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Penguins/Lightning Highlights: The magic runs out

Pittsburgh Penguins v Tampa Bay Lightning

Photo by Jaylynn Nash/Getty Images

The Penguins run of hot play comes to an abrupt end

The Penguins’ run of hot play in the past few weeks, led by Tristan Jarry, hit an abrupt halt on Tuesday night in Tampa. Jarry got chased by giving up four goals in the first period, the team in front of him was as overwhelmed and barely made the Lightning have to struggle in what ended up as a 6-1 TB victory with Bryan Rust’s third period goal the only Penguin marker. Enjoy some highlights (lowlights?) if you please.

Pittsburgh’s road trip rolls on in Buffalo on Thursday.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/25/24394148/penguins-lightning-highlights-the-magic-runs-out
 
Wilkes Weekly: Playoff clincher nears for AHL Penguins

wbs.0.jpeg


The WBS Penguins are about to clinch a playoff berth

The Wilkes-Barre/Scrantion Penguins lost their first game last week in comical fashion at the hands of a 10-2 blowout loss to Providence. That’s the bad news, the good news is the AHL Pens rebounded to win on Saturday and Sunday in order to salvage a successful week. Here’s Nick Hart’s report of the games of the week:

Friday, Mar. 21 – PENGUINS 2 vs. Providence 10

Sam Poulin and Boris Katchouk found the net for the Penguins, but Providence racked up 10 goals to take a 3-0 lead in their season series.

Saturday, Mar. 22 – PENGUINS 3 vs. Hershey 2 (OT)

An epic battle ended with Avery Hayes winning the game in overtime on STAR WARS Night. Atley Calvert provided both of the team’s goals in regulation. Sergei Murashov made 24 saves, improving his record to 10-0-0.

Sunday, Mar. 23 – PENGUINS 5 at Bridgeport 2

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton deployed a four-goal first period to sink the Islanders on Sunday afternoon. Poulin, Matt Nieto, Valtteri Puustinen and Katchouk all lit the lamp in the opening frame. Chase Stillman tacked on his first goal as a Penguin during the second frame for insurance.

WBS can clinch a playoff berth as soon as today in their next game against Hartford. The Pens are in action on Saturday and Sunday with two road games in Charlotte. The standings show why those games this weekend could be two of the most crucial games of the season.



The top-two teams in the division get byes from the opening round, which is only best-of-three. Last year WBS got bounced in the short series and their playoffs were over before they ever really got a chance to begin. With Wilkes and Charlotte in a dead heat, those two road games will be of the utmost importance.

Rookie Sergei Murashov is still doing his thing. He’s yet to taste defeat in the AHL level and his penchant to pull out victories against Hershey is a nice feather in his cap too.


Locked in, loving every moment, and just getting started.

Sergei Murashov won his 10th straight game with @WBSPenguins on Saturday, a new franchise record for the longest win streak in a rookie season.

"Honestly, no secret, just enjoy games."
https://t.co/gDQ10scgMW

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) March 23, 2025

Everyone’s other favorite prospect, Rutger McGroarty, has always been in the spotlight this season. McGroarty’s progress and development over this season was illustrated in great detail by Jesse Marshall. A lot to be excited about watching a young player improve and begin to master the AHL level.


NEW: Rutger McGroarty Spring '25 Mixtape. Highlighting his improvements to his first few steps, center drive, ability to hunt open space, and forechecking. Still lacks a top end speed and skill chaining. from him. Overall, I think you'll be impressed.https://t.co/fdOrAuIYRv

— Jesse Marshall (@jmarshfof) March 24, 2025

ATO season​


It’s that time of year where junior and college seasons are starting to end for some clubs and talented youngsters are finding their way into the AHL for the rest of the season. The Pens are expected to add Harrison Brunicke in the near future. Owen Pickering appeared in eight regular season AHL games in spring 2023 in his draft+1, which could be something similar as a road map for Brunicke to make his AHL and pro debut in a few games down the stretch.

2024 fourth round pick Chase Pietila has turned pro and joined the AHL Pens. Pietila has already played in two AHL games, but the presence of Brunicke will serve to be competition to find playing time as a right-side defender. This time in the process is more for acclimation to the new level and using as a jump off point for next season for most and that will likely apply to Pietila as a practice player to soak in as much new information and experience as he can for the future.

26-year old forward Zach Gallant (a 2017 draft pick of Detroit) was signed to an AHL contract after playing the last two years at McGill University. Gallant has appeared in two AHL games so far.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/26/24394397/wilkes-weekly-playoff-clincher-nears-for-ahl-penguins
 
Pens Points: Tampa Bay Blowout

Pittsburgh Penguins v Tampa Bay Lightning

Photo by Jaylynn Nash/Getty Images

The Penguins’ Florida trip ends with an ugly loss.

Here are your Pens Points for this Wednesday morning...​


The Pittsburgh Penguins closed out a two-game Florida trip on Tuesday night against the Tampa Bay Lightning, and right from the jump, it was an ugly night for everyone wearing sweaters with flightless birds. [Highlights]

Defensive prospect Harrison Brunicke was the training camp surprise of 2024 as he nearly made the NHL roster as an 18-year-old. After another year in juniors, he will soon get his first taste of AHL action. [PensBurgh]

The Penguins played the Florida Panthers on Sunday, and the Panthers got the shootout win despite not having star defenseman Aaron Ekblad, who at the time of the game was serving the seventh game of a 20-game suspension for violating the NHL/NHLPA Performance Enhancing Substances Program. Many Penguins players who spoke on the topic said they take a very simplistic approach to avoid troubles with banned substances. [Trib Live]

This could be of interest to many Penguins fans as we approach the playoffs: According to TSN Hockey Insider Chris Johnston, the NHL Draft lottery will take place on May 5 or May 6. [TSN]

News and notes from around the NHL...​


Jakob Chychrun signed an eight-year, $72 million contract with the Washington Capitals on Tuesday. The contract begins next season. [NHL]

The Vancouver Canucks are currently in a Western Conference wild card battle, and head coach Rick Tocchet says he’s ‘emptying the tank’ and putting faith into his players as he and the team finish out a season filled with ups, downs, and quite a bit of drama. [Sportsnet]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/26...panthers-ekblad-nhl-canucks-chychrun-capitals
 
Bryan Rust, Rickard Rakell also going for personal milestones this season

St Louis Blues v Pittsburgh Penguins

Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images

Sidney Crosby is not the only Pittsburgh Penguins player looking to set big scoring marks this season.

The biggest thing Pittsburgh Penguins fans are watching over the next handful of games is when Sidney Crosby will get one more point to secure his 20th consecutive point-per-game season, breaking a record previously held by Wayne Gretzky. It is not going to get much fanfare around the league, or perhaps even from the league itself, and it is not really something that has ever really been on anybody’s radar until recently, but it is still an incredible accomplishment. Like I have said here before regarding it, it is perhaps the best objective, numbers-based testament to Crosby’s dominance and consistency that he has been able to produce at this level for two decades in the NHL. Especially since a significant part of his career took place during one of the lowest-scoring eras in league history, and when point-per-game seasons were nearly unheard of.

In short: It is still a really big deal.

But that is not the only big milestone Penguins players are aiming for over the next couple of weeks.

His current linemates — Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell — also have some big numbers they are trying to reach for themselves.

Let’s start with Rust.

He has scored four goals in the Penguins’ past three games, bringing him to 26 for the season in only 62 games.

That leaves him two goals away from matching his career high (28) and four goals away from his first ever 30-goal season.

The biggest thing that has kept Rust from reaching the 30-goal mark is the simple fact he has never really played in enough games to get there. He has consistently scored at a rate that would easily reach 30 goals (and more), but injuries (and shortened seasons) have kept getting in the way.

These are his per-82 game paces going back to the start of the 2019-20 season:

2019-20: 40.2 goal pace (27 goals in 55 games)
2020-21: 32.2 goal pace (22 goals in 56 games)
2021-22: 32.8 goal pace (24 goals in 60 games)
2022-23: 20.2 goal pace (20 goals in 81 games)
2023-24: 37.1 goal pace (28 goals in 62 games)

It is kind of unfair to have that sort of luck. He has also missed his share of games this season, and with 26 goals in 62 games is on a 34.3 goal pace per 82 games.

Rust has been an unexpected great Penguin during his career. He arrived as a third-round pick that almost nobody would have had high expectations for, made his debut as a depth-piece, and then quickly became one of the young players that injected new life, speed and energy into a team that had gotten stale. He quickly developed a knack for scoring big goals in big moments for Stanley Cup winning teams, and eventually turned himself into a bonafide top-line player that can contribute all over the lineup. He is a great success story for the Penguins player development in the mid-2010s, and a great success story for himself to turn himself into an outstanding NHL player. Because of that, I really hope they help him get four more goals over the next nine games.

I think they will.

Rakell is also going for a new career high in goals, entering play on Tuesday night with 32 goals for the season and just two away from his previous career high of 34 goals and three away from setting a new personal best.

Rakell’s performance has been one of the few very pleasant surprises for the Penguins this season.

After a down 2023-24, his contract was looking like it had a chance to be a really bad deal on the books, and perhaps one that would be difficult to get out of.

The combination of the rising salary cap in the seasons ahead, as well as his production and performance, has for the time being changed that outlook.

They could probably easily move him this offseason if they wanted, and if they didn’t they should at least have some reason to believe he can still be a productive player over the next few years.

It is also going to be kind of fascinating to watch unfold.

Rakell has spent three full seasons with the Penguins (and about two months of a fourth season).

In two of those full seasons (and the two-month stretch after he was acquired) he was one of the Penguins’ best and most productive players. He was great after the trade deadline in 2021-22. He was outstanding in 2022-23. He has been outstanding this season. He was mostly invisible in 2023-24.

I know his shooting percentage has spiked this season and is likely to regress next season, but I am also not convinced it is going to regress so much that he ceases to be productive. Even his career average shooting percentage would have him on a 25-goal pace this season I would take that. Every team in the league would take that. Because I can promise you, you’re not finding a 25-goal scorer on the open market, with future league-wide salary caps of $95 and $105 million for less than $5 million per season.

The Crosby-Rust-Rakell line has been a great source of offense this season, and there is a very clear chemistry between all of them. They have been the biggest bright spots, and now all of them have a very real chance to set personal milestones over the next nine games.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/27...lso-going-for-personal-milestones-this-season
 
Penguins/Sabres Highlights: Pens tripped in another blowout loss

Pittsburgh Penguins v Buffalo Sabres

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It starts off poorly for the Pens and doesn’t improve from there

The Penguins slipped into some old, bad habits and finished up an 0-2-1 road trip that didn’t have a lot go right. One aspect that did was Sidney Crosby scoring a goal to clinch his 20th straight season of producing at least a point poor game.

Unfortunately for Crosby and the Pens, that goal was the only one Pittsburgh scored out of the first eight of the game with the Sabres taking a 7-1 lead after two periods. The Pens tacked on a pair of goals in garbage time but weren’t able to put up much of a fight tonight right from the beginning when they allowed a goal in the first minute of the game.

Pittsburgh has eight more games to go in what’s become a forgettable 2024-25 season. They’ll knock the next one out on Sunday at home before heading out on the road.

Here are the highlights of the game, if you dare.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/27...ghlights-pens-tripped-in-another-blowout-loss
 
Penguins recall forwards Ville Koivunen, Rutger McGroarty

New York Rangers v Pittsburgh Penguins

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You will get to see some of the Pittsburgh Penguins top prospects for at least a little bit.

With the Pittsburgh Penguins on a three-game losing streak, and not looking particularly good in the process, they are making a couple of changes before Sunday’s home game against the Ottawa Senators. The top-two forward prospects in the organization, Ville Koivunen and Rutger McGroarty, are getting recalled from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the American Hockey League.

As long as Wilkes-Barre/Scranton was playing meaningful hockey games it seemed possible — if not likely — that the Penguins were going to let them keep playing important games instead of meaningless games in the NHL. But now that Wilkes-Barre/Scranton has officially clinched its spot in the AHL playoffs, this is a good time to give them a taste of NHL action before going back down to the AHL for the postseason.

If nothing else, it will be something different to look for at the NHL level.

Both players have certainly earned a promotion based on the way they have played in the AHL this season.

Koivunen, playing in his first full season of pro hockey in North America, has been one of the most positive and important developments in the Penguins organization this season.

He is not only leading Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in scoring, he has been one of the top scorers in the AHL (sixth in the league and first among rookies) and is still only 21 years old.

Originally acquired in the Jake Guentzel trade at the 2024 NHL Trade Deadline, he has emerged as a legitimate prospect and looks to have a future as a middle-six, and potentially even top-six scorer.

McGroarty, a first-round pick by the Winnipeg Jets in the 2022 NHL Draft, was acquired over the summer in exchange for Brayden Yager.

While his overall numbers for the season are not quite on Koivunen’s level, he has been outstanding offensively over the past two months and really seen his offense improve. The concensus on his early season performance was that his production was not matching his play. He was unlucky. The results were not always there, but the process was. Now the results are starting to match the process.

McGroarty opened the season in Pittsburgh and played three games before being sent back down to the AHL.

Both players figure to be significant parts of the Penguins roster next season and beyond. Now they get an opportunity to get a taste of what it is like in the NHL and what areas they need to improve over the summer. It is also a chance to see some fresh faces and get a glimpse of what could be ahead in future seasons.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/28...call-forwards-ville-koivunen-rutger-mcgroarty
 
Sidney Crosby makes NHL history with 20th point-per-game season

Pittsburgh Penguins v Buffalo Sabres

Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images

Crosby passed Wayne Gretzky on the NHL’s all-time list of point-per-game seasons on Thursday night.

Sidney Crosby has earned yet another historic achievement during his celebrated NHL career.

Crosby scored his 80th point of the season during the Penguins’ 7-2 loss to the Sabres on Thursday night in Buffalo and has ensured he’ll finish the year averaging a point per game or higher for the 20th time in his career.

Prior to Thursday night, Crosby was tied with Wayne Gretzky with 19 point-per-game seasons and now Crosby sits alone at the top of the list.

Fellow Penguins players Mario Lemieux and Evgeni Malkin each have 15 point-per-game seasons in their careers.

When asked about setting the record, Crosby cited work ethic.


"Work ethic. You have to continue to get better and learn. Even after this long you have to continue to evolve and adjust."

Sidney Crosby's answer on how he's able to score at such a consistent rate for so long is perfect pic.twitter.com/RTYMZS5tH3

— SportsNet Pittsburgh (@SNPittsburgh) March 28, 2025

“You have to continue to get better and learn. Even after this long you have to continue to evolve and adjust,” Crosby said.

The Penguins have dropped three straight games and will be back in action Sunday evening when they take on the Ottawa Senators at PPG Paints Arena. Puck drop is set for 5 p.m.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/28...s-nhl-history-with-20th-point-per-game-season
 
Where the Penguins’ top 25 young players are finishing up the 2024-25 season

Pittsburgh Penguins v Columbus Blue Jackets

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An easy way to keep tabs on where the youngsters are now that a lot of player movement is going on at the end of the various seasons

This is one of the more exciting times of the calendar all around the sport of hockey. Junior seasons have had their playoffs begin, the Frozen Four is underway in the NCAA. The NHL and AHL teams are going down the stretch of their respective seasons. Player movement picks up at this time of year too with younger players joining the pro ranks.

To help keep up with all the activity and excitement, let’s check in quickly with last year’s rankings of the top 25 young players in the Penguins’ organization to talk about where they are at as the 2024-25 season finishes up.

The NHL Pittsburgh Penguins are going no where fast, but the AHL Wilkes-Barre Penguins have qualified for the Calder Cup playoffs. The ECHL Wheeling Nailers are right behind them in terms of an impending clinch of a playoff spot. Wheeling sits in fifth place in the Eastern Conference and should be locking up their ticket to the postseason shortly.

HM: Finn Harding: Brampton (OHL): the former seventh round pick has earned a place on prospect tracking radar. He has signed a contract with the Pens and is now in the first round of the OHL playoffs with Brampton. If/when they are eliminated it’ll be interesting to see if Harding gets ATO’d to join up with either Wheeling or Wilkes.

#25: Raivis Ansons: Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...Hasn’t played since early December and only appeared in nine games this season due to injury.

#24: Kirill Tankov: Split time with St. Petersburg/Avangard (KHL) and VHL...Tankov might be done for the year, the KHL is in the playoffs but he has not appeared in any games and has mostly been unable to make an impact at that level where young players often receive extremely limited roles and even games.

#23: Isaac Belliveau: Wheeling (ECHL)...WBS finally getting back towards healthy on their blueline bumped Belliveau back to the Cheese Toast league. He’s been an impact player at the ECHL level but hasn’t gained much traction in the AHL.

#22: Taylor Gauthier: Wheeling (ECHL)..Gauthier quietly has slightly better ECHL stats than even the great stats Sergei Murashov has put up there this season. Gauthier something of a forgotten prospect but has proven to be a very, very good minor league goalie, particularly from Wheeling. There’s a big block of goalies preventing his upward mobility at this time, but that has been to the Nailers’ benefit to keep a star-caliber player in that league.

#21: Chase Pietila: Wheeling (ECHL)...There ended up being little room in Wilkes for Pietila to see the ice, so he’s been shuffled to the Wheel. There Pietila gets to be reunited with brother Logan (the two played at Michigan Tech together as well).

#20: Emil Jarventie: Tappara (SM-Liiga)...Has only played a handful of games due to injury, I think he might be done for the year.

#19: Kalle Kangas: HPK (SM-Liiga)...Appeared in three playoff games for his Finnish team, they are now eliminated so Kangas is wrapped up for the season.

#18: Joona Vaisanen Western Michigan (NCHC)..The top seeded Broncos survived a 2OT game against Western Minnesota earlier in the week so Vaisanen in a Frozen Four game today against UMass (6:30pm eastern on ESPNU and ESPN+ if you’re interested!)

#17: Filip Kral Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...Back from injury and a decent-sized piece of the AHL team for this stretch run.

#16: Mac Swanson North Dakota (NCHC)...Season has concluded.

#15: Jonathan Gruden TRADED. Gruden is now with the NJ Devils’ organization (AHL Utica). They’re in last place so unfortunately it looks like his season will be ending soon.

#14: Cruz Lucius Arizona St (NCHC)...Season has concluded.

#13: Emil Pieniniemi: Kingston Frontenacs (OHL)...After putting up 60 points in 60 OHL regular season games, Pieniniemi was held without a point in Kingston’s Game 1 win over Sudbury. Kingston was in third place in their conference, they should be hoping for a fairly deep playoff run so it looks now in doubt whether or not Pieniniemi gets any meaningful pro playing time this spring, his immediate future could be helping his OHL team go deep.

#12: John Ludvig - claimed by Colorado...Was waived and is now playing for AHL Colorado Eagles.

#11: Mikhail Ilyin Cherepovets Severstal (KHL)...Has one assist in two playoff games, Ilyin’s team is down 0-2 in the KHL first round series against the higher seeded Spartak Moscow so it might be a short trip but good to see Ilyin continuing to be an important player in his lineup.

#10: Harrison Brunicke Wilkes-Barre (AHL): Now that his WHL season is over, Brunicke has been assigned to Wilkes for the stretch run. Exciting times for him to take a step up in competition and continue his journey in the pros, hopefully for a while this spring. (As a reminder, Brunicke will have to play in the NHL or WHL next regular season again).

#9: Tristan Broz Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...Broz is playing in a significant role in the AHL these days, lining up as WBS’s first line center last game and he stepped up with two assists in the win over Hartford in that role. Broz should be a key piece for the AHL club down the stretch.

#8: Sam Poulin Wilkes-Barre (AHL): Poulin has been red hot with 13 points (5G+8A) in his last eight AHL games. He’s run hot and cold at times, it’s nice to see that Poulin is one of the top players at the AHL level in this moment, that would go a long way to helping Wilkes with playoff positioning and the postseason itself.

#7: Tanner Howe Calgary (WHL)...Howe recorded two assists in last night’s 4-2 win over Saskatoon in the first game of the WHL playoffs. The first one was a vintage Howe play with a shorthanded effort leading to the goal. Howe’s third seeded Calgary Hitmen are on the upswing as one of the more dangerous clubs in the WHL playoffs, they might be going on a run that could prevent his pro prospects for this spring.


Tanner Howe sets the tone with a beautiful forecheck, forcing a turnover and setting up the opening goal of the playoffs. Making an impact right away.pic.twitter.com/W4ZfftunO7

— Pens Prospects (@pensprospects_) March 29, 2025

#6: Vasily Ponomarev Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...Dubas mentioned wanting to see impending restricted free agents prospects in Pittsburgh soon, which Ponomarev is, but he’s still in Wilkes doing his thing for the time being.

#5: Ville Koivunen Pittsburgh (NHL)...The future is now for Koivunen to get a taste of NHL action and for the Pens to see what a season’s worth of development has done for his readiness. Koivunen leaves the AHL with 55 points (6th in scoring) and the league’s top rookie scorer.

#4 Sergei Musharov Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...Murashov is 11-0 in the AHL this season and you can’t do any better than that. Joel Blomqvist’s recent injury opened a door for Murashov to play and he’s doing his part to play his way into the AHL crease more and more with every winning appearance. WBS will have an envious but interesting situation in net for the playoffs as far as which goalie plays at what time but at this rate Murashov is putting his name in the conversation.

#3: Owen Pickering Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...The 21-year old continues to play a regular role on the AHL blueline.

#2: Joel Blomqvist Wilkes-Barre (AHL)...Blomqvist hasn’t played a game since March 2nd (with Pittsburgh) and has been seen occasionally at the NHL Pens practice rink for medical purposes. AHL coach Kirk MacDonald shrugged off injury severity questions weeks ago, it’s unknown if that was a smokescreen or just when Blomqvist will be available to play again.

#1: Rutger McGroarty: Pittsburgh (NHL)...McGroarty came on big time in the AHL in the past few months and has turned that into a reward of being brought back to the NHL for the first time since the first few games of the season.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/29...g-players-are-finishing-up-the-2024-25-season
 
Koivunen, McGroarty recalls and the shape of the next Penguin team

New York Rangers v Pittsburgh Penguins

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What the new players could mean for next season

Two weeks ago, Kyle Dubas kicked around what might happen with recalls from the AHL and yesterday he got around to some action. Up to the big team are Rutger McGroarty and Ville Koivunen.

“I would say it’s a very case by case basis, we’ll evaluate it here each week and layout what we have ahead. I know people are clamoring for it, but we don’t want to bring players up just to give them a test run or appease the fans or media. We have to do what’s right for their development and we’ll continue to do that over the coming weeks.”

The recalls might not have been done for fan appeasement, but it still helps the cause just the same to see a pair of the top forward prospects in the organization get a crack at some NHL regular season action after both performed quite impressively all season in Wilkes.

Gretz touched on the reasoning and benefits behind doing it, but it was also summed up concisely here:


Excellent management. Two players that weren't ready, have improved notably in the AHL all year, now let's see where they stand (so we know what to work on in the summer) and then send them down for the playoffs.

— Michael Farkas (@MichaelFarkasHF) March 28, 2025

Dubas also directly referenced some of the fan response about if this would be in WBS’s best interests.

“I’m not so worried about breaking up the mojo [in Wilkes]...That’s part of the [AHL] level, you’re going to have a different team every night at this time of the year,” was Dubas’ thoughts about shuffling top AHL players up to the NHL for a late-season stint.

It does suck for coach Kirk MacDonald and the AHL Pens in an obvious manner to lose two of their top forwards when they’re pushing for playoff positioning. As Dubas said, at the same time the nature of minor league hockey is one with conflicting interests and fluctuating lineups in a vastly different world from what an NHL fan might be used to.

Among reasons 1A and 1B for getting a long AHL playoff run is development time for McGroarty and Koivunen, but then again in the three and five game formats for early rounds of AHL action there’s no guarantee even if they stay that Wilkes will have more than a handful of postseason games. In the bigger picture, for those players personally there’s much more to gain by getting into the big show for a handful of games to show their strengths and weaknesses for coaching and management to see and hopefully continue on the development path.

While it’s easy to say that these stretch NHL games don’t matter for the Penguins since they aren’t going to build towards anything, that can be an incomplete perspective to take. These games definitely matter when it comes to individuals winning or losing jobs within the organization for next season.

Seeing Koivunen and McGroarty for what they can offer (and maybe what they still don’t have at this stage of their development) is very important. It will help to tell the organization how necessary a player like Phil Tomasino might be for them moving forward. Additionally it gives information for what future off-season plans they might need (or not need) to make when it comes to players like Kevin Hayes and Danton Heinen that could be kept or possibly dealt over the summer.

The Pens are in a period of transition where a big part of last summer’s roster building plans saw them take on players like Hayes and Cody Glass from teams that were willing to pay draft picks to drop salaries. If the Penguins shift gears into a different phase, as Dubas has signaled, they might not be in the market to keep going down that path. In that case, getting experience for the two recent call-ups shows its importance there for these final run of games to have better insight into what the homegrown players have and to not paint over the roster with veterans.

As of now, Pittsburgh has the following statuses for next season:

Top Six forwards: Sidney Crosby, Rickard Rakell, Bryan Rust, Evgeni Malkin
Bottom Six: Tommy Novak, Blake Lizotte, Noel Acciari, Danton Heinen, Kevin Hayes
Potential restricted free agents: Phil Tomasino, Connor Dewar
Unrestricted free agent: Boko Imama

There certainly will be player movement in the form of free agency and trades to add and subtract to the above. There’s a possibility they could look to get younger by dealing a player like Rust or Rakell, but given the sky high reported trade ask for Rakell and the resistance to even consider thinking about moving Rust so far, then again they might not be in a hurry to move those players prior to next training camp either.

As Pittsburgh finally moves to get younger, they could conceivably be looking to build a NHL third line next season around Novak and one, if not two, of McGroarty and Koivunen. Those youngsters might even push to play on Malkin’s line in a best case scenario, much like Tomasino has done at times this year.

Dubas wasn’t fibbing when he said recalls wouldn’t be for fan service to see these young players, but it still provides a little extra juice just the same to see what the organization hopes will be a couple of key players getting the opportunity to graduate to the NHL. That adds some value for everyone down the stretch where the results of the game won’t matter very much. Setting that aside, what the Pens see and learn from Koivunen and McGroarty will very much be relevant heading into an off-season where the organization makes whatever plans for the direction they attempt in building the 2025-26 version of their squad.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/29...lls-and-the-shape-of-next-years-penguins-team
 
Game Preview: Ottawa Senators @ Pittsburgh Penguins 3/30/2025

Ottawa Senators v Pittsburgh Penguins

Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images

Two new players poised to step into big roles today for the Penguins

Who: Ottawa Senators (39-28-5, 83 points, 4th place Atlantic Division) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (29-34-11, 69 points, 7th place Metropolitan Division)

When: 5:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: TSN5, SportsNet Pittsburgh, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Penguins hit the road for the last multi-game away swing of the season next week, starting with a Thursday trip to see the St. Louis Blues and followed by a back-to-back set in Dallas and Chicago next Saturday and Sunday.

Opponent Track: The Senators have lost three of their last six games but still remain on track for the first Wild Card spot in the East. Most recently the Sens claimed a 3-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets last night.

Season Series: The Penguins have yet to win against the Senators this season. Brady Tkachuk scored in overtime at Canadian Tire Centre in December, and no extra frame was needed in a 5-0 shutout at PPG Paints in January.

Hidden Stat: Senators winger Claude Giroux has the most points against the Penguins of any active player with 76 (21 goals, 55 assists) in 69 career matchups with the Pens, per StatMuse.

Getting to know the Senators​


Projected lines (from Saturday’s game)

FORWARDS

Claude Giroux - Tim Stützle - Fabian Zetterlund

David Perron - Dylan Cozens - Drake Batherson

Brady Tkachuk - Shane Pinto - Ridley Greig

Matthew Highmore - Adam Gaudette - Michael Amadio

DEFENSEMEN

Jake Sanderson / Artem Zub

Thomas Chabot / Nick Jensen

Tyler Kleven / Nikolas Matinpalo

Goalies: Anton Forsberg (Linus Ullmark started yesterday against the Blue Jackets)

Scratches: Dennis Gilbert, Travis Hamonic

IR: Nick Cousins (knee)

  • Nick Cousins hasn’t played since a knee-on-knee collision during a Jan. 25 game against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

Player stats​


(via hockeydb, doesn’t include Saturday’s game)


  • The Senators went into Saturday averaging 2.06 goals per game at 5v5, good for 28th in the NHL, per Natural Stat Trick. The team worked on addressing this season-long weakness at the trade deadline, when they traded Josh Norris for a more productive even-strength player in Dylan Cozens.
  • Ottawa has also struggled on the penalty kill. They’re at 77.3 percent on the season, good for No. 19 in the NHL, although the unit has gone 6-for-7 in their last two wins over the Red Wings and Blue Jackets.
  • The Sens have recently struggled with blown leads, including almost giving up a three-goal third-period lead earlier this week against the Detroit Red Wings, but were able to hold strong for a 3-2 regulation win over the Blue Jackets last night. That’s a promising sign for a team looking to make a postseason run for the first time since Chris Kunitz eliminated the franchise in double overtime of the 2017 Eastern Conference Final.

And now for the Pens​



Projected lines

FORWARDS

Rutger McGroarty - Sidney Crosby - Bryan Rust

Ville Koivunen - Rickard Rakell - Connor Dewar

Philip Tomasino - Kevin Hayes - Noel Acciari

Danton Heinen - Blake Lizotte - Emil Bemstrom

DEFENSEMEN

Matt Grzelcyk / Kris Letang

Erik Karlsson / Conor Timmins

Vladislav Kolyachonok / Ryan Graves

Goalies: Tristan Jarry, Alex Nedeljkovic

Potential Scratches: Ryan Shea (upper body injury), Tommy Novak (lower body), Evgeni Malkin (day-to-day upper body injury)

Injured Reserve: P.O. Joseph (upper body), Boko Imama (bicep)

  • The Penguins will get another look at two players who could be competing for a roster spot in next fall’s training camp with the arrival of Ville Koivunen and Rutger McGroarty from Wilkes/Barre-Scranton. Calling up these two top WBS scorers is something head coach Mike Sullivan said he and Kyle Dubas have “talked about for a little bit,” per Penguins team reporter Michelle Crechiolo.

Rutger McGroarty and Ville Koivunen were both put next to Sid in the lockeroom pic.twitter.com/4IymDrYdU6

— Hailey Hunter (@TheHaileyHunter) March 29, 2025

Sidney Crosby is taking a ton of extra time at the end of practice today to work with the kids. #LetsGoPens

He, McGroarty, Koivunen, Bemstrom, and Tomasino are the only forwards left on the ice. Long after the conclusion of formal practice.

— Kelsey Surmacz (@kelsey_surmacz4) March 29, 2025
  • Boko Imama is out for the rest of the season after undergoing surgery Saturday on a bicep injury, the Penguins announced Saturday.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/30...ottawa-senators-pittsburgh-penguins-3-30-2025
 
Penguins/Senators Recap: Crosby scores game’s only goal in OT

Ottawa Senators v Pittsburgh Penguins

Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images

The Pens’ captain takes the last shot and Pittsburgh gets the first and last goal Sunday against Ottawa

Pregame​


It’s time for some fresh faces for the Penguins! Rutger McGroarty is back for his fourth NHL game of the season on his 21st birthday (with the gift of playing on Sidney Crosby’s line) and Ville Koivunen makes his NHL debut. Vlad Kolyachonok takes a night off as a healthy scratch. The coaches decide to stick with Tristan Jarry in the net, despite his getting pulled early in the last two games.


Welcome to the @NHL, Ville Koivunen! pic.twitter.com/l5mVgxcR79

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) March 30, 2025

The Ottawa Senators roll into town with the following lines.


Projected lines Pittsburgh #GoSensGo | @UpperDeckSports pic.twitter.com/RGlXTHA9hP

— Ottawa Senators (@Senators) March 30, 2025

First period​


Ottawa takes the first penalty 6:24 into the game, Koivunen is on the top power play and gets a couple looks in front of the net for his first stand out moment in the NHL. Crosby sets Rickard Rakell up for a glorious chance but the puck rolls off his stick before he can pull the trigger on the shot.

The Penguins give Sidney Crosby a video for his recent achievement of being the first NHL player to record at least a point per game in 20 seasons. Always a good time with names like Armstrong, Malone and Kunitz involved to share some memories and praise for their former teammate.


Sidney Crosby receives a video tribute and standing ovation in his first home game since passing Wayne Gretzky for the most point-per-game seasons in @NHL history https://t.co/Admu9ki9hm pic.twitter.com/OcJRObRN58

— SportsNet Pittsburgh (@SNPittsburgh) March 30, 2025

Lots of good goaltending at both ends takes us to the end of the period. No goals in the opening frame, but it’s not for a lack of chances. Moneypuck has both Ottawa and Pittsburgh at slightly over 1.5 expected goals in the first 20. But it’s 0-0 courtesy of Jarry and Anton Forsberg’s strong play.

Second period​


Rakell hits a post just about as square and hard as possible. So close to the game’s first goal but no dice.

Unlike the first period that was entertaining, the second bogs down more. Crosby steals a puck away from Nick Jensen and nearly sets up a goal but Forsberg is ready.

Ryan Graves takes a penalty with 6 seconds go. His crime? Brady Tkachuk skating directly into Graves and getting shaken up over a collision of two players not looking where they were going.

We’re still looking for an icebreaker on the scoreboard after 40 minutes, surprisingly enough.

Third period​


6’5” Ottawa defender Tyler Kleven punishes Philip Tomasino with a pair of hits down low. Tomasino took exception and went after the much bigger player after the whistle and Kleven just kinda stood there. Reminiscent of a little dog getting mad a a big dog who doesn’t even bother to react, makes it that much worse.

Late in the third period Crosby and Artem Zub are both shown the penalty box for exchanging hacks and punches after the whistle. Crosby serves his two minutes, gets on the ice and draws a Pittsburgh power play with three second left in regulation.

Overtime​


We’ve waited this long for a goal so it’s only fitting that the Penguin power play gets pretty deep 1:16 into OT before who else but Crosby wins the game. Erik Karlsson makes a one-timable pass over for the captain and he hammers a shot hard to the short-side that finally beats a goalie. 1-0, game is over, Pens win.


SIDNEY CROSBY SCORES THE OVERTIME WINNER

Penguins win 1-0! pic.twitter.com/QLkICv9jRT

— TSN (@TSN_Sports) March 30, 2025

Some thoughts​

  • Kudos to Sportsnet Pittsburgh for not cutting away during the first TV timeout and showing the Crosby 20th season point-per-game video instead. Nice touch and reward from the network to those dedicated enough to tune into a late-season game.
  • Add in Hailey Hunter doing an interview with Koivunen’s parents right in the stands and getting it on air before the start of the second period it was a really nice game for the broadcast team. Well done to all involved.
  • Now onto the key topic, impressions of the youngsters. McGroarty definitely has progressed from the fall with his acceleration and first steps, nice to see the work paying off and experience gained turn him into a more confident and noticeable player, showing up on the backcheck in one instance in the second period. Pretty good return with an official stat line of 3 SOG (5 attempts), 4 hits and a blocked shot in 16:57 worth of work.
  • Similarly, Koivunen was impressive. He didn’t look out of place on the top power play and had no problems going down low. Koivunen was effective all over the ice, at one point he lifted a stick of an opponent to take the puck back. Nice first impression, Koivunen’s marks from the scorekeeper were 2 SOG (7 attempts), 1 giveaway, 1 takeaway in 17:28 of ice-time.
  • Rakell seamlessly sliding into center when necessary is another reminder for just how good NHL players are at hockey, especially that top echelon of player. He was great today in the middle.
  • After giving up 13 total goals in the last two games, at least the Pens were able to shut things down defensively to not lose in a blow out, which in turn means Jarry got his last few games out of his system and performed really well. Every decision in goal is an interesting one with the way things have gone so it was with Jarry getting a nod yet again despite the last two games going poorly. On the other hand even without starting those games Alex Nedeljkovic has played way more minutes than Jarry (78-41) in the last two and given up five total goals himself so it’s not like the other option has been a great one lately either. Perhaps that’s close to all that went into the decision but Jarry’s performance down the stretch and what that might mean for where it leaves him for next season is one of the more interesting Penguin storylines going on. Stopping all 31 shots and earning his first shutout of the season makes for the latest unpredictable twist of Jarry’s season. What happens next is anyone’s guess!
  • Crosby amped up the dramatics to wait until OT to extend his point streak to now 10 games. This is what Kyle Dubas meant when he said that players like Crosby were too good to ensure that Pittsburgh would get an elite draft position (outside some lottery luck, anyways). Crosby was the best player on the ice in this game, as he still often is. He’s going to play hard and more often than not he’s going to find individual success that helps raise his team.

The Pens get a few days off to rest and regroup for their last extended road trip that starts Thursday night in St. Louis.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/30...-only-goal-in-ot-ottawa-pittsburgh-highlights
 
Sidney Crosby named Penguins’ team MVP for 13th time

NHL: Ottawa Senators at Pittsburgh Penguins

Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Crosby has been the Penguins’ MVP for five seasons in a row.

Sidney Crosby has been named Penguins’ Most Valuable Player for the 13th time in his career.

The Penguins announced Monday that Crosby was picked by his teammates as the Penguins’ Most Valuable Player.


Sidney Crosby and Noel Acciari are recipients of the 2024.25 Penguins Team Awards!

Crosby was voted Team MVP, presented by @PPG, and Players’ Player, presented by @UPMC. Acciari was named Unsung Hero, presented by PNC Private Bank.

Details: https://t.co/EMg0GX2O2o pic.twitter.com/5Tzk4YWo70

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) March 31, 2025

Crosby has been the Penguins’ MVP for five seasons in a row and has passed Mario Lemieux for the most MVP selections in team history.

Earlier this month, Crosby set a new NHL record with 20 consecutive point-per-game seasons, an achievement he has attained during each of his seasons he has played in his career.

Crosby also given the Penguins’ Players’ Player Award​


In addition to being named team MVP, Crosby also was recognized by his teammates for his on-ice and off-ice leadership for the 7th time in his career.

Noel Acciari recognized as team’s Unsung Hero​


Penguins forward Noel Acciari was also recognized by his teammates and given the Unsung Hero Award, which goes to a player who the team says ‘constantly gives 150% effort but receives little recognition.’

Acciari has played in every game this season for the Penguins so far and leads the team in hits and blocked shots, often spending time on the penalty kill for the team.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/3/31/24398124/sidney-crosby-named-penguins-team-mvp-for-13th-time
 
Penguins open roster spot, waive Emil Bemstrom

Pittsburgh Penguins v Philadelphia Flyers

Photo by Len Redkoles/NHLI via Getty Images

Bemstrom may be headed to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton if he clears waivers at 2 p.m. ET.

The Penguins will have another roster spot open by this afternoon.

The Pens placed Emil Bemstrom on waivers Monday, per Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman.

If he clears waivers by 2 p.m. ET tomorrow, Bemstrom can join the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins for their playoff push.


Emil Bemstrom on waivers by #Pens, per @FriedgeHNIC.

Bemstrom was on #WBSPens roster on #NHLTradeDeadline day, so if he clears waivers tomorrow he can join AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.

He didn't need waivers earlier this month because he hadn't yet appeared in 10 NHL games.

— Tony Androckitis* (@TonyAndrock) March 31, 2025

Bemstrom cleared waivers at the beginning of the season after failing to make the Columbus Blue Jackets roster out of training camp. He needs to clear again because he’s played more than 10 NHL games since he was acquired by the Penguins in the Alex Nylander trade on Feb. 22. There’s reason to believe he will clear, being as Bemstrom is ineligible to play for another team this season since it’s after the trade deadline.

The forward recorded an assist on a late goal in the Pens’ March 15 blowout of the visiting New Jersey Devils, but hasn’t marked the scoresheet in any of his other 12 NHL opportunities. He averaged 8:20 per game and saw a few power-play opportunities during his time up in the NHL.

This could be his final parting from the Penguins, given that he’s signed to an expiring $775,000 contract and set to hit restricted free agency.

A former fourth-round pick in the 2017 draft, Bemstrom turns 26 in June. He spent five and a half seasons with the Blue Jackets organization before his trade to the Penguins.

Other NHL clubs have started making moves toward signing college free agents now that NCAA hockey is down to the Frozen Four.

The Penguins could also want Bemstrom down in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton for the Calder Cup playoffs. Bemstrom may have had limited offensive impact at the NHL level this season, but he was named an AHL All-Star in January after leading the WBS Pens with 28 points and tying for the lead with 12 goals through the first 27 games of the season.

The Calder Cup playoffs will take place after the AHL regular season ends on April 20. The WBS Penguins clinched a spot in the postseason with an overtime win over the Hartford Wolf Pack last Wednesday. By waiving Bemstrom yesterday, the Pens have started the process to open up the option to send him back in time for that- should he clear and they opt to go that route.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/4/1/...strom-pens-nhl-roster-pittsburgh-wilkes-barre
 
Why Sidney Crosby’s current 10-game point streak is so impressive

Ottawa Senators v Pittsburgh Penguins

Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images

Just another incredible accomplishment in an already incredible season for the Pittsburgh Penguins captain.

When Sidney Crosby scored the game-winning goal in the Pittsburgh Penguins 1-0 overtime win against the Ottawa Senators on Sunday evening, it extended his current point streak to 10 consecutive games. That is a big deal for a lot of reasons.

For one, a 10-game streak for any player, at any point, is always going to be impressive, because it is just simply really hard to consistently produce like that at the NHL level.

Effort is consistent. Process is consistent. Production is not.

Not even for the very best players. A 40-goal scorer does not score a goal every other game on a set schedule. An 82-point player does not get one point every night. They get six goals in five games, eight points in four games, and then go cold for a few games where they do not see the score sheet at all.

Just for context: There have only been 22 10-game point streaks in the NHL this season, with only two of them (Leon Draisaitl at 18 games and David Pastrnak at 17 games) going beyond 14 games.

Crosby has had 12 10-game streaks in his career, but only three of them have happened since the 2017-18 season.

This current streak is his first since an 11-game streak early in the 2023-24 season.

There is another layer to this that interested me just beyond a double-digit point streak. It is the fact he is doing it at 37 years old and still rolling along and defying all known aging curves in the NHL.

With that in mind, I wanted to take a look at how many times a player at this age put together a streak like this, and how long they were able to go.

Not surprisingly, there have not been many.

Via the Hockey-Reference StatHead database, there have only been 19 point streak of at least 10 games in NHL history by a player in their age 37 season or older. The longest streak is 12 games.

Here is the full list.



Only 11 of those streaks have reached at least 11 games. Crosby will have a chance to join that group against the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday night, and if he does, he can potentially match that 12-game streak on Saturday in Dallas.

Crosby’s most recent game without a point was a 4-0 shutout loss against the Vegas Golden Knights. Prior to that point he had recorded a point in four consecutive games. He has just three games over the past 26 games where he has not recorded at least one point. During that stretch, which goes back to January 18, he has 33 points, which comes out to a point-per-game average of 1.27. Only seven players have averaged more since then.

Crosby has been the one consistent bright spot in this season from the very beginning. He is also not slowing down, even as the playoffs have slipped away and the rebuild really starts to kick into high gear. He just still consistently brings it every single game. It remains incredible to watch.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/4/1/...current-10-game-point-streak-is-so-impressive
 
Potential offer sheet targets for the Penguins this summer

St Louis Blues v Pittsburgh Penguins

Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images

Can the Pens poach talent through restricted free agency?

The St. Louis Blues upended the status quo of how NHL teams acquire talent last summer by signing two offer sheets with Edmonton Oilers players. The cap strapped Oilers reluctantly agreed to take the draft pick compensation rather than match a $4.58 million cap hit for restricted free agent defenseman Philip Broberg and a $2.29 million contract for forward Dylan Holloway.

NHL teams have historically been reluctant to poach one another’s “restricted” free agents, putting emphasis on the first word of the term to the extreme. Offer sheets have been fun in concept, but rarely put into practice in the real world. Only two players — Dustin Penner in 2007 and Jesper Kotkaniemi in 2021 — changed teams via the practice in the whole salary cap era from 2005 to now. Well, prior to STL’s big splash last year, that is.

The results for the Blues have been tremendous. In exchange for second and third round draft picks, projected as of now to be 52nd and 86th overall in this upcoming draft, STL added a 23-year old defenseman who has blossomed into top-four caliber (eight goals, 19 assists while playing 20:27 per game) AND a 23-year old forward who has broken out even further with 62 points into a front-line player.

Many are hoping and expecting that the Blues’ success will encourage other teams to set aside past norms. It wasn’t too long ago when NHL general managers literally challenged one another to fist fights over targeting each other’s RFA, which shows how far things have come in not that long of a time for decision makers to consider offer sheets a realistic way to acquire talent.

Offer sheet rules refreshers​


Before we begin, some gentle, general reminders:

  • In order to make an offer sheet, teams must have their own draft picks available in the following year (so for free agency 2025 it’s draft picks in 2026)
  • An offer sheet can’t be unilaterally handed out by a team, the player has say in the matter by getting to accept or decline the offer from the new team
  • The initial team is given the option to either match the offer sheet and keep the player or decline and get draft pick(s) in return
  • The cap hit determines the compensation of the offer sheet

Below are last year’s compensation levels, via PuckPedia’s offer sheet tracker. It’s important to keep in mind that these numbers will be ticking up along with the salary cap for next year. Since the Penguins carry all of their relevant 2026 draft picks, they are free for whatever they want in this area, as you can see with their logo appearing at every category on the right.




The upper limit of the salary cap is set to raise from $88 million to an expected $95.5 million for 2025-26. For our math, we will apply that 8.5% raise similarly and unofficially to the project top-end of the second round compensation at $4.971m (up from the $4.58m from last year and as seen in the detail above).

Targets and the right strategy​


Logic dictates that a building team like the Penguins should not part with a 2026 first round draft pick, so we can focus away from the levels that require giving up a first round pick and move down a rung to the mid-level free agents. That fits what the Blues did when they targeted their two Edmonton players.

Who could fit the bill? Sportsnet listed their top 12 impending RFA’s a couple weeks ago, but none of the top RFAs are with the same team to present an easy target the way the Oilers made themselves. That doesn’t make for an exact fit for the Blues situation last year, but other opportunities persist.

The juiciest target might seem like redemption for Kyle Dubas being as Toronto could be ripe for the RFA picking. PuckPedia projects the Maple Leafs to have $27 million in cap space for 2025-26, but contract extensions for unrestricted free agents Mitch Marner and John Tavares figures to eat much of that space. Toronto has Matthew Knies, Nick Robertson and Pontus Holmberg as RFA’s if they can’t extend them prior to July 1.

The thought of Knies being plucked away in the Pens’ offer sheet range for just under $5 million is pushing it, probably a little too far. Knies already has 25 goals and 49 points this season and has the opportunity to put the shine on himself with a big post-season. He appears to be player in position to command more money.

To best follow the Blues’ example, one can’t be looking to poach those types like Knies anyways. Young players that are already performing like first liners is like “skating to where the puck is”, as the famous saying goes. The magic and genius about what St. Louis did with their offer sheets was that they “skated to where the puck is going to be” and took chances on projecting to value what players could become in bigger roles and paid them before they proved it. There can be risk in that strategy if the scouting is off, but we also see the reward available when the bet hits.

Now that we’ve established that Knies is out of a reasonable range, the same train of thought applies for Buffalo’s JJ Peterka, Winnipeg’s Gabriel Vilardi and even New York’s K’Andre Miller (who carries a $4.6m qualifying offer). These players are already too good to be plucked away in the second round pick territory, the focus has to shift to better fits.

Turn to Buffalo..​


Buffalo pops out as an interesting potential team to target. The Sabres have Peterka, Bowen Byram, Ryan McLeod and Jack Quinn all coming up as notable RFAs. Buffalo has a projected $22 million in cap space and no big UFAs left to eat into that, which seems favorable to them keeping their young players upon first glance.

Then again, their business practices have not so straight-forward as of late. Buffalo bought out Jeff Skinner and didn’t replace him nor didn’t spend to the cap limit this season, sitting at about $81m in player expenses this year per PuckPedia. Their stop-and-go management strategies makes them worth targeting.

Buffalo doesn’t have any UFA’s on their roster because they already committed a total of $8.75 million in extensions to veterans Jason Zucker and Jordan Greenway. Whether they’ve realized it yet or not, these moves have served to paint themselves into a corner to become vulnerable to offer sheets. That’s perhaps almost blindingly so considering that Sportsnet article linked above put Peterka commanding $7+ million to sign long-term and then the Sabres have Byram plus McLeod (on his way to a 50+ point season this year) both looking at significant salaries that will be eating up much of the cap space the Sabres have — even making the grand assumption that the smaller market team intends to spend to the cap’s upper limit next season.

Suddenly what seemed like a team with plenty of space now can be considered somewhat vulnerable...

And now, the target​



Jack Quinn is the figure that fits the mold of what being aggressive in offer sheets could look like for the Penguins. Quinn’s chart from the past looks impressive but is misleading since the 2023-24 sample was only 27 games due to injury. Add in a down season this year in 2024-25 and while the natural reaction might be one of concern, having a down year is what fits Quinn neatly in a pocket where, still just 23 years old, he becomes that mid-range offer sheet candidate.

Quinn 14 goals and 21 assists this season, he is the mold of a Holloway-type of player to bet on a year early. There are some obvious parallels between the two; both Quinn and Holloway hit RFA at a similar age (23). Both were former first round picks, both are plus skaters who have showcased enough talent to believe there could be more output available in the right circumstance. The Penguins would obviously have to buy in big time to believe Quinn was worth the pre-investment, but the cards are starting to align to some degree.

Offering Quinn $2.485 million (the max projected 2025-26 third round pick amount) would put Buffalo in an uncomfortable situation where they would be required to almost 3x his salary from his current $863k cap hit to stick with a player on a meandering career path that might be on the verge of unnecessary considering the team has younger forwards on in Jiri Kulich, Zach Benson and Isak Rosen that could replace or pass Quinn up in the near future in the first place. All three of those options would make a combined salary about equal of that proposed offer sheet for Quinn, which also figures to factor into considerations.

Going up a notch and making it a $3.5 or $4 million offer requires being willing to give up a second round pick, but it figures to push the envelope to the point where Buffalo almost certainly would have no choice in the matter. Given what that would do to their cap structure after signing Zucker+Greenway and considering Quinn’s worth/role with them, that equation tips way against keeping Quinn.

Granted, such a move risks overpayment by the Penguins — because there’s no way around the fact paying Quinn $2.4 - $4 million makes for a vast overpay on signing day. Such is the cost of doing business in attempting for a successful offer sheet ploy, if it’s not a painfully high amount of money then the initial team has too much incentive to match. Pittsburgh might gamble on the third round tender amount but the statement would be made and the case would be open and shut if they really went for it. If you’re going to make an offer sheet splash, you really better make a big one for best results if it’s deemed to be the right player and situation. Go the whole hog, as another saying goes.

The glorious piece of the equation for Pittsburgh is that they currently possess three 2nd round picks in 2026 and two 3rd rounders. If they do intend to switch gears from asset collection into using their stockpile to acquire NHL-caliber talent then the offer sheet is out there as a possible avenue to accomplish that goal. It becomes a lot easier to sink a second or third round pick and cap space into a player like Jack Quinn when the team has an excess of those picks (and plenty of cap space) on hand.

And since the title of this is “potential offer sheet targets” and we only offered one name and dislike misleading headlines — how about a bonus of circling quickly back to Nick Robertson? Based on our unofficial math, there will be no draft compensation required for RFA contracts in the $1.6 million or less range. If Kyle Dubas wants to get salty without dumping a pick or making a major play, why not offer Robertson about $1.5 million to come to the Penguins? It might be a lower reward gambit, but considering Toronto’s cap crunch it would be difficult to imagine they would have the ability and maybe interest in giving Robertson about 2x of his current cap hit. Going for Robertson would give the Pens considerably less risk to grab a player for no return with the benefit of not making a costly overpay if it doesn’t work out.

It remains to be seen if the Pens will choose to get so aggressive and reach way out of their lane to go this route. Perhaps the time isn’t quite right or the supply of RFA’s doesn’t align as perfectly as it did for St. Louis last year. It’s encouraging enough that in this new, evolving NHL world that it has become realistic to venture outside of traditional norms for ways to improve. That strategy is becoming normalized, the draft picks are certainly there for the Pens, now Kyle Dubas and team just has to figure out how bold they want to be about trying to improve by signing another team’s free agent(s).

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/4/2/...nguins-this-summer-nhl-restricted-free-agents
 
Pens Points: Crosby staying remarkably consistent

Ottawa Senators v Pittsburgh Penguins

Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images

Catch up with some headlines you may have missed with some new Pens Points.

Here are your Pens Points for this Wednesday morning...​


Many writers will continue to sing the praises of Pittsburgh Penguins captain Sidney Crosby, and deservedly so. Not only has Crosby recently surpassed “The Great One” Wayne Gretzky for the most point-per-game seasons in NHL history, but he is also in the midst of a 10-game point streak. Why is that so impressive? It’s because of his incredible consistency as a player at 37 years old. [PensBurgh]

Penguins’ forward Emil Bemstrom cleared waivers and was re-assigned to the AHL on Tuesday afternoon. [Pro Hockey Rumors]

The long-term future of goaltender Tristan Jarry is anyone’s guess, especially after being recalled to the NHL and playing decent hockey since then. For Jarry’s money, he wants to remain in Pittsburgh’s plans beyond this campaign. [Trib Live]

News and notes from around the NHL...​


The Great 8’s chase is now down to four goals: Alex Ovechkin scored his 891st on Tuesday to move within four of breaking Wayne Gretzky’s NHL record of 894. [NHL]

The NHL has reached an agreement with Rogers Communications on a 12-year, $7.7 US billion media rights agreement in Canada, a person familiar with the deal has told The Associated Press. [Associated Press]

The Vancouver Canucks remain determined to have head coach Rick Tocchet behind the bench next season and beyond. [Sportsnet]

Speaking of Vancouver, Canucks center Filip Chytil may miss the rest of the season after experiencing a setback in his attempt to return from another concussion. [AP via ESPN]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/4/2/...ins-jarry-nhl-canucks-tocchet-rogers-ovechkin
 
Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ St. Louis Blues 4/3/2025

Pittsburgh Penguins v St Louis Blues

Photo by Scott Rovak/NHLI via Getty Images

The Pens head out to start a midwest road trip. First stop, St. Louis

Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (30-34-11, 71 points, 7th place Metropolitan Division) @ St. Louis Blues (41-28-7, 89 points, 4th place Central Division)

When: 8:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: SportsNet Pittsburgh and FanDuel Sports Midwest in the local markets, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: Welcome to the last extended road swing of 2024-25. The Pens start a three-game-in-four-day stretch today, heading to Dallas for a 3:00pm eastern Saturday afternoon game and then up to Chicago for a 6:00pm start on Sunday. Pittsburgh welcomes those same Blackhawks to the Steel City for the next home game on Tuesday April 8th.

Opponent Track: The Blues lost to the Penguins 5-3 back on March 13th. It was a big game for St. Louis and they looked pretty apathetic. Apparently that was their wakeup call, STL hasn’t lost since having reeled off a current 10-game winning streak. That included some dramatics against Detroit on Tuesday night in their most recent game. Jordan Kyrou scored with 29 seconds left in regulation to force OT, Cam Fowler won it for the Blue Notes in extra time.

Season Series: As mentioned above, Pittsburgh took round one 5-3 a couple weeks ago. Tonight is the second and final game.

Hidden Stat: Per Pens PR, goaltender Tristan Jarry has played in eight career games versus St. Louis going 7-1-0 with a 2.00 goals-against average, .926 save percentage and one shutout.

Getting to know the Blues​


Projected lines (from Tuesday’s game)

FORWARDS

Jake Neighbours - Robert Thomas - Pavel Buchnevich

Dylan Holloway - Brayden Schenn - Jordan Kyrou

Zach Bolduc - Oskar Sundqvist - Jimmy Snuggerud

Alexei Toropchenko -Radek Faksa - Sean Walker

DEFENSEMEN

Cam Fowler / Nick Leddy

Philip Broberg / Justin Faulk

Ryan Suter / Tyler Tucker

Goalies: Jordan Binnington, Joel Hofer

Scratches: Mathieu Joseph, Alex Texier, Dalibor Dvorsky, Matthew Kessel, Colton Parayko

IR: Torey Krug

—Snuggerud, a former Rutger McGroarty US teammate and fellow 2022 first round pick, made his NHL debut on Tuesday against Detroit. Hopes are high for this 20-year old after he’s had three very impressive seasons in the collegiate ranks at the University of Minnesota.

—Put Thomas’ name and number (18) in big bold letters up on the board in the locker-room today as the key player to watch out for. Thomas has 17 points during this 10-game winning streak (2G+15A), second most in the NHL since March 14th (Nikita Kucherov).

—Kyrou with eight goals in the last 10 isn’t too far behind in the attention battle.

—Many around Bluesland are wondering why Dvorsky, a 19-year old former top-10 pick who has spent most of the year in the AHL, has been called up to the NHL only to become a scratch lately. See, other head coaches “hate” young players too!

Player stats​


(via hockeydb)



—Fowler has been coming on strong with nine points (2G+7A) in the last 10 games, including the OT GWG in the last game. The long-time former Duck hasn’t jumped off the page but has settled in here recently with the Blues in a major way. STL only had to give up a second round pick while getting back a fourth round pick for Anaheim to retain some money and leave the Blues with a $4.0 million cap hit for this season and next on Fowler. Not a bad piece of business for them.

—Toropchenko scored such a pretty goal against the Pens a few weeks ago; skating the puck the entire length of the ice, cutting through and around defenders and then making a deft little finish. Hard to imagine that’s only one of four goals he has this season in 74 games!

And now for the Pens​



Projected lines

FORWARDS

Rutger McGroarty - Sidney Crosby - Bryan Rust

Connor Dewar - Rickard Rakell - Ville Koivunen

Philip Tomasino - Kevin Hayes - Noel Acciari

Danton Heinen - Blake Lizotte - Joona Koppanen

DEFENSEMEN

Matt Grzelcyk / Kris Letang

Conor Timmins / Erik Karlsson

Ryan Graves / Ryan Shea

Goalies: Tristan Jarry and Alex Nedeljkovic

Potential Scratches: Vladislav Kolyachonok, Tommy Novak (lower body), Evgeni Malkin (day-to-day upper body injury), Boko Imama (bicep surgery, out for season)

Injured Reserve: P.O. Joseph (upper body)

—All the time has granted a little rest, the team practiced on Monday and Wednesday and got a day off on Tuesday. Coach Mike Sullivan said a few players are banged up but still going to try and play, thus the emergency recall of Joona Koppanen.

—Speaking of, welcome back Joona Koppanen. Since last game, the Penguins waived the ineffective and often invisible Emil Bemstrom and have shuttled in Koppanen back to the NHL in Bemstrom’s place. As of now, Bemstrom remains on the NHL roster but can be sent back to the AHL at any point down the stretch.

—Joseph and Malkin skated before practice together yesterday, Novak was not out there. One is starting to get the feeling the “day to day” injury for Novak out since March 9th might be more than that with now two weeks left in the season.

Like a fine wine...​


Sidney Crosby eclipsed the 80-point plateau recently, making him one of the few players that age or older to ever do so. That age-37 season is so crazy how it was the last truly great year for players like Sakic, Lemieux and Gretzky. It’ll be very interesting to see how Crosby ages into his senior years as an NHL player. From Pens PR:

With his goal against Buffalo on Thursday, Sidney Crosby notched a goal to record his 80th point of the season. He became the 12th player in NHL history to tally 80 or more points in their age 37 season or older. He then followed that up with an overtime winner against the Ottawa Senators on Sunday for his 81st point of the season:

Players to Record 80+ Points at Age 37 or Older, NHL History

Player Age Year Points

Gordie Howe 40 1968-69 103
Joe Sakic 37 2006-07 100
Johnny Bucyk 37 1972-73 93
Mario Lemieux 37 2002-03 91
Wayne Gretzky 37 1997-98 90
Jean Ratelle 37 1977-78 84
Johnny Bucyk 40 1975-76 83
Gordie Howe 39 1967-68 82
Jean Beliveau 37 1968-69 82
Adam Oates 38 2000-01 82
Sidney Crosby 37 2024-25 81
Brendan Shanahan 37 2005-06 81
Johnny Bucyk 39 1974-75 81
Joe Pavelski 37 2021-22 81
Teemu Selanne 40 2010-11 80

Only two players (Gordie Howe and Johnny Bucyk) appear on this list multiple times, and both of them were competing in the 1960’s/70’s as older guys, interesting to see how in more modern times that no one has been able to hold up at advanced ages that much against the young bucks as time goes by. Call it a hunch, but I’d bet Crosby joins them.

Career year for the Rusty Razor?​


Bryan Rust has been a good player in this league for a long time and frequent linemate of Sidney Crosby, it seems odd that his personal bests are under 30 goals and 60 points in a season. Then again, with his unfortunate penchant to miss large chunks of every year, it makes sense. From the PR department again:

Bryan Rust is having an exceptional year as he is currently just two goals away from matching his career-high total of 28 goals set in the 2023-24 season, and three points shy of tying his career high of 58 points achieved in the 2021-22 season.

Most Goals, Rust’s Career

Season GP G

2023-24 62 28
2019-20 55 27
2024-25 63 26
2021-22 60 24

Most Points, Rust’s Career

Season GP PTS

2021-22 60 58
2019-20 55 56
2023-24 62 56
2024-25 63 55

Knock on wood and all but if Rust finishes out all the rest of the Pens’ games this season that will get him up to 71 appearances on the season. He did manage to play in 81 games in 2022-23 but his other career-highs besides that are: 72, 69, 64*, 62 and 60. (*being current).

Rust is also two goals away from 200 in his career.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/2025/4/3/24398122/game-preview-pittsburgh-penguins-st-louis-blues-4-3-2025
 
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