Former goalie of the Canucks and Flames, Louis Domingue, has decided to call it quits in the NHL and head overseas to sign a contract in Russia's KHL. Veteran Canadian goalie Louis Domingue has signed a one-year deal with Sibir Novosibirsk of the KHL, the first overseas career contract for the 33-year-old. <div align='center' class='pl20 pr20'><blockquote class='twitter-tweet' data-lang='en'><a href='https://twitter.com/TonyAndrock/status/1945843476488216928'><div style='border:1px solid #CCCCCC;border-radius:10px;padding:20px;width:300px;'>Loading from Twitter ...</div></a></blockquote></div> The Quebec-born product of Mont-Saint-Hilaire was chosen 138th overall by the Phoenix Coyotes in the 2010 NHL Draft. <h3>Louis Domingue played for two Canadian teams: Vancouver and Calgary</h3> <a href='https://www.nhl.com/player/louis-domingue-8475839' class='lien_marqueur' target='_blank' rel='noopener'>Louis Domingue</a> suited up for 144 regular-season and seven playoff games for the Coyotes, Tampa Bay Lightning, New Jersey Devils, Pittsburgh Penguins, and New York Rangers, as well as two Canadian clubs, the Vancouver Canucks and Calgary Flames. His best NHL season was in 2018-19 with the Lightning, when he went 21-5-0 in 26 games, including a franchise-record 11-game winning streak, as Tampa Bay tied the NHL mark with 62 wins. Domingue saw playoff play in 2022 when the Penguins' goalies were affected by injuries. He came in for double overtime in Game 1 versus the Rangers and went on to make six of seven starts in that first-round series. In his past two seasons, Domingue has only played two games for the Rangers in the NHL, both of which he won. For the rest of his time, he was with the AHL's Hartford Wolf Pack. <a href='https://thehockeynews.com/international/latest-news/another-goalie-moves-from-nhl-to-khl' class='lien_marqueur' target='_blank' rel='noopener'>Domingue is the third 2024-25 NHL goalie to sign with the KHL this offseason</a>, following Chris Driedger and Spencer Martin. He is going to join a seventh-place Sibir team in the KHL's Eastern Conference that was ousted in the first round of the playoffs. Scott Wilson, Nikita Soshnikov, and Toronto Maple Leafs prospect Vladislav Kara are some of the other NHL veterans on the roster.