Said defenseman Brian Dumoulin, "He's the type of guy I want in my life at all times. If I could follow that guy around all day, I'd be happy. … I love that guy so much."
Penguins captain Sidney Crosby was the last to speak and was joking with reporters before the subject of Fleury leaving was raised.
"It'll be tough," Crosby said. "I think playing with someone that long, going through what we did, it's pretty special. We have some great memories."
Forward Evgeni Malkin, who did not speak Thursday, also shared those memories with Fleury and Crosby. Those three, along with defenseman Kris Letang and forward Chris Kunitz, won the Stanley Cup three times together, the first in 2009.
On Thursday, Fleury was asked how he would say goodbye to Crosby and Malkin.
"Probably don't," he said. "Just walk away. … We'll see each other again. Just not every day, but we'll keep in touch."
Fleury, 32, said his desire to play has been a big reason behind his potential departure from Pittsburgh.
"I love to play. I love the game," he said. "I love to be in there and to compete, the challenge of it. I like everything about it. Obviously, Matt's the guy here and he will be for many years. And the salary cap also, I take a big chunk of that [$5.75 million]. So it couldn't work anymore."
In 13 NHL seasons in Pittsburgh, Fleury is 375-216-66 with two ties, a 2.58 goals-against average and .912 save percentage. He holds Penguins records for games played (691), minutes played (39,769), wins (375) and shutouts (44).
He had a difficult time articulating what he would miss most about the city.
"This feels like home for me," Fleury said. "Everything, I guess. Yeah."