In this edition, Marcoux, former goaltending coach for the Carolina Hurricanes and the Calgary Flames, looks at the amazing story that is Vegas Golden Knights goalie Marc-Andre Fleury.
With four shutouts and two series wins through the first two rounds of the 2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs, Fleury and the Vegas Golden Knights are headed to the Western Conference Final.
It's been an amazing story in the NHL this season, and now in the postseason.
I watched Fleury in Game 6 against the San Jose Sharks on Sunday, a 3-0 win that clinched the second-round series. The game confirmed to me what's been going on with the Golden Knights, that they have full trust in Fleury back there.
RELATED: [Fleury shines again for Golden Knights in Game 6 | Complete Golden Knights vs. Sharks series coverage]
Vegas' first-round series against the Los Angeles Kings was intriguing to me. I saw a Fleury who was trying to out-compete, out-speed and out-battle Jonathan Quick of the Kings. It was like, "Whatever you can do, I can do better." You could tell Fleury was on a mission in that series.
I've watched Fleury since he played for Cape Breton of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and I was coaching in Hull.
Fleury was a good goalie then, but it was hard to know if was going to be really good. I certainly remember thinking, though, that he was a diamond in the rough.
He also was tested mentally at a young age, from banking a puck off a teammate and costing Canada a shot at the gold medal in the championship game of the 2004 IIHF World Junior Championship to facing 32.1 shots per game in 21 games as an 18-year-old NHL rookie in 2003-04 after the Penguins selected him with the first pick of the 2003 NHL Draft.
But Fleury got past all of it and stuck with it.
The story this season also is wonderful because of what Fleury went through in the two previous seasons in Pittsburgh. Matt Murray had emerged as the Penguins future in goal and having two quality goalies like that certainly had to create some distractions.