Timo Meier, prior to Friday’s game with the Los Angeles Kings, was tied for the league lead in goals this month with 11.

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SAN JOSE – Forward Timo Meier is adjusting to the challenges of playing through a contract year as some uncertainty surrounds his future with the Sharks organization.
Meier is in the final year of a four-year, $24 million contract he signed with the Sharks in 2019 and he is slated to become a restricted free agent next summer. His next contract will almost certainly be longer and richer, as his present deal carries an average annual value of $6 million.
Meier said Friday that there’s been “nothing too crazy” in terms of progress on a new deal with the Sharks. Meier’s agent, former Sharks forward Claude Lemeiux, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
“It’s obviously there, but I think if you want to be a good player in this league, you’ve got to be able to handle situations like that,” Meier said of playing through a contract year. “Definitely it’s on your mind, it’s going to take a little bit of energy out of you, but you can’t let it influence you too much.
“You go to work and then you’ve got to be the best player you can be. But yeah, it’s just part of the deal.”
With the Sharks presently out of a playoff spot and owners of a 7-12-3 record before Friday’s game with the Los Angeles Kings, speculation has also grown that Meier, 26, might become a prime target for other teams once the March 3 trade deadline nears.
“The focus right now for me is to play hard, play my best hockey,” Meier said. “Obviously, we’re not winning a lot of hockey games. I’m trying to become better for the team and make sure we win.”
Meier is the Sharks’ leader with 177 points over the last three-plus years since he signed his current contract. This season, after not scoring in his first nine games, Meier had 12 goals in his last 13 games before Friday, as he was tied for the league lead with 11 goals in November.
Meier said he has received advice from others who have gone through similar situations contract-wise.
“You get some advice, but you want to be yourself,” Meier said. “There’s going to be thoughts about it, and sometimes you have to get those thoughts and you’ve got to think about it. But for me during the season now, the most important thing is to focus on hockey, not thinking about too much or letting it influence your game.”
Asked if the uncertainly about his next contract weighed on him at the start of the season when the puck wasn’t going into the net for him, Meier said “not really. I don’t think I was playing terribly. Sometimes it just doesn’t go in.
“Call it bad luck or just the bounces aren’t going your way, but then you’ve just got to keep going. Can’t get too frustrated and you’ve got to help the team in whatever way you can, and it’s got to be in different ways.”

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