RSS Penguins Team Notes

The Penguins have been mostly what was expected (and kind of entertaining)

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In terms of on-ice results it is pretty fair to say that preseason expectations for the 2025-26 Pittsburgh Penguins were as low as they have been in two decades. I do not know of anybody, nor did I see anybody, anticipating a playoff team or any sort of a contender. Everybody knows the deal here. The best players are at the end of their careers, the offseason was the same as last year’s where collecting future assets and acquiring short-term stop-gaps was the priority, and they have a younger roster that still has more than $10 million in salary cap space.

It is a rebuilding team.

Winning in this one particular season is not the priority at this moment.

We all know that. We all know after nearly two decades on top of the NHL you eventually have to go through a few seasons like this.

Even with that being the case you still have some sort of an expectation for what a team is going to look like and what the season might be like.

If you are going to be bad and not win many games, you at least need to be interesting. Be entertaining. Bad and entertaining is better than bad and boring. Bad with new faces and seeing individual growth is better than aimless wandering.

It is still early, but through four games I feel like the Penguins have mostly been what was probably expected, while at least playing some entertaining hockey and providing what they need to provide for future Penguins teams.

If this were a season with Stanley Cup goals in mind, Tuesday’s game in Anaheim would have been a maddeningly frustrating game. Not only with the fact they mostly outplayed the Ducks at 5-on-5 and still lost, but because it ended with bad penalty killing after an incomprehensible delay of game penalty when at least one point seemed like a lock. But in a season where you have no expectations I came away from that game thinking, “well, at least there was a good pace to it and some wild back-and-forth moments.”

Outside of the home-opener game against the New York Rangers, none of these games have really bored me.

If you look at this Penguins roster it’s not hard to see the potential for at least some chaotic hockey this season.

The forward group is still formidable. It might be top-heavy offensively, but there are enough good players at the top, at least one really intriguing young player (Ben Kindel) right now and at least a few more that will be here soon (Rutger McGroarty, the return of Ville Koivunen at some point, Tristan Broz, Avery Hayes, etc.) to add some intrigue.

The defense group is, by NHL standards, awful. Kris Letang, all-time great Penguin that he is, has clearly lost a step or two. Erik Karlsson has looked better at times, but is still pure chaos. Harrison Brunicke is impressive, but he’s 19. The left side of the defense doesn’t have a single player that a playoff team would want getting meaningful minutes.

What happens when you combine good forwards with bad defensemen? The potential for some back-and-forth hockey.

Through four games, the Penguins have mostly delivered that. At least from a scoring chance perspective. Going into Wednesday’s games the Penguins were sixth in the NHL in expected goals per 60 minutes, 11th in expected goals against, while their games featured the third most *total* expected goals in the NHL.

They were fourth in high-danger chances for, and 10th in high-danger chances against. Their games, again, have featured the third-most total high-danger chances.

There is at least a lot of excitement and a lot of big chances. Take off your Penguins fan cap for a minute and just look at it as a hockey game. It’s been interesting even if not particularly good.

But the most important development so far is the fact the right players are mostly playing well. Especially as it relates to the important younger guys in Kindel and Brunicke. Both of them have not only looked like they belong, they look like they can be legitimately good NHL players for a long time. Kindel just keeps looking more and more impressive every time he is on the ice, and is actually doing the heavy lifting on his line. As an 18-year-old. The confidence and hockey IQ are off the charts. He always seems to be in the right place, the game doesn’t look too big or too fast for him and his first NHL goal was a ridiculous snipe against one of the best goalies in the world. Not many players beat Igor Shesterkin from the distance with that shot. He did. Cleanly. It’s impressive and exciting.

It is a similar story for Brunicke on defense. He looks the part. It is important not only for these guys to improve, but to also show they can be significant long-term parts.

There is a fine line between accepting the realities of this season and making losing acceptable. When you create an environment where losing is not only accepted, but openly encouraged (a full-blown tank where fans are cheering against their own team in the building — like the Tim Murray era Buffalo Sabres) it creates a losing culture. Losing breeds losers. I don’t want that. Nobody should want that. But I also know the reality of the season, which is that this team is simply not built to contend right now. So they better at least be entertaining, and the right players need to produce and get better.

So far they have mostly done that.

They have played the way this roster should play. They have been mostly interesting. They are seeing young players establish themselves.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/statistic...ly-what-was-expected-and-kind-of-entertaining
 
Pittsburgh Penguins Prospect Update: Mid-October

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Optimism is growing and interest is raising for the players the Pittsburgh Penguins have in their organization who aren’t playing with their professional teams this season. The Pens made a bevy of draft picks this past June and have plenty other young players acquired that are worth tracking all across Europe and North America. Now that the season is off the ground all across the world now is a good time to set the stage and check in on the more notable performers.

We’ll break things down by region and go from there, touching on the prospects who are deserving a mention for positive reasons (or sometimes unfortunately not so positive reasons) at this point of the year. We’ll also at least touch base with the absolute most notable and important names within the system. This topic is narrow enough to be separate from the weekly update of the WBS Penguins feature, so keep that in mind that we’re not thinking about a complete view for the players like Sergei Murashov, Owen Pickering and Tristan Broz that get tracked regularly. And while Ben Kindel and Harrison Brunicke certainly are the team’s top prospects, their work is easily accessible on the NHL stage. This update is for the players spread far and wide who are playing outside of Pennsylvania.

Russia

Mikhail Ilyin: Cherepovets Severstal, 13 games, 2 goals, 6 assists

Ilyin, a fifth round pick in 2023 and No. 14 in our 2025 Pensburgh Top 25 Under 25, is off to another great start in the KHL. He was exceptionally productive in that league as a teenager and is performing well again in what could be his final season in Russia. Ilyin signed an entry level contract with Pittsburgh, but through mutual agreement was assigned back to Cherepovets for 2025-26.

NEW: Mikhail Ilyin early season mixtape. Diving into his playmaking, skating updates, and a long mixtape of his early season successes. https://t.co/8U4s1zzZoE pic.twitter.com/aerjfJokRM

— Jesse Marshall (@jmarshfof) October 14, 2025

Ilyin is an electric player with his puck handling skills and playmaking ability. He’s got some special qualities and has that knack of standing out on the ice. His skating will need some work and how effective he will be fighting for space towards the net in America remains to be seen, but there’s always time for a dynamic and skilled forward like this. Check out Jesse’s write-up for more highlights and analysis, Ilyin started out a little slow but has come to life in recent games and is back to doing his usual thing of putting up offense in the KHL.

Mikhail Ilyin scores his 3rd of the season and extends his point streak to 6 games! He’s been locked in lately — consistent, confident, and making an impact every game. pic.twitter.com/klZdnAQEiP

— Pens Prospects (@pensprospects_) October 13, 2025

Sweden

Melvin Fernstrom: Orebro HK (SHL) 11 games, 0 goals, 0 assists

It’s a big goose egg statistically so far for last year’s SHL rookie of the year. No time to panic yet, but we’ll see how this impacts his season and placement on or within Sweden’s World Junior team.

WHL

Kale Dach: Calgary Hitmen, 7 games, 3 goals, 3 assists

The Calgary Hitmen were supposed to have a big time Pittsburgh Penguin prospect this year in Ben Kindel. That’s been put to the side, for now at least but it turns out they have a pretty decent consolation prize in Pittsburgh’s seventh round pick this year in Kale Dach. Dach is tied for the team lead in goals and tied for second in points so far this season. This season is Dach’s first in the WHL (he played in the lower BCHL the prior two years), it’s been a nice debut to put himself on the map as a little more of a prospect with performances like he’s had at prospect camp and so far in October.

Third of the season for Kale and it’s a beauty! https://t.co/Q1fmI5xAee pic.twitter.com/dCD7qxOv9Z

— Calgary Hitmen (@WHLHitmen) October 13, 2025

Ryan Miller: Portland Winterhawks, 8 games, 2 goals, 6 assists

Miller was a player several times who carried an optimistic note that his 2025-26 production might be well increased from the 31 points in 50 WHL games he scored last season. That’s come to pass in the early going with a point per game rate, which has had him as the leading assist getter and point scorer for Portland so far, as their captain. Miller, a fifth round pick in 2025, isn’t the most skilled player in the world, but he’s got a great motor and has that knack to stand out while being solid all-around. Perfect type of late round flyer to track in the next little bit to come.

AYE, AYE CAPTAIN 🫡 pic.twitter.com/lVDlqqA8wx

— Portland Winterhawks (@pdxwinterhawks) October 13, 2025

Peyton Kettles: Swift Current Broncos, 0 games played

Kettles remains out from an injury, though he was skating towards the tail end of NHL camp.

QMJHL

Gabriel D’Aigle: Victoriaville Tigers 3-2 record, .874 save%, 4.48 GAA

D’Aigle ranks 22nd in both save percentage and GAA in the early going in the Q. Game-by-game goals allowed: 4, 8, 4, 4, 3. His last outing (36 saves on 39 shots) was his best of the season, so I guess at least he’s trending up, but this is a league where plenty of goalies have .900 or even .910 save percentages, and D’Aigle isn’t one of them. He’s big, he’s athletic but he’s had a lot of trouble keeping the puck out of the net so far in his career and blaming team or league can only go so far.

Bill Zonnon: Rouyn-Noranda Huskies, 0 games

Zonnon was injured in a preseason QMJHL game and missed NHL training camp as a result. He’s still yet to make his return but reportedly isn’t too far out.

OHL

Quinn Beauchesne: Guelph Storm, 6 games 0 goals, 2 assists, 4 penalty minutes

This one surprises me to see Beauchesne off to a quiet start. He was anything but a quiet player in the prospects portion of camp where he was scoring goals and getting into fights left and right. Still a long way to go, but curious by the lack of much going on so far.

Jordan Charron: Soo Greyhounds, 11 games 9 goals, 4 assists

Charron is off to a red hot start, he scored seven goals in his first six games! The fifth round pick from 2025 has been putting on a show at the beginning of the season in the OHL. We’ll see how long it lasts and how far it takes him but for now Charron has to be the biggest pleasant surprise of the Pittsburgh prospects in the early going of the season.

Charron still hot! pic.twitter.com/7NjaMgPdrE

— Soo Greyhounds (@OHLHoundPower) October 5, 2025

NCAA

Will Horcoff: University of Michigan, 4 games, 5 goals, 1 assist

Horcoff went absolutely crazy at the beginning of the season by scoring a hat trick in his first game and two more goals the next night. Michigan was playing Mercyhurst (UM defeated them 18-1 in aggregate over the two games they played) so take that with a grain of salt and his production has settled down since then. That said, Horcoff scored four goals in 18 games last season as a very young freshman. It’s nice to see he already has exceeded that level and is playing top line on Michigan’s left wing to start the season in a great position to keep growing. One thing noticed in Pittsburgh at summer camp and already on some highlights is that Horcoff is effective at scoring goals from in tight. He has a hard shot, big body, knack for going to the net. And when he gets the puck down low, he scores goals at high frequency.

Who said touchdowns were reserved for Saturdays? pic.twitter.com/HugO3aillu

— Michigan Hockey (@umichhockey) October 4, 2025

Cruz Lucius: Arizona State, 4 games, 4 goals, 0 assists

Acquired in the Jake Guentzel trade, 2025-26 is a big season for Lucius. Suddenly in his senior season, at just 21 years old, Lucius is playing for an NHL contract. So far, so good. From summer camp in Pittsburgh it was evident Lucius is at his best when he’s holding onto pucks in the offensive zone and letting his hands do the work. That was on full display in this highlight reel goal. Lucius has a lot on the line this season and he’s off to a great start, the forward has a lot of skill and upside, it’s now the time for him to put it together, stay healthy and show his stuff.

Scoring is easy… the celly is harder 🤣

Cruz Lucius with his second goal of the season #BeTheTradition pic.twitter.com/FqbB6wRN6V

— Sun Devil Hockey (@SunDevilHockey) October 12, 2025

Mac Swanson: North Dakota, 1 game, 1 goal, 1 assist

As a 5’8” seventh round pick (in 2024), Swanson can be easily overlooked within a prospect pool that is filling up rapidly with draft picks. He’s a long-term type of player that needs more experience, but he popped in UND’s first game. As with Horcoff above, take note the opposition isn’t the strongest but it’s nice to see Swanson get to show his stuff.

Swanson ends it with a bang! #UNDproud | #LGH pic.twitter.com/A2GADPriZl

— North Dakota Hockey (@UNDmhockey) October 11, 2025

Joona Vaisanen: Western Michigan, 2 games, 0 goals, 3 assists

Vaisanen is a sleeper prospect that could surprise. Drafted in the sixth round of 2024, he was a prospect team captain this summer. Vaisanen played top pair minutes as a freshman on WMU’s national championship team. He’s such a smooth player in every zone; calm, collected, good skater, good puck skills, projectable frame at 6’1”, 190, effective defender. At 21, he looks pretty polished and about ready to turn pro, hopefully he can keep it up and WMU should be a factor in the Frozen Four this spring.

Of course that was 𝘊𝘰𝘸𝘢𝘯 in. #BroncosReign pic.twitter.com/Sc1A8z9d6T

— WMU Hockey (@WMUHockey) October 9, 2025


Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/pittsburg...ttsburgh-penguins-prospect-update-mid-october
 
Filip Hallander’s long journey back to the Penguins finally pays off

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It has been seven years since the Pittsburgh Penguins selected Filip Hallander in the second-round of the 2018 NHL Draft.

On Thursday, he finally scored his first NHL goal as part of their 4-2 win over the Los Angeles Kings.

It’s been a long journey for Hallander to get here in his NHL career, especially with the Penguins. They just haven’t been able to quit each other over the years, always looking for a way back together, and it might finally be paying off for both sides.

What has that journey looked like for Hallander?

  • He was taken in the second-round of the 2018 NHL Draft and originally looked like one of the better prospects in the Penguins system for the time.
  • The Penguins traded him to the Toronto Maple Leafs in August, 2020, as part of the trade package for forward Kasperi Kapanen.
  • The Penguins re-acquired him almost exactly a year later when they sent Jared McCann to the Maple Leafs as part of the Seattle Kraken expansion draft process.
  • After spending two years back in the Penguins organization and getting two brief cups of coffee in the NHL, he went back to Sweden for two years where he put together a strong career.
  • Then this offseason he returned to the Penguins on a two-year deal where he has been one of the more intriguing players on the young season.

Despite his lack of NHL experience it’s not really fair to call Hallander a prospect. Because he’s not. He’s been a seasoned pro hockey player, even if most of his professional play hasn’t come in the NHL. He’s just unproven as an NHL player. But that’s kind of what makes him so interesting. The Penguins are still finding out what they have in him, and he’s still young enough to where he might still have an NHL future.

He’s also the exact type of player you want to find out about in a season like this.

He’s appeared in four of the Penguins’ first five games, and has mostly stood out in a positive way.

He has not been given a ton of ice-time to this point, and has in fact averaged the fewest 5-on-5 minutes per game of any player that’s dressed for the Penguins this season.

But he has made the most of what he’s been given.

Not only has he already collected two points, including Thursday’s shorthanded goal, but some of his on-ice defensive metrics have been strong despite taking on heavy defensive zone starts.

Aside from the numbers and metrics, he has also mostly passed the eye test. He’s shown good hockey sense, has been in the right position and has just looked like a solid depth player in his first four games.

With Rutger McGroarty and Kevin Hayes getting closer to returns from injury, and with players like Ville Koivunen, Tristan Broz and Avery Hayes down in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton knocking on the door, there is going to be a lineup crunch in the weeks and months ahead at forward. Even with that they still need to find a way for Hallander to get some ice-time to show what he can do. And it should not be hard to do that.

The argument for sending Koivunen down after a slow start was that you didn’t want to see him play in a bottom-six role when he doesn’t project to be that sort of player. If Hallander is going to have any kind of future in Pittsburgh it’s going to be as a bottom-six player and penalty killer. So there really shouldn’t be any excuse to not give him a consistent look in that role even when the aforementioned players return or get their chance.

If the goal for this season is truly about looking ahead toward the future and finding out about people, this is a real opportunity to do so.

There are no secrets with players like Hayes, Noel Accairi, Blake Lizotte or even Connor Dewar. We mostly know what they can do. We know what they are capable of. We know what type of players they are. And we know they are not going to be long-term fits for the Penguins beyond this year or next year. At least they shouldn’t be.

Hallander might be. And even if he isn’t, even if he doesn’t maintain the solid start he’s shown through four games, it is still better to find out about him one way or another.

He has done nothing to play his way out of the lineup at this point, and if anything should keep getting an increased look.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...journey-back-to-the-penguins-finally-pays-off
 
Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ San Jose Sharks 10/18/25

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Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (3-2-0, 6 points, 4th place Metropolitan Division) @ San Jose Sharks (0-2-2, 2 points, 7th place Pacific Division)

When: 10:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on SN-PIT and NBC Sports California, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Penguins return home next Tuesday for a 7 p.m. ET home game against the Vancouver Canucks before hitting the road again for a Thursday matchup with the defending champion Florida Panthers.

Opponent Track: The Sharks got off to a dispiriting start to the 2025-26 season with back-to-back overtime losses to the Vegas Golden Knights and Anaheim Ducks followed by a 5-1 blowout by the Utah Carolina Hurricanes. San Jose is still looking for its first win of the season after last night’s 6-3 road loss to the Utah Mammoth.

Still fighting 💪

Send good vibes to the guys ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/7ApO72VoSG

— San Jose Sharks (@SanJoseSharks) October 18, 2025

Season Series: The Penguins will meet up with the Sharks again in Pittsburgh on December 13th. These two teams split the season series in 2024-25, with the Pens coming out on the winning side of a five-round home shootout last November but conceding a 2-1 road loss in January.

Hidden Stat: The Sharks are tied with two other teams (the Ottawa Senators and Calgary Flames) for the worst goal differential in the NHL at minus-9 as of Friday.

Getting to know the Sharks​


Projected lines (from Friday’s game at Utah)

FORWARDS

Jeff Skinner – Macklin Celebrini – Philipp Kurashev

William Eklund – Alex Wennberg – Tyler Toffoli

Collin Graf – Ty Dellandrea – Will Smith

Barclay Goodrow – Adam Gaudette – Ryan Reaves

DEFENSEMEN

Nick Leddy – Dmitry Orlov

Mario Ferraro – Vincent Iorio

Sam Dickinson – Vincent Desharnais

Goalies: Alex Nedeljkovic (Yaroslav Askarov started last night)

Scratches: Michael Misa, Shakir Mukhamadullin

Injuries: John Klingberg, Timothy Liljegren

  • One highlight of Friday night’s loss for the Sharks was Macklin Celebrini, who showed off his hands with his first goal of the season.
Macklin Celebrini with the quick release for his first of the season 🎯 pic.twitter.com/8pQbW8GKJu

— NHL (@NHL) October 18, 2025
  • Askarov gave up six goals on 34 shots last night, setting the Penguins on track for a reunion with Alex Nedeljkovic. The former Pens netminder has allowed at least four goals in both of his previous starts this season, although in his defense the Sharks are so far allowing an NHL-high 38 shots against per game.
  • The Sharks spent this offseason loading up on veterans, adding former Penguin Ryan Reaves alongside Jeff Skinner, John Klingberg, Adam Gaudette, Dmitry Orlov, Nick Leddy and Philipp Kurashev in order to add more experience around the team’s young core of Celebrini, Will Smith and William Eklund.
  • San Jose general manager Mike Grier is likely looking to flip some, if not most, of those veterans at the trade deadline. Skinner, Reaves, Kurashev, Leddy and Klingberg are all pending UFAs.
  • Both aspects of that plan— the Sharks’ young stars learning from veteran players, and veteran players increasing their value so contenders will pay up to grab them at the deadline— depend on things going better than they have during San Jose’s dismal four-game start to the season. Ryan Warsofsky, who formerly worked with Erik Karlsson in San Jose before his promotion to head coach ahead of the 2024-25 season, could decide to mix these lines up in order to spark some changes tonight against the Pens.

And now for the Pens​


Projected lines (from Friday’s practice)

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Anthony Mantha – Evgeni Malkin – Justin Brazeau

Tommy Novak – Ben Kindel – Filip Hallander

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Ryan Shea / Kris Letang

Caleb Jones / Harrison Brunicke

Goalies: Arturs Silovs, Tristan Jarry

Potential Scratches: Philip Tomasino, Connor Clifton, Mathew Dumba

IR: Kevin Hayes (upper body), Jack St. Ivany (lower body), Rutger McGroarty (upper body), Joel Blomqvist (lower body)

  • The Penguins practiced in Los Angeles on Friday before taking the trip up north to San Jose. Ben Kindel, Harrison Brunicke and Filip Hallander all seem to be on track to stay in the lineup. Philip Tomasino was bumped out as Noel Acciari hung onto his spot on the fourth line.
Hit the ice in LA before heading up to San Jose 🏒 pic.twitter.com/D9juiTB6Rt

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 17, 2025
  • Evgeni Malkin has seven points through the first five games of the season. That’s good for the fourth-best season start by a forward aged 39 or older in NHL history, per Penguins PR. Only Gordie Howe in 1968, Jean Belliveau in 1970 and Joe Sakic in 2008 have totaled more.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/68070/game-preview-pittsburgh-penguins-san-jose-sharks-10-18-25
 
Sunday Standings: A new season dawns

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The 2025-26 season is upon us. Most teams have played about and at least five games at this point, giving a first look. Overreactions or over-emphasizing the early games can be a struggle — who could forget the Penguins last year started 3-2-0 before hitting a skid — but for now we only have so much to go on. The standings will never matter less in a season than they do right now, we’ll scan them anyways. Everyone in the division had reason to wake up happy this morning, all eight teams won their last game. Five of the clubs are on at least a two-game winning streak, the top-three teams have all chalked up victories in at least their last four games. Lots of winning early on across the Metropolitan.

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Below, a note or potential surprise for each team’s first impression on the 2025-26 season

Carolina: Surprise — uneven star scoring. The Hurricanes have won all five of their games, no huge surprise to see them start off strong. Here’s a head-scratcher, though — Nikolaj Ehlers and Andrei Svechnikov both recorded 0 points in the first five games. Meanwhile, Seth Jarvis has six goals and Sebasitan Aho is over a point per game with seven. The lack of balance between slumping players vs. red hot performers on the same team (and even same line in some cases) is an interesting early season anomaly.

New Jersey: Surprise — injuries strike already. The common caveat attached to the Devils is that they need to stay healthy. That is already proving to give them some problems, starting goalie Jacob Markstrom is out for a “couple of weeks” due to a lower body injury that he picked up. That’s barely phased NJ so far, who have won four out of their five games with some impressive victories against Tampa, Florida and Edmonton already under their belt. All systems go so far even moving forward without their primary goalie.

Washington: Surprise — still good. It seemed like this off-season a lot of model makers and observers looked for reasons or excuses to drop the Capitals down a notch from their first place finish in the division and conference last season. So far so good, Washington has opened the season with a 60% expected goal share and the wins keep rolling in. Washington is getting it done defensively and in the net, the eight goals they’ve conceded so far is by far the best in the division, and even in the NHL as a whole.

Pittsburgh: Surprise —goalies playing well. The Pens endured some dreadful goaltending last year (sitting at 29th in the NHL with a .899 5v5 save%). There were of course underlying defensive reasons that contributed to that poor goaltending, but no matter who Pittsburgh used last year they couldn’t keep the puck out of the net. That’s turned around in the early going (their .922% 5v5 save percentage ranks 10th in the opening days of the season), Arturs Silovs has done pretty well and Tristan Jarry has stabilized, for now at least. It’s debatable how long the uptick will last but the increase in goaltending performance is a big reason the Pens have won four out of their first six games.

New York Rangers: Surprise — no one can score goals. The Rangers are 0 for 3 at home. Not just at winning games, but for even scoring one single goal. Pretty shocking to see a team go ice cold like that, right at the beginning of the season. They look cleaned up in the defensive zone and Igor Shesterkin is back into his typical stellar form, but now they have to figure out how to put the puck in the back of the net. It could be considered a wonder they are even at 3-3-1 at this point of the season, outside of the game that NYR dropped six goals on the Pens, they’ve only scored nine total goals in their other six games.

Philadelphia: Surprise — stars gone cold. Matvei Michkov, who scored 63 points last season as a rookie only has a one point (a goal) in the first five games. Travis Konency, the Philadelphia leading scorer with 76 points last year has zero goals and two assists to start the season. As a result, the Flyers have the least goals scored in the division as of today, though they’re not far from the pack. You’d expect those guys are talented enough to where will get it going sooner than later, however the lack of production has led to only two wins in their first five games.

Columbus: Surprise — goalies have arrived. The Blue Jackets’ biggest question mark coming into the year was in net, and to re-use a note from the Penguins, CBJ’s goaltending has been great in the first five games of the season. Both Jet Greaves and Elvis Merzlikins have overall save percentages north of .920% and they have been very tough to beat at 5v5, allowing only five goals in five games and good for a .960% save percentage there. Despite the quality goaltending, Columbus has endured a pair of one-loss games to Nashville and New Jersey this season to squander some early chances to stack up a few more victories.

New York Islanders: Surprise — Matthew Schaefer is an insta-star. The first overall pick from a few months ago has made a seamless transition into the NHL. That’s no easy task for a defenseman that just celebrated his 18th birthday in early September. Schaefer has recorded one point in all five games, making him the youngest NHL player ever to start his career with a five-game point streak. In two of the games he’s played 26+ minutes. It’s no surprise that a No. 1 overall pick would figure to be very talented, but this start is rightfully turning heads.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/68107/sunday-standings-a-new-season-dawns
 
Penguins/Sharks Recap: Pens shutout San Jose in 3-0 win

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Pregame​


There’s minimal changes for the Penguins compared to the norm this season; Ben Kindel gets back into the lineup at the expense of Philip Tomasino and Tristan Jarry rotates back in the cage.

Here are the line combos for tonight's matchup with the Sharks ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/pdSs5LMGCi

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 19, 2025

The hometown Sharks are going with this lineup:

Tonight's starting lineup.
🔹
Los titulares de hoy ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/QSNXIpwAqG

— San Jose Sharks (@SanJoseSharks) October 19, 2025

First period​


The first period is definitely something that happened. Free flowing, end to end action with a bunch of shots flung to net. No penalties, goals or really any close calls. Shots go 18-11 PIT, but that somehow makes it seem a little more exciting than it was.

Second period​


The second period ambles on, out of no where Kris Letang shoots from the right side and Sidney Crosby gets a really fine deflection on the puck from in front. 1-0 Pens.

Kris Letang and Sidney Crosby. An iconic duo. pic.twitter.com/90u4aZXSVP

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 19, 2025

That goal puts a fire under the Sharks, they push hard for the rest of the period but can’t find a way to beat Jarry. 1-0 game.

Shots overall are 23-22 PIT. It’s a Jarry/Alex Nedeljkovic goalie duel through 40 minutes, just like everyone expected.

Third period​


More ugly play all around, eventually the aptly nicknamed Mutant Line strikes for the Pens. Evgeni Malkin wanders into the o-zone, feeds Justin Brazeau. Brazeau holds the puck for a beat and then lays a great pass over for Anthony Mantha. Mantha whips a hard shot that hits the back of the net. That was a slow, slow, slow, boom in the net. 2-0 Pens.

Size and skill on full display 💪 pic.twitter.com/2a6H2zCdUa

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 19, 2025

With 7:26 to go, finally the first penalty of the game is called on Bryan Rust. The Pens killed it off and Rust made a power move when he came out of the box and forced the Sharks to hold him and earn Pittsburgh’s first power play with 4:55 to play. Crosby ended the power play early, with a hooking penalty and not a goal or assist.

Sane Jose used their timeout with 2:50 play and with 1:16 of power play time. San Jose pulls the goalie, Jarry takes a shot at the open net but it gets knocked down.

Malkin salts the game away with his second goal of the season into the open net to set the final score at 3-0.

Some thoughts​

  • Really liked the game of Harrison Brunicke, he looks like he’s settling in and growing a little bit stronger with each passing night right now. Nothing stand out, though he did have a great scoring chance that he rung off the post, but all around good work, which the advanced stats back up to a pleasing eye test performance.
  • As far as Ben Kindel goes getting back into the lineup, you could probably go either which way depending on which moments stood out the most. Kindel had some bad puck touches in the second period and was on the ice for over two minutes on a shift and was struggling at times. He also back-checked well on other shifts and had five shots on goal. Some good, some bad — nothing out of the ordinary for an 18-year old in the best league in the world.
  • Be it coincidence, game style, referee tendencies or a mix of all of the above (it’s always a mix of all of the above), it’s been pretty astounding how few penalties happen in Penguin games this season. Pittsburgh only has 14 power play chances in six games, none tonight, tied for fewest in the league (and with six games, they’ve played as much or more than most). On the other side, they’ve only been shorthanded 19 teams, among the lower end. Many of the calls have been automatic and/or obvious ones. Everything else the refs haven’t whistled. Perhaps only noteworthy since the conventional wisdom is that a lot gets called early in the year to set a standard that eventually fades away. Can’t really say anything egregious was missed, surely there were things the refs could have called if they wanted but the standard apparently was set high and kept that way in this game until Bryan Rust took a penalty with about 7 minutes left in regulation.
  • An elite Bob Grove stat of the night: Crosby’s opening goal against SJ was the first in his career, he’s scored the first goal of a game against everyone except Utah. (And, as you may remember, the NHL didn’t transfer the franchise stats over from Arizona in the move, making Utah essentially a brand new franchise in that regard).
  • Speaking of Utah, they put six goals on the Sharks last night in Salt Lake City, and SJ had to travel back home. Circumstantially that reflects poorly on the Penguins to not have exploited that into a bigger lead earlier, even though at the end of the night they pulled away for a comfortable victory.
  • I think Tyler Kennedy coined the ‘Mutant Line’ and that’s such a fitting name. Just a bunch of huge humans at 6’5+ for the Pens’ second line that can cover a lot of ground and they’re able to create a lot of space for themselves with their wingspans. A guy like Mantha who has three 20+ goal seasons under his belt can really shoot the puck. His shot ended up top corner but it came off the stick at mid-level and deflected up after going through Nedeljkovic and had some great velocity and placement. Great shot, setup by two good decisions and passes from his linemates to get there.
  • Tristan Jarry didn’t have too many quiet games, and dare we say easy shutouts last year. Kudos, of course to him for making it look easy. He had to make 30 saves, far from a night off, but the team in front of him gave him a chance and he made the most of it in posting the shutout. Solid game for him.

A 2-1-0 California swing is always a plus, the Pens will head back home for a game Tuesday night full of confidence and looking to continue their nice start to the season after taking care of business in this one.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/game-recaps/68105/penguins-sharks-recap-pens-shutout-san-jose-in-3-0-win
 
The week ahead: Penguins return home with fascinating player usage options

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We are two weeks into the 2025-26 NHL regular season and the Pittsburgh Penguins have probably produced better results than most people expected so far. They return from their west coast road trip having won two out of three games on the trip and have won four of their first six games overall. Not only that, their underlying numbers have been mostly strong from a scoring chance and expected goals angle. They have had a sizable edge in both categories in every game they have played this season with the exception of the Saturday night game against the New York Rangers, while their overall numbers for the season are near the top of the league.

The eye-test has not always been there at times, and they have had some sloppiness in their own end, but that is to be expected given the makeup of the roster in some areas.

Still, they have played mostly well and the results have been good with a strong process behind them.

It has also come against some less-than-stellar competition.

The Rangers and Los Angeles Kings are the two best teams they have played, and neither team has had the look of a serious contender yet this season.

The competition will eventually get tougher, and that will start a little bit this week.

The Penguins play three games through Saturday, returning home on Tuesday to play the Vancouver Canucks, then traveling to Florida on Thursday night for a game against the back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers, before returning back home on Saturday to host the Columbus Blue Jackets.

Vancouver is an interesting team because it’s off to a great start in the standings with the same 4-2-0 record as the Penguins, but it’s gotten there in a very different way. The Canucks’ underlying numbers have been mostly abysmal, but they did play a really strong game on Sunday against the Washington Capitals. While the roster is flawed, they still have some high-end talent on the roster, including one of the league’s best defenseman (and players) in Quinn Hughes.

But there are still big questions.

Is Elias Pettersson going to be an elite scorer again? Will Thatcher Demko stay healthy and play well in goal? Is there enough depth?

It won’t be an easy game, but it’s winnable.

On Thursday the Penguins travel to Florida — a place they always seem to struggle — for what might be their toughest challenge of the season so far. The Panthers are not anywhere near 100 percent healthy at this point with Aleksander Barkov and Matthew Tkachuk sidelined, but raced out to a 3-0 start to the season. Since then, however, the Panthers have lost four games in a row and will be coming off what will surely be an intense game in Boston on Tuesday when Brad Marchand makes his return to play against his original team. Thursday’s game will also be Florida’s first game back home after a five-game road trip. Between that and the injuries the Penguins might be catching them at the right time.

It might be a similar story with Saturday’s game against Columbus. The Blue Jackets have an outstanding young core of talent, and better days should be in their near future assuming they can bring that talent along and properly develop it. They have only won two of their first five games entering the week, however, while they will be playing the second-half of a back-to-back, with travel, while the Penguins will be rested the night before. It is a big scheduling advantage.

Given the opponents, the scheduling matchups and all of the variables, I really do not think it is a stretch to think the Penguins could — or perhaps even should — get three or four points out of this week. Florida seems like the most likely game they lose, even without Barkov and Tkachuk, but the other two look winnable.

The bigger intrigue for me this week is not necessarily about who the Penguins play or what they do with those games as a team.

It is how they handle some of their roster decisions.

Will the goalie situation remain a rotation? Or does Dan Muse stick with Tristan Jarry following his shutout in San Jose? Aside from the fact the goalies have mostly been rotating starts, Tuesday’s game would also be a chance for Artus Silovs to get an opportunity to play against his former team.

Overall, both goalies have mostly played well so you can not really go wrong with either decision for Tuesday. They each have a shutout already, while they have combined for a .905 all-situations save percentage that has them 11th in the NHL so far.

Then there is the question of the teenagers, forward Ben Kindel and defenseman Harrison Brunicke.

Will they play all three games this week? And if they do, will that result in them being sent back to their junior teams next week? Or at least closer to getting sent back?

Both players have already appeared in five games, and only have four more to go before the Penguins have to make a decision on them. Whether they stay in Pittsburgh all season or not the Penguins are still going to give them the occasional game off — as they already have — simply because neither player has ever played a full NHL schedule worth of games. Their minutes need to be managed at least a little bit.

What makes the decisions so interesting is that both of them have been among the Penguins best players so far this season. They have not just been good for a couple of teenagers, they have just simply been good. Really good. They look like NHL players right now. Kindel has the highest expected goal share of any player on the team that has played in more than one game, while Brunicke has the highest mark among the team’s defensemen.

They belong.

What makes Kindel’s play so impressive is that he is not doing this as as passenger next to one of the Penguins’ top centers like Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin. He is driving his own line, while playing some extremely tough minutes.

There is a strong argument to be made for both of them staying in Pittsburgh. Will we see both of them all week? Will they continue to get their big minutes and big roles? If they do, how they play and continue to develop will be the biggest storyline of the season.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...rn-home-with-fascinating-player-usage-options
 
Wilkes Weekly: WBS Penguins stay perfect on season

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They’re cookin’ with gas up towards the northeastern corner of the state. The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins secured another two victories this past week to move their overall season record to a perfect 4-0-0.

WBS started the week off with a 5-2 victory over Hartford on Friday night. Atley Calvert scored twice and prospects Tristan Broz and Avery Hayes each chipped in a goal — the other team leaders were the erstwhile former NHL players attached to the club. Danton Heinen recorded three assists and Ryan Graves added a pair of helpers.

Wilkes had perhaps their most enthralling win a night later, scoring six straight goals after falling behind 3-0 to come back against Bridgeport. Much like the first game of the week, this one was veteran-fueled: Heinen ended up with a goal and two assists, Graves had a goal, Rafael-Harvey Pinard added a goal and an assist, Valtteri Puustinen added a pair of assists. There were some younger players on the scoresheet as well – Ville Koivunen scored a goal and added and assist and Owen Pickering registered two assists of his own; but the common theme of the weekend was the older players in WBS coming through and tipping the balance.

Overall, the organization must be thrilled with the start. The vets like Heinen and Graves have paid dividends on the ice. Youngsters like Koivunen, Broz and Murashov have gotten off to great starts of their own. All systems are go right now down at the AHL level, the Penguins have a blend of talent from players young and old that have seemingly melded together in a way to create a very formidable AHL club.

Weekly lines

Here were the lines from the two games last week. Due to the veteran rules of which players can dress it was Puustinen and Sebastian Aho who got held out for Friday’s game as healthy scratches. Both of those players rotated back in for Saturday’s game when it was Joona Koppanen and Boko Imama turn to be scratched.

Broz+Koivunen have been working together as an early season staple for one line, and Heinen+Hayes have been the basis for another line with pieces rotating around those building blocks, though Calvert has become a regular third member of that line through his strong start (three goals in four games). Poulin+Harvey-Pinard is emerging as another frequent combination, though the latter is subject to the occasional rotation out of the lineup as the team dances the dance of scratching veteran players.

The defense has been fairly stable with Pickering/Kemp as the usual top pairing and Graves/Pietila forming the second pair at the start of the season.

Murashov played both games on the back-to-back, though his stats have noted a modest decrease in performance in each of the games (allowing one, two and three goals in the course of his small sample).

Harvey-Pinard, Ansons and Huglen are in ⬇️

Catch the action on AHLTV on FloHockey: https://t.co/CrNDVVI2ER pic.twitter.com/jPp3zreKKF

— Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (@WBSPenguins) October 17, 2025
Aho, Puustinen, De St. Phalle, and Klassen slot in for Koppanen, Imama, Ansons, and Harding

Watch the action on AHLTV on FloHockey: https://t.co/CrNDVVI2ER pic.twitter.com/jwWddFsXRr

— Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (@WBSPenguins) October 18, 2025

Pieniniemi suspended

At 30,000 feet it’s been all positive for the minor league levels, but individual situations can always pop up. One such trouble spot has been the team reportedly suspending rookie defenseman Emil Pieniniemi over the player’s refusal to accept an assignment to ECHL Wheeling.

Pieniniemi, a former third round pick, has been a prospect on the rise lately but was unable to secure a spot on the AHL team out of camp. Per the NHL collective bargaining agreement, players working on an entry level contract (as Pieniniemi is under) are required accept a team’s assignment to the AHL or ECHL. Pieniniemi has balked at that and his status with the organization is now in question as all sides sort out what comes next. The Penguins could loan Pieniniemi to a European team — but such a move would be neutral at best for the 20-year old’s career. (Pieniniemi left Finland to play Canadian juniors last season) and not exactly help him becoming established within the Pens’ organization via playing outside of it.

It’s a tough situation, that partially is a result of the Pittsburgh depth chart. Having veterans like Graves, Sebastian Aho and Alexander Alexeyev in the AHL hurts the chances for a left shot defender in Pieniniemi to get an immediate AHL role. At the same time, AHL rosters are incredibly fluid and Pieniniemi would have likely received an opportunity at some point. No player desires to stick around in the unglamorous land of the ‘Cheese Toast’ league, but sometimes situations dictate starting out at the lowest rung on the ladder and working one’s way up. In many ways minor league hockey is about grinding out personal growth in what can be uncomfortable and far-flung settings. It’s disappointing that Pieniniemi has balked at that and will be interesting to see how he and the Penguins play this situation out.

The week ahead

WBS settles into what will become a familiar and typical rhythm of the AHL schedule: playing games on Wednesday-Friday-Saturday in five of the next six weeks through the end of November. Wilkes hosts Lehigh Valley on Wednesday and then hits the road for a pair of games in Charlotte on Friday and Saturday.

The Charlotte games will be a great test – the Checkers are off to a 3-1 start this season and finished second in the division last season — while making it all the way to the Calder Cup Final last summer (eventually losing in the championship round to Arturs Silovs and Abbotsford).

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/wbs-weekly/68137/wilkes-weekly-wbs-penguins-stay-perfect-on-season
 
Kyle Dubas might have cooked this offseason

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When Kyle Dubas talks about his timeline for the Pittsburgh Penguins, he almost always uses the word “urgent” to emphasize short-term focus on improvement, even as the main focus managerially has been to trade away quality players when their contracts are running out and stockpile future draft picks. Dubas has reason to pay lip service towards short-term competitiveness, being as Sidney Crosby’s agent is one step away from publicly imploring his client to come around to the idea that the player deserves to finish his career with a flourish and not on a rebuilding team.

Dubas’s every word can be parsed for intention and how sincere it is, obviously a manager doesn’t keep in $11 million in cap space going into a season while ignoring the blue line if he truly was prioritizing the best short-term team he could produce. At the same time, Dubas hardly wants to position the Pens as the next version of the Buffalo Sabres or San Jose Sharks that face the long and uncertain climb out of the dregs of the league and set them up for a potential decade (or longer) period of being a doormat always waiting for that next wave of youth to raise them back up.

This time of year there’s always the disclaimer that it’s only been seven games, and that’s true. Justin Brazeau isn’t going to score on 36% of his shots forever. 82 games is a long time for teams to settle out and find their true level. None of that takes away from the impressive start for Pittsburgh. A lot of that has come from Dubas’s decisions in the off-season.

  • Justin Brazeau: 5 goals, 3 assists in 7 games — the biggest signing, literally. The Pens grabbed Brazeau in free agency on a two-year deal worth $1.5 million per season. It might be the best budget signing of the summer, it certainly is through the first two weeks of the season. Brazeau started 2024-25 in Boston, where he did relatively well (10 goals and 20 points in 57 games) and was a trade deadline pickup by Minnesota. That didn’t go as well, scoring only one goal in 25 games with the Wild. This year, Brazeau can’t miss. His line with two fellow 6’5”+ has been a force. What a force he’s been to be one of the most pleasant and unexpected surprises in the league this year.
  • Anthony Mantha: 3 goals, 3 assists in 7 games — Mantha got pulled out of the bargain bin this summer too after being injured for the majority of the 2024-25 season with a one-year contract on only a $2.5 million guarantee (and $2 million more in potential performance bonuses). Last season was supposed to be a redemption opportunity for Mantha after a dreadful 2024 playoffs in Vegas. That was delayed to now, Mantha is looking like the player who was productive for Detroit and Washington in the earlier part of his career, and also benefitting from playing with Brazeau and Evgeni Malkin on the uniquely big Pittsburgh second line. Unlike Brazeau, Mantha’s history of three 20+ goal seasons made his addition more of a known quantity.
  • Arturs Silovs: 3-1-0 record, 2.25 GAA, .919 save%, 3.68 GSAx — Dubas ended up getting more back from trading away Alex Nedeljkovic (a third round pick) then he had to give up to acquire Silovs (a fourth round pick). That could work out as one of the best off-season moves he made. The Pens needed something new and fresh in their crease, and Tristan Jarry’s contract/play makes him a tough move. Enter Silovs, only 24, last year’s AHL champion goalie who is looking like a clear upgrade over what Pittsburgh has had in net lately. Silovs has the talent, size and technique to be a solid NHL option and his Penguin career has gotten off to a wonderful beginning like so many other recent adds.
  • Dan Muse: The coaching change was an uncomfortable time, an unpleasant chore that the Penguins put off for too long. Muse has been a great choice by Dubas to pluck almost out of nowhere (few had barely heard his name in general, let alone that even that he was in serious consideration for the job) and it’s been aces. The Pens puck support is better, they’re defending the slot and net-front better, their neutral zone systems and easily defeatable puck side overload are gone. The buttons pushed from coaching has served the team well.

You can keep going if you want. Ben Kindel made the team as an 18-year old, and beyond that accomplishment has looked like he belongs. That’s more a win for the scouting and drafting to create an unexpected but welcome early return out of that pick, but one that Dubas still was a major part of. Ditto even the move to add Connor Dewar or bring back Filip Hallander or get some passable work out of Parker Wotherspoon.

The Penguins have exceeded expectations so far by winning five of their first seven games. At this point a key reason for that has been the offseason adds that have also exceeded wildest dreams. Dubas has a long history with Brazeau, but even in his heart of hearts it’s tough to imagine he could have dreamed up a start like this. Not since the days of Blake Comeau (who ‘only’ scored 16 goals and 31 points in 61 games in 2014-15, which under coach Mike Johnston is akin to production almost double that) has a player rejuvenated a career so quickly and thoroughly along side Evgeni Malkin.

There’s an awfully long time to go before the Pens can rightfully prove whether or not they have staying power. Time will likely work against them, Malkin’s aged legs have faded in recent seasons and Brazeau could always slide back down to the player he’s been for much of his career. Silovs, as a volatile goalie, figures to have some valleys thrown into this recent peak time.

As far as the first two weeks go, the Pens and Kyle Dubas couldn’t have hoped for much more. All the levers he pulled over the summer have paid immediate dividends, many have worked out to best case scenarios or even beyond the imagination of what could have been possible. The team has put out some enjoyable hockey to be excited about and have made it interesting to see just how this version of the fairly expectation-less Penguins can continue to build upon a solid start.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/68254/kyle-dubas-might-have-cooked-this-offseason
 
Pens Points: Cruisin’ Over Canucks

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Here are your Pens Points for this Wednesday morning…​


The Pittsburgh Penguins returned home on Tuesday night to welcome the Vancouver Canucks to PPG Paints Arena. A slow start turned into a second-period explosion, where Pittsburgh got out to a 4-1 lead after 40 minutes en route to a milestone-filled 5-1 win. [Recap]

Many an early-season Pens Point has been spent hyping up the two youngest players on the Pittsburgh Penguins’ roster: that being 18-year-old Ben Kindel and 19-year-old Harrison Brunicke. Neither player has looked entirely out of place in a lineup of veterans and playing against NHL-level players after most recently playing junior hockey. Yet, with both players’ nine-game trials expiring soon, before their entry-level contracts begin, the Penguins have big decisions to make with their two young players. [PensBurgh]

Some good news: Penguins broadcaster Josh Getzoff returned to the television booth after fainting and requiring medical attention during the second intermission of the Penguins’ road game against the Anaheim Ducks on Oct. 14. [Trib Live]

As the Penguins prepare to honor their first batch of Penguins Hall of Fame inductees this Saturday against the Blue Jackets, familiarize or refamiliarize yourself with one of the greatest coaches in NHL history and one of the driving forces behind the behemoth that was the early-1990s Penguins: Scotty Bowman. [Penguins]

News and notes from around the NHL…​


The Colorado Avalanche, celebrating their 30th anniversary, have unveiled Quebec Nordiques specialty jerseys that will be worn throughout this season. [NHL]

It was an emotional night for Florida Panthers forward Brad Marchand on Tuesday. He returned to Boston to face the Bruins for the first time as a member of the opposing team. Tears flowed from the eyes of a visibly moved Marchand as a touching video played on the big screen at TD Garden, and the fans paid their respects to one of the all-time great Bruins. See it here. [Boston.com]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/6822...ndel-brunicke-getzoff-nhl-avalanche-nordiques
 
Pens Points: Those Cats ain’t all that!

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Here are your Pens Points for this Friday morning…​


The Pittsburgh Penguins traveled to South Florida on Thursday to fight the back-to-back Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers. Pittsburgh, led largely by its captain, Sidney Crosby, and Tristan Jarry, had an answer for everything the Panthers did on Thursday night, leading to an impressive 5-3 win. [Recap]

Sidney Crosby has tied Mario Lemieux’s franchise record for the most multi-point games. [The Hockey News]

The Penguins have boasted an impressive, if somewhat unforeseen, record in the early stages of the 2025-26 season. But, as Gretz pens, we’re about to see what this team is really made of, as they prepare to play what’s expected to be a much more difficult slate of games over the next few weeks. [PensBurgh]

Some notable off-ice news concerning the Penguins: the team no longer owns the development rights to the Lower Hill District site where the Civic Arena once sat. The Penguins, along with Pittsburgh’s Urban Redevelopment Authority and the Sports and Exhibition Authority, reached an agreement in 2007 to give those rights to the team as part of a deal that helped keep the Penguins in Pittsburgh. But that deal expired at 11:59 p.m. Wednesday. Development rights have reverted to the URA and SEA. [Trib Live]

News and notes from around the NHL…​


Is Gavin McKenna in any real danger of being unseated as the No. 1 overall prospect in the 2026 NHL Draft? [Sportsnet]

Former Toronto Maple Leafs president Brendan Shanahan will be joining the National Hockey League’s hockey operations department, TSN’s Darren Dreger reports. [TSN]

Thursday’s game between the San Jose Sharks and New York Rangers was monumental in many respects. San Jose notched its first win of the season, a 6-5 OT thriller, but what led to the Sharks earning two points was something else entirely: a five-point night from teenager Macklin Celebrini, including three goals and two assists. Celebrini is the fourth teenager in NHL history with multiple five-point games in his career, joining Dale Hawerchuk, Bryan Trottier, and Wayne Gretzky. Elite company. [The Sporting News via Yahoo!]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/68297/pens-points-penguins-panthers-crosby-hill-district-nhl-celebrini
 
The five biggest surprises of the Pittsburgh Penguins season so far

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With their 5-3 win over the defending Stanley Cup champion Florida Panthers on Thursday night the Pittsburgh Penguins improved to 6-2-0 on the young season, making them easily one of the biggest surprises in the NHL through the first two-plus weeks of the season. Nobody expected this, even with a relatively soft early season schedule.

It has been fun to watch.

Along with the team itself being a major surprise, there have also been some surprising individual developments on this team through the first eight games of the season.

Let’s talk about five of them.

Ben Kindel


In the span of about four months Ben Kindel went from being viewed by a lot of upset fans as a reach of a draft pick to looking like he is already a damn good NHL player at 18 years of age. Kyle Dubas and Wes Clark may have simply cooked with this pick.

Kindel is a surprise not only for the fact that he made the NHL roster in his draft year — an extremely rare accomplishment for a pick outside of the top-five — but also because he has legitimately been one of the team’s best players. That is not an exaggeration or hyperbole, either. He simply has been, even if it is not yet producing a lot of goals and points for himself. Even so, he does have two goals in his seven games (and both of them were on staggering shots) and has some of the best underlying numbers on the team when it comes to scoring chances, expected goals and driving possession.

He is not a passenger next to Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin. He is driving his own line, and doing so in a really impressive manner. His playmaking is obvious, his defensive play and diligence without the puck is shocking for a teenager and he just always seems to be in the right place, at the right time and always making something positive happen when he is on the ice.

There are not enough positive things to say about him and his play with the Penguins so far this season. He belongs here. Right now. They are nuts if they send him back to junior hockey. They are simply nuts.

Harrison Brunicke


Everything that I just said about Kindel can also be applied to Brunicke, the team’s 19-year-old defenseman.

His presence on the roster is not as big of a surprise as Kindel because I think there was always an expectation that he might be here this season. He is a year older, already had an NHL training camp under his belt (where he impressed) and was rapidly rising on the team’s prospect board. The surprise might be the fact that he has played really well as a 19-year-old defenseman in the NHL.

I think he has had a few more noticeable tough shifts than Kindel has, but that is to be expected with a young defenseman. Overall, though, it is hard not to be impressed with what he is doing and the way he looks when he is on the ice.

I thought one of the most impressive plays he made so far is one that did not even result in a goal. He took a pass off the rush in San Jose, deked around a defender and then just absolutely wired a shot that rang off the post. If that shot had bounced into the net instead of away from it, it would be one of the Penguins’ prettiest goals of the season. Even as it is, it was still a fantastic glimpse into the skill and talent he possesses and what he can do on the ice and with the puck.

The Penguins farm system has improved significantly over the past two years. Kindel and Brunicke are two shining examples of it, and they are already making impacts in the NHL. It is encouraging for both now in the short-term and in the long-term future.

Justin Brazeau


Evgeni Malkin has two new wingers in Brazeau and Anthony Mantha, and they have been an impressive line offensively so far. Putting two big bodies on Malkin’s wings has taken some of the physical pressure off of him, and at times they have simply bullied their ways to goals. Brazeau has also showed some shockingly smooth hands and already has five goals on the season. They have not been garbage goals, either. Some of them have been strong displays of skill. He is not going to keep scoring goals at this pace, but he did enter this season having scored 16 goals in 95 games (around 15 goals per 82 games) and has had some big offensive years at the lower levels. Maybe there is something here.

He scored 61 goals in his final OHL year (and 39 the year before), and had some strong years in the American Hockey League offensively.

It always just seems to take him a couple of years at each level before he figures it out and really starts to shine.

Late bloomer? Just a lucky streak to start the season? Whatever it is, I do not think anybody expected five goals and eight total points from him through the first eight games of the season.

The goalies


This has been the Penguins’ biggest question mark for years, and it is one of the things that still gives me pause about fully buying into this fast start for the season. We have seen this movie from Tristan Jarry before where he plays great early in the season and then struggles in the second half. So we will have to just see how it plays out. But the Jarry-Artus Silovs duo has been mostly fantastic this season as part of their rotation.

Between the two of them their .920 all-situations save percentage is the fourth-best in the NHL and their .934 save percentage is sixth-best in the NHL.

They each have a shutout, they have each been solid by making the routine saves and an occasional spectacular save. They have simply been very, very strong.

Erik Karlsson


It was very tempting for me to include Connor Dewar or somebody from the fourth line in this spot, but I will give them an honorable mention for their strong play. They have really had some nice momentum-changing shifts in games. Still, I am going to go with Karlsson as one of the biggest surprises, even if that seems weird to say about a three-time Norris Trophy winner and future Hall of Fame player.

It just got to a point with him during his first two years in Pittsburgh where most of the fanbase just gave up on the idea of him being the player they hoped he would be. The points and the offense were always there, but the overall play was not always there. The mistakes. The lapses. It was almost as if he had finally become the player his harshest critics had always thought he was throughout his career, and that maybe his days as an elite player were finished.

Maybe they are not? Because these first eight games this season might be the best hockey he has played as a member of the Pittsburgh Penguins. Which is kind of wild to say because he has yet to score a goal and has five assists in the first eight games. The offense is not yet there, but the overall play mostly is. Whether you think the Penguins can make the playoffs again before his contract expires with him being a part of that, or if you still want to view him as potential trade bait, him playing well is an important development.

Maybe Mike Sullivan hated him. Maybe he hated Mike Sullivan. Maybe they hated each other. Maybe Dan Muse is just getting the best out of him, as he seems to be doing with everybody on the roster right now.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...ises-of-the-pittsburgh-penguins-season-so-far
 
Game Preview: Columbus Blue Jackets @ Pittsburgh Penguins 10/25/25

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Who: Columbus Blue Jackets (3-4-0, 6 points, 8th place Metropolitan Division) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (6-2-0, 12 points, 3rd place Metropolitan Division)

When: 7:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Broadcast in the local markets on Sportsnet Pittsburgh and FanDuel Sportsnet Ohio, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Pens are looking at a busy next week mostly spent on the road. The stretch starts out with a back-to-back set of games at home against the St. Louis Blues on Monday and on the road against the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday, followed by road games in Minnesota, Winnipeg and Toronto in a span of five days.

Opponent Track: After losing three of four games to start the season, the Blue Jackets have recently turned things around with back-to-back wins against the Tampa Bay Lightning and at the Dallas Stars.

Columbus is coming in on the second half of a back-to-back after losing 5-1 to Alex Ovechkin and the visiting Washington Capitals on Friday night. But that final score doesn’t reflect how close things were for most of the game. The Blue Jackets were within one goal until early in the third period, and Washington head coach Spencer Carbery said afterwards he believed “we just stole two points.”

Season Series: The Pens are playing in Columbus on Nov. 28 and Jan. 4, followed by another home game against the Jackets on Jan. 17. Last season the Blue Jackets won the first two games of the series before the Pens came out on top of a 6-3 victory in March.

Hidden Stat: Since the Blue Jackets joined the NHL in 2000 the Penguins have conceded just four regulation losses to the team (24-4-1 overall record). One of those four losses took place on Nov. 15 of last year.

Getting to know the Blue Jackets​


Projected lines

FORWARDS

Dmitri Voronkov – Sean Monahan – Kirill Marchenko

Boone Jenner – Adam Fantilli – Kent Johnson

Cole Sillinger – Charlie Coyle – Mathieu Olivier

Zach Aston-Reese – Isac Lundestrom – Yegor Chinakhov

DEFENSEMEN

Zach Werenski / Denton Mateychuk

Ivan Provorov / Damon Severson

Dante Fabbro / Erik Gudbrandon

Goalies: Elvis Merzlikins (Jet Greaves started last night)

Potential scratches: Miles Wood (injury), Jake Christiansen

Injured reserve: None

  • Blue Jackets forward Miles Wood returned to practice Thursday for the first time since Oct. 13, when he took a high stick to the face he said left him afraid he had lost his left eye, per Brian Hedger of the Columbus Dispatch. He remained sidelined for Friday’s game against the Caps.

Season stats
via hockeydb, does not include last night’s game against the Caps

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  • Denton Mateychuk, a 2022 first-round pick skating on the Blue Jackets’ top pairing during his second NHL season, scored his second goal of the season on a Sean Monahan assist Friday night.
  • The penalty kill has been a serious issue for the Blue Jackets so far this season. The team headed into Friday’s matchup with Washington having killed off an NHL-low 60 percent of penalties so far this season. You can find multiple examples from early in the season of the unit breaking down and allowing an opponent an all-but unchallenged opportunity at the netfront.
NO QUIT pic.twitter.com/L6PKRsOfmR

— Minnesota Wild (@mnwild) October 12, 2025
Top cheese deserves a second look 👀 pic.twitter.com/aVycV4Utqk

— Nashville Predators (@PredsNHL) October 10, 2025
  • The Capitals took advantage of those struggles by scoring back-to-back power-play goals late in Friday night’s third period.
Tom Wilson leads the team in points (11) and power play goals (3)#ALLCAPS | @aerovironment pic.twitter.com/pJwAxnKuIv

— Washington Capitals (@Capitals) October 25, 2025

And now for the Pens​


Projected lines (from Thursday’s game)

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Anthony Mantha – Evgeni Malkin – Justin Brazeau

Tommy Novak – Ben Kindel – Filip Hallander

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Ryan Shea / Kris Letang

Caleb Jones / Connor Clifton

Goalies: Tristan Jarry and Arturs Silovs

Potential Scratches: Philip Tomasino, Mathew Dumba, Harrison Brunicke

IR: Kevin Hayes (upper body), Jack St. Ivany (lower body), Rutger McGroarty (upper body), Joel Blomqvist (lower body)

  • The Penguins are heading into tonight’s matchup on a four-game winning streak. Should the Pens remain in the win column tonight, it would mark the team’s longest winning streak since November 2023.
  • Sidney Crosby is on the rarest of goalscoring streaks. He has scored on all five of his last five shots while recording at least one goal in each of the Penguins’ last four games.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/6...bus-blue-jackets-pittsburgh-penguins-10-25-25
 
Sunday Standings: Metropolitan Division off to strong start

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It’s the last October Sunday of the year, and just like that we have teams approaching double-digit games played in the NHL. The season is still young, but more data and games are rolling in.

Let’s go around the circuit to check on all the teams in the Metropolitan Division and check on the week that was. So far, this division is off to a great start, almost every team is on target or exceeding what was expected of them through the first few weeks of the season (the Rangers may be the sole exception and certainly aren’t in a comfortable spot at the moment).

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New Jersey — Seven straight wins for the Devils! This week New Jersey came out on top against Toronto, Minnesota and San Jose, by a combined score of 12-4. Impressive stuff going on in NJ, it’s all systems go for them right now. Things don’t get any easier with a home-and-home starting today against Colorado.

Pittsburgh — Anyone else noticed the Pens lead the NHL with an all situations 13.97% shooting percentage? No matter! The vibes are sky high, let’s see how long this hot roll will continue. Maybe it goes for a while, and Pittsburgh fans deserve feeling good after a few years of just kinda hanging around. It’s a credit to them so far that they’ve been able to convert so many chances to goals and get off to a much stronger start than anyone could have expected.

Carolina — The Hurricanes were on the road and took on three elite Western Conference teams this week in Vegas (4-1 loss), Colorado (5-4 shootout win) and Dallas (3-2 loss). Tough road to go down there. As an aside and only place to ramble on this tangent; the game against the Avalanche featured them wearing Quebec Nordiques jerseys and Carolina wearing the Hartford Whalers getup. Many loved it, and obviously they are great jerseys and primo nostalgia but I did not like it. That’s just rubbing it in. You’re not the Hartford Whalers, you killed the Whalers by moving them. Imagine if the Penguins moved to Kansas City and played a game with the old logo? Awful. Hardly the biggest deal and maybe the point was a surface level ‘oh that’s nice’ reaction, just not a fan of teams reverting back to their franchise’s past that they were the ones who destroyed.

Washington — The Caps sandwiched two wins around losses to Vancouver and Ottawa to start and end the week. Last night’s game was fun, Alex Ovechkin celebrated game 1,500 with Washington in a 7-1 loss. Linus Ullmark lost his mind and skated all the way down the ice to get involved in a scrum. We could use more goalie fights these days.

NY Islanders — Over the past few years the Islanders have been scrappy, resilient, stubborn but typically boring or a chore. Now with Matthew Schaefer (and to a lesser extent Emil Heineman and a healthy Mat Barzal) are the Islanders…frisky and fun? It’s quite the turnaround from being a team to slog through games to now being an exciting one. This week will be a huge one to find out just where NYI stands, they have a road trip that takes them through Boston, Washington and Carolina.

Philadelphia — The Flyers might be getting their legs under them, after losing three of the first four games to start the season, they’ve now won three out of four including a shootout win over the Islanders yesterday. The Trevor Zegras experiment is going well out the gates, Zegras has eight points in the first eight games with Philadelphia. Goalie Dan Vladar has been playing some really good hockey lately too, strangely enough with his history.

Columbus — Last night was a nice response game in Pittsburgh for the Blue Jackets, who absorbed a tough 5-1 loss the night before to Washington. Columbus is another team on the rise that is a fun watch. Two or three times their defensemen had to pull pucks off the goal line to prevent goals, everyone is pitching in!

NY Rangers — Mike Sullivan is not having a good time so far in New York. The Rangers need to “learn how to win” and have played some situationally terrible hockey. The ironic thing is that Sullivan has gotten NYR above water in chances and shored up their awful defensive play from last year. They still have a lot of work to do to get things settled in, Sullivan hasn’t been able to erase the turmoil.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/68377/sunday-standings-metropolitan-division-off-to-strong-start
 
Rickard Rakell has surgery, out 6-8 weeks

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The IR list for the Penguins is growing. A few days after Caleb Jones was lost for eight weeks with a lower body injury, Rickard Rakell will now be on the shelf for 6-8 weeks after undergoing surgery on his left hand.

Forward Rickard Rakell underwent successful surgery on his left hand today.

The procedure was performed by Dr. John Fowler in collaboration with head team physician Dr. Dharmesh Vyas at UPMC Mercy Hospital.

The expected recovery time is six to eight weeks. pic.twitter.com/Ljp9dzjgDX

— Penguins PR (@PenguinsPR) October 26, 2025

Rakell was struck in the hand in last night’s loss to Columbus. He has been a staple on the first line with Sidney Crosby and has eight points (3 goals and 5 assists) in nine games this season. The Penguins have started out a strong 6-2-1 on the season but will now have to deal with losing one of their top forwards for the future.

An internal replacement could be on the table, Ville Koivunen has excelled in the AHL with 11 points (4 goals, 7 assists) in nine games with Wilkes-Barre this month after being sent down following two quiet games in the NHL to start the season.

Koivunen was back with the NHL team in practice on Sunday.

#LetsGoPens workflow:

Hallander-Crosby-Rust
Mantha-Malkin-Brazeau
Novak-Kindel-Koivunen
Dewar-Lizotte-Acciari
(Tomasino)

Wotherspoon-Karlsson
Shea-Letang
Dumba-Brunicke-Clifton

— Pens Inside Scoop (@PensInsideScoop) October 26, 2025

Beyond Koivunen, there were other choices as well. Danton Heinen is leading the entire AHL in scoring with 12 points. Tristan Broz is also off to a good start with six points in seven AHL games. Pittsburgh only has 12 healthy forwards currently on the roster and figure to need some depth from someone in the minors, since the Pens are about to start a busy stretch of the schedule with three games in four days (and four games in six days, five in eight) and have been managing the workload of 18-year old Ben Kindel.

For now, it will be a big blow to lose Rakell, who was third on the team among forwards in ice time and among their leading scorers. Rakell is one of two Penguins who has averaged over a minute per game on their power play and penalty kill (Bryan Rust being the other), so his loss will be felt in a trickle down manner to press many others up a level. That begun with Anthony Mantha taking Rakell’s spot last night on the team’s top power play group.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/68382/rickard-rakell-has-surgery-out-6-8-weeks
 
The week ahead: Welcome back Ville Koivunen; Big decisions loom on Kindel, Brunicke

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The first two weeks of the 2025-26 Pittsburgh Penguins season have gone way better than anybody expected, and this past week was no exception. I looked at the three games they were facing a week ago and realistically expected three or maybe four points out of it. They ended up getting five. The games against Florida and Columbus were definitely not their prettiest of the season, with the latter arguably being their worst performance of the season outside of the late, dramatic comeback.

While the Penguins were beating up on the bottom-tier teams on the schedule to open the season, the games in Florida and against Columbus were more about goaltending stepping up and some serious shooting percentage swings going their way. That is not a sustainable recipe for success, so it will be interesting to see if they reverse that trend, or if maybe some cracks in the strong start are beginning to show.

The schedule also gets a little tougher this week with games against St. Louis on Monday, Philadelphia on Tuesday, Minnesota on Thursday and Winnipeg on Saturday. The latter three games begin a four-game road trip (tied for the second-longest trip of the season), while they also play their first set of back-to-back games on Monday and Tuesday with the Blues and Flyers.

This is a big change in the schedule based on the way the season began.

Not only have the Penguins mostly drawn favorable matchups, they have also had a lot of scheduling advantages where they had yet to play a back-to-back while they played multiple opponents on the back end of back-to-back.

All of that helps.

Now it is going to swing the other way.

As for the opponents themselves, the Blues are off to a bad start in the standings, but are not getting any goaltending help. They have pushed the pace of play in their games and are one of the top teams in expected goal share, scoring chance share and high-danger scoring chance share. What’s held them back has been the league’s worst 5-on-5 save percentage. It will be a big test for the Penguins to see if they can reverse the trend from the past two games.

I am still not sure what to make of the Flyers at this point, but Dan Vladar has been off to a surprisingly good start in goal and Trevor Zegras looks like he might be getting a bounce back with a fresh start in Philadelphia.

Matvei Michkov, however, has been quiet so far. You have to think a breakout game is coming from him at some point.

Minnesota’s early performance is simply not matching the talent on paper. I liked this team a lot coming into the season and thought with better injury luck they could be a sleeper team in the West. Instead, they have been awful with only three wins in 10 games and some nasty underlying numbers to go with it.

Winnipeg on Saturday might simply be their toughest game of the season.

That is eight possible points on the schedule. If they get more than four that would be quite an accomplishment given the opponents and schedule.

But even more than the opponents and the games, the most intriguing thing to watch this week will be some individual players. Specifically as it relates to the teams youngest players.

The injury to Rickard Rakell has opened the door for Ville Koivunen to return. I was not a fan of sending him down initially, but he went to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and simply dominated while he was there. Whether he gets an opportunity on the top line in Rakell’s absence, or slides into the third-line next to Ben Kindel and Tommy Novak I want to see if he can get his production in Wilkes-Barre to carry over to the NHL. He only played a few shifts with Kindel in the first two games, but they were very, very strong.

Then there is the Kindel and Brunicke situations.

Kindel has played in seven games.

Brunicke has played in six games.

Both players sat out games this past week with Brunicke sitting back-to-back games and Kindel sitting against Columbus (along with Brunicke).

That means Kindel is two games away from the nine-game mark that could result in him getting sent back to Calgary and Brunicke is three games away from potentially being sent back to Kamloops.

My opinion on this has not changed from a week ago. I think both players are NHL quality right now and have earned a spot here this season. They are not struggling to keep up. They are playing at a high level and making significant contributions. Kindel has arguably been one of their best players. Actually, I do not think there is much of an argument for it. I just find it really hard to believe that there is anything for them to gain in the Western Hockey League where they will likely dominate 16-and 17-year olds when they could be getting NHL training, NHL coaching and NHL everything while also getting to learn from a handful of Hall of Famers. Especially when they look good enough to play at this level.

They should stay strictly from a hockey standpoint, even if they continue to sit out every handful of games as part of the “development plan” as the Penguins are calling it.

From a purely selfish perspective, they just make the team more interesting to watch. Not only because they are fresh faces and bring major, significant long-term upside, but also because they simply bring a new energy that has been lacking.

Without them in the lineup on Saturday, and with Koivunen still in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, there was not a lot of juice or excitement for that game. The Penguins played like it until the last five minutes. There was a whole lot of “what’s the point to this season if this is the lineup?” to it. It looked like a lot of the slow, lifeless hockey we saw a year ago with no long-term upside in the lineup. Novak and Filip Hallander were absolutely crushed without Kindel centering their line. Connor Clifton was a nightmare on the third defense pairing. It was a boring glimpse into what the season might look like if Kindel and Brunicke go back to juniors and players like Kevin Hayes eventually return to the lineup.

I know Koivunen is back and McGroarty will be back soon, but if you are going to look toward the future and go young, then you might as well do it. Especially when the young players you have as potential options in the lineup are good enough to contribute right now.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...oivunen-big-decisions-loom-on-kindel-brunicke
 
Fan seriously injured in fall from upper bowl at PPG Paints Arena

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A fan was seriously injured after falling from the upper concourse during a Penguins game at PPG Paints Arena. | KDKA-TV

A fan was seriously injured Monday night after falling from the upper bowl during the Penguins’ game against the Blues at PPG Paints Arena.

The team said in a statement that the fan fell to the lower bowl and was immediately attended to by medics and arena personnel. The fan was then taken to the hospital.

A Pittsburgh Public Safety spokesperson said the person’s injuries are considered life-threatening.

Another individual in the lower bowl where the fall occurred was evaluated by medics but declined being taken to the hospital.

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Pittsburgh Public Safety said that detectives from the police bureau’s Major Crimes unit are investigating the circumstances surrounding what led up to the fall.

A photo shared on social media by Pittsburgh comedian Matt Light showed the upper balcony area where the fall took place.

The photo appeared to show broken glass covered by a black sheet.

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“Our concerns remain with the individual and his family at this time,” the team also said.

Fall at PPG Paints Arena the most recent at Pittsburgh’s three sports venues

Earlier this year, the baseball world came to a halt when Kavan Markwood fell over the right field wall at PNC Park and onto the playing surface during a Pirates game.

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Markwood was critically injured in the fall. Doctors said he suffered several injuries, including to his skull, brain, spine, ribs, and lungs, CBS News Pittsburgh reported.

Worker at Acrisure Stadium falls 50 feet from scoreboard

Over the weekend, a worker at Acrisure Stadium on the North Shore suffered serious injuries after falling 50 feet from the stadium’s scoreboard.

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The man who fell was working Saturday night to prepare the stadium for the Steelers’ game against the Packers following the Pitt game, CBS News Pittsburgh report.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/68483/fan-injured-fall-penguins-ppg-paints-arena
 
Pens recall Owen Pickering

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From the recap last night:

And this isn’t the usual platform or time/place for big picture thoughts, but for cryin’ out loud, this team is going to have to find a third LD just for the sake of being functional. Dumba on the left side and a 19-year old Brunicke isn’t going to be the answer. (Neither is Connor Clifton). We’ll see how and when that might get rectified.

Asked and answered, come on back to the NHL Owen Pickering!

The Penguins have recalled defenseman Owen Pickering from the @WBSPenguins (AHL). pic.twitter.com/2SYt4sRq6S

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 28, 2025

The Penguins have had a unique problem in that they don’t have enough left shot defenders. Almost always the opposite is true for NHL teams. Caleb Jones suffering a lower body injury last week meant the team has attempted to rotate through Matt Dumba, Harrison Brunicke and Connor Clifton filling the two spots on the third pair in the past few games. All are right shots. It hasn’t been a smooth process to watch unfold, as can be seen from the raw emotion of the recap. The Pens badly needed the added structure that comes with a left shot playing on the left side and a right hander on the right side.

That’s where Pickering will come in to have a chance and steady the third pair. Pickering did spend quite a bit of the preseason with Brunicke on an all-rookie pair, and performed well in Wilkes-Barre scoring four points in seven games on their first pair defense.

Huge opportunity for Pickering to show his stuff and start establishing himself in the NHL in his draft+4 season, a time where it would be wonderful for his future career prospects that he gets it in gear and starts moving up the ranks. It’s also interesting to a degree that it’s Pickering, and not veteran Ryan Graves, who is coming up to Pittsburgh at this time. Barring injury, it might be a long, long time (if ever) before Graves is back in a Penguin jersey.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/68506/pens-recall-owen-pickering
 
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