The Avalanche have released Pierre-Édouard Bellemare, per a team announcement. Bellemare was attempting to land his second contract in Colorado on a PTO as a fourth-line piece.
While this may mark the end of the road for Bellemare in the NHL, don’t expect him to hang up his skates. The 39-year-old said in August that if an NHL opportunity didn’t materialize, he’d likely head overseas to Skellefteå AIK of the Swedish Hockey League, where he played from 2009 to 2014.
Bellemare has 64 goals, 74 assists, and 138 points over 700 career appearances, getting a late start to his NHL career with the Flyers at age 29 after spending the early part of his prime playing in Sweden. That includes 122 games over a previous stint with the Avalanche, where he had a career-high 22 points in 69 games during the 2019-20 campaign.
Despite a lengthy track record of being a serviceable fourth-line center over the past decade, it wasn’t surprising to see Bellemare settle for a PTO. The Frenchman looked like he lost a step last season after signing a one-year deal with the Kraken, limited to seven points in 40 games and serving as a routine healthy scratch for the first time since arriving in North America. He averaged a career-low 9:50 per game and had a diminished effect physically, laying 20 hits after a lengthy history of averaging at least one per game.
Still an international team fixture for his native France, Bellemare has reached the Stanley Cup Final twice, with the Golden Knights in 2018 and with the Lightning in 2022, although he was on the losing end both times. He’d likely still be a decent depth piece for Skellefteå if he decides to return to Sweden (and if there’s a spot for him). He’d join a squad headlined by Red Wings first-round picks Michael Brandsegg-Nygård and Axel Sandin-Pellikka that’s off to a strong 4-1-0 start in SHL league play.
As for the Avalanche, they’re still looking for a veteran to hold down their fourth-line center spot. Look for them to make a claim off waivers in the coming days to address that vacancy.