The Wild traded Secret Santa gifts at practice last week, and whoever picked Marc-Andre Fleury decided the goaltender should receive a cane adorned in pink flowers.
"I plead the Fifth," Brandon Duhaime said when asked if he was behind the present.
After all, Duhaime had been the target of a recent string of practical jokes that screamed of Fleury's handiwork. Twice in the same TV interview after the Wild's victory at Boston on Dec. 19 Duhaime praised Fleury's performance at 50 years old (he's 39), and a couple of days later Duhaime's dress shirt went missing.
When the team reconvened after the holidays, Duhaime was spotted in white boots instead of his normal footwear.
"They're pretty comfortable actually," Duhaime said. "Fit really nice."
Fleury, a well-known prankster who switched former Penguins teammate Kris Letang's home and away helmets just last month when the Wild were in Pittsburgh, denied his involvement when asked about the tricks against Duhaime — "Wasn't me," he said — but he embraced the cane shtick, even wielding it as a goalie stick during practice.
But the cane symbolized more than Fleury's age; it also represented his experience.
On Sunday, the future Hall of Famer played his 1,000th NHL game, and his workload is likely to increase: With fellow netminder Filip Gustavsson being placed on injured reserve Monday, Fleury will chase another milestone as the Wild's go-to goalie, the kind of role that led him to these rare feats.