. He still has that ability inside the blue line to hold on to pucks. His mind is at an elite level. He still makes plays.
"Is pace his strongest asset? No, but then you figure how you support speed around him and ultimately allow him to bring his assets into play. He's different than other guys at 45 who depend primarily on pace. If you don't know what Jaromir Jagr's all about by now you haven't been paying attention.
"We want to get better. We feel he can make us better. So you do the deal."
He was voted one of the 100 Greatest NHL Players presented by Molson Canadian last season, and is third in goals (765), fifth in assists (1,149) and fourth in games played (1,711) in League history. He also holds the NHL record for most game-winning goals (135). He won the Stanley Cup with the Penguins in 1991 and 1992, and was chosen for the NHL All-Rookie Team in 1990-91 after he had 57 points (27 goals, 30 assists) in 80 games.