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Game Preview: New York Rangers @ Pittsburgh Penguins 10/11/2025

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Who: New York Rangers (1-1-0) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (2-0-0)

When: 7:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh and MSG, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: Pens fans should get ready for some late nights ahead. The next few puck drops are set for 10 p.m. ET or later as the Penguins head West to take on the Anaheim Ducks, Los Angeles Kings and San Jose Sharks on the road.

Opponent Track: The Rangers lost their season opener to the Pens in a 3-0 shutout on Tuesday at Madison Square Garden, but ended up the other side of the blank sheet in a 4-0 win over the host Buffalo Sabres on Thursday.

Season Series: One more win will allow the Pens to best last season’s series with the Rangers, which the good guys lost 1-3 while getting outscored 17-8.

Hidden Stat: If the Penguins beat the Rangers again tonight, it will mark the team’s first 3-0-0 start to a season since the 2013-14 campaign.

Getting to know the Rangers​


Projected lines (from Thursday’s game)

FORWARDS

Will Cuylle – JT Miller – Mika Zibanejad

Artemi Panarin – Vincent Trocheck (?) – Alexis Lafreniére

Conor Sheary – Noah Laba – Taylor Raddysh

Adam Edstrom – Sam Carrick – Matt Rempe

DEFENSEMEN

Vladislav Gavrikov – Adam Fox

Carson Soucy – Will Borgen

Urho Vaakanainen – Braden Schneider

Goalies: Igor Shesterkin, Jonathan Quick

Scratches: Matthew Robertson, Juuso Parssinen, Brett Berard

  • Vincent Trocheck’s status is uncertain after the forward suffering an upper-body injury on Thursday against the Sabres. The Rangers responded to him leaving the game by bumping down Mika Zibanejad to play alongside Artemi Panarin and Alexis Lafreniere on the second line, per The Athletic’s Vincent Z. Mercogliano.
  • That resulted in two-time Stanley Cup champion Conor Sheary— who signed a one-year minimum deal with the Rangers one day before the season started— being elevated to skate on the top line. Here’s a look at some of the line shuffling Mike Sullivan did Thursday after Trocheck’s absence:
Lines without Trocheck look like:

Cuylle – Miller – Sheary
Panarin – Zibanejad – Lafrenière
Edström – Laba – Raddysh #NYR

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) October 10, 2025
  • Shesterkin looked strong during his 37-save shutout against the Sabres on Thursday. He could be called on for another big performance tonight, especially if the Rangers’ relatively thin forward depth gets exposed by Trocheck’s absence.
  • The Rangers goaltender has stopped 15 of 16 high-danger shots he’s faced through the first two games of the season, per NHL Stats. (Parallel stat: Pens forward Justin Brazeau leads the NHL with seven high-danger shots through two games).
Mike Sullivan on having Igor Shesterkin on his side as a goaltender:

"It sure is nice, I tell ya" pic.twitter.com/r7nlbaCdFt

— Rangers Videos (@SNYRangers) October 10, 2025

And now for the Pens​


Projected lines

FORWARDS

Ville Koivunen – Sidney Crosby – Rickard Rakell

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: Bryan Rust (week-to-week, lower body), Kevin Hayes (upper body, week-to-week), Jack St. Ivany (week-to-week, lower body), Rutger McGroarty (indefinite, upper body), Joel Blomqvist (week-to-week, lower body)

How we sleep at night knowing the @penguins are 2-0 and Evgeni Malkin leads the NHL in points. pic.twitter.com/Q1iptTBFrs

— Penguins PR (@PenguinsPR) October 10, 2025
  • Bryan Rust, who rejoined the team for Wednesday’s practice in a regular jersey, seems like he’s approaching his season debut but has yet to commit to a return date.
  • The clock is ticking as to when Dan Muse and Kyle Dubas will need to decide whether Ben Kindel and Harrison Brunicke will active their contracts by staying with the Pens past nine games. So far they’ve both made a convincing effort to prove they’re ready for the full-time NHL gig, but the eventual return of forwards like Rust, Kevin Hayes and Rutger McGroarty could lead the Pens to decide to hold off on burning the first year of Kindel’s ELC for another year.
  • The Penguins announced Friday the team will recognize David Blackburn, who has spent 64 years working at Civic Arena and PPG Paints Arena, during Saturday’s game on his 90th birthday.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/67826/game-preview-new-york-rangers-pittsburgh-penguins-10-11-2025
 
Ranking the recent Pittsburgh Penguins alternate jerseys

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Let’s shift to jersey talk on an off-day Sunday for the Penguins. The Pens recently revealed their new yellow alternate jerseys that they will wear for every Thursday home game this season and a couple of select weekend games.

These rankings are always personal and subjective. It’s always fun when one person’s least favorite is another’s most treasured. Feel free to give your take. We’re sticking with only the Sidney Crosby era from 2005-present and including the outdoor jerseys as well.

Huge shoutout to the great resource of NHL Uniforms, great database to check out jerseys over the years from all the hockey teams.

#12: ‘Silver’ Pens

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I believe only used for the 2014 Stadium Series and maybe once more, the 2014 Stadium Series jersey was more of a flop than a hit. The front logo appeared to have a silver impact in the middle that showed in an odd way (I think a beer company sponsored the game and this jersey almost looked like a nod to that, whether intended or not). The numbers on the back were extra long for visibility in the outdoors. Not a good one.

#11: Cursed Frankenstein

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Perhaps best known for the jersey that Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin both suffered major injuries in over different games in 2011, this alternate doesn’t leave a good feeling. Worse yet, it’s a combination of different design concepts and colorings similar to what the team wore from 1967-80, yet never in this exact form (i.e. the light blue stripes were dark, the scarf Penguin wasn’t used). It resulted in a busy mish-mash of different concepts that didn’t land well. It’s a shame that it’s seemingly ruined the likelihood of a dark blue jersey again, the potential was there but what they came up with wasn’t it. Moving on.

#10: Reverse retro

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The Penguins never had a white PITTSBURGH black/gold diagonal jersey, and now we see why after the design of the 2021 “reverse retro” concept. It throws you off from the nostalgic black version of the ‘90s that didn’t really land well. That was the point of the “reverse” part of a reverse retro jersey but it’s an idea that no one asked for or particularly wanted in this instance. To me this is kind of like getting a Philly Cheesesteak on rye bread — it’s almost right but they didn’t quite get the order right when they put it on the wrong type of bread (or jersey color, in this case). So that spoils the dish.

#9: No white

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The first Penguin jersey in history to date that features zero amount of white on it anywhere for a Stadium Series jersey. The helmet with a logo on one side it was a cool idea, the rest just kinda looks like the printer messed up and put yellow in the logo where the white was supposed to go. Having a big arm stripe, a medium single bar on the socks, a thin bar at the bottom of the jersey and nothing on the pants looks uneven. The keystone PA logo on the pants is a very nice mark— especially since these jerseys were designed for an outdoor game against the Flyers who had matching designs— but the rest of the looks feels half baked. Not a big fan.

#8: The new alternate (middle)

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The new look is, well, OK. It’s very yellow and has a new jersey font that gives Nashville Predator vibes. Maybe some are a fan of the new concept of the new shoulder logo that features, well, random enough ancillary symbols but that came out of no where with no obvious connections to the established branding the team uses. Luckily they went ahead and put it on both shoulders for good measure. The triple arm striping looks busy and a modest attempt to break up all the yellow and it doesn’t match in width to single bottom bar across the bottom or the single bar on the socks. Out of necessity and ease they stuck with the regular pant shell, which sticks out to not flow cohesively with this concept considering the pants have a white stripe that isn’t found anywhere on the all-yellow/black top. On the plus side, this is the first matte helmet the team has used, which has no advertisement on it and is a big plus to have a team logo and not a corporate one. The white outlining of the number looks sharp, just a shame that’s all of the white involved, besides the interior of the logo and the part from the holdover pants. Maybe it will grow on me after seeing it more, for now it’s just there.

#7: Return of the Robo Penguin

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Some will have this one a lot higher on their personal rankings, which is totally fine. To me, it’s not the best sort of Robo Penguin design which would have been nice to see more retro shoulders and radiant across the middle of the shirt, but considering the concept was a reverse retro jersey that might have been difficult to work in. Instead, we were left with this sort of compromise where at least fans looking to see Crosby/Malkin got to play in a Robo Penguin jersey, ever so briefly, but it didn’t leave a lasting mark or seem like it will be returning to the ice again in the near future. They also used the same pant shell, so there was a “normal” skating Penguin logo on the leg just kinda leftover and still sticking around. The Robo Penguin in general is a very polarizing subject, which makes it ironic that it ends up just kinda in the middle for me. I’d be fine with the occasional RoboPen (though I’m not a huge fan of it) but the offering they designed was far from ideal use of it.

#6: Yellow comes back (middle)

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A fitting tribute to the 1980-84 jerseys brought a mainly yellow jersey back to the Penguins in 2018. As far as yellow jerseys go, this is the one; a classic look brought back and nice play off the existing black and white jerseys that the team used as the regular color schemes. They made the hockey stick in the logo yellow and not white for the first time (aside from the all black/yellow jersey), which looks pretty cool. It’s also nice they kept white on the arms to better tie in with the pants, giving a differentiator to the current yellow alternate. This is only sixth on the list, but I like it well enough, more that others just popped a little more or were a little more appealing and exciting.

#5: Steelers inspired yellow

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This Stadium Series jersey is similar to the yellow jersey above. It ups it a notch with the excitement factor that has a nod to the Steelers by making the numbers in the style of the football team that calls Heinz err Acrisure Stadium home. This was a cool concept that worked, would have loved to see some type of logo moved from the shoulder to the front leg of the pants for an added special touch, maybe keep on the Steelers theme by using a helmet with a logo on one side, something a little more creative was left out there. It was too niche to last very long but it wasn’t designed to stick around. For a special event this one was about pitch perfect.

#4: ‘90s Nostalgia at its best (middle)

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The Pens brought back the classic diagonal PITTSBURGH block font from 2021-25 for the first time in the traditional black since they wore it from 1992-97. The memories associated with this jersey give it the power, in the mind’s eye you can almost see Mario Lemieux pulling this sweater on to win the scoring title despite undergoing cancer treatments or expect to see Ron Francis pop up and make a perfect pass to Jaromir Jagr for a goal. A lot of that is age-related and might not hit the same for everyone, but that’s what made this nostalgia done right. It’s a great alternate because it doesn’t stray or try to reinvent what worked in the first place with the concept.

#3: The 2023 Winter Classic throwback

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Really liked these 1920’s inspired Pittsburgh (hockey) Pirates outfits, which as a trivia note was the first pro Pittsburgh team to ever use black and gold as its jersey colors. It would have been even nicer if they could have worked in the crest that the old team had into the arms or shoulders. The creamy off-white worked well, especially for the outdoor game and having Penguins in a cursive font on the helmet and pants flowed very well and was a nice addition for a baseball stadium. It’s also a very nice touch that the inside of the collar (like the new yellow alternate) has the white/blue checkers from the city of Pittsburgh’s flag on it. You can’t see it when the players play but that’s a bonus when getting one that adds a little something extra.

#2: So good they made it the regular jersey (middle uniform)

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The Penguins faded out the “Vegas gold” colors of their home and away jerseys starting in 2014 by using the middle jersey as an alternate. This jersey is basically what the team wore from 1980-92 before inexplicably changing it up in the middle of a championship run. It was such a good alternate that it eventually graduated into the standard home jersey from 2016-present and likely will be around for years to come and put the ’Vegas gold’ out to its rightful place in pasture. This is THE classic Penguin look to have.

#1: The light blues

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This is what it’s all about, a throwback to the classic 1968-71 look. It also helps that Crosby made it his own for a new generation with his outdoor shootout winner in the first Winter Classic back in ‘08. When you want a perfect alternate jersey, to me this hits all the notes. It’s outside of the normal scheme that the team wears so it’s something different, yet still rooted in history. The colors contrast well in any sport but especially well on the ice for a hockey game and the jersey itself is clean and uncluttered. The arm striping and bottom effectively breaks up the single color and is complemented by the socks and pants doing the same. Do I want to see the team wear this 41 times a year at home or in the playoffs? No. Is it the best alternate the team has had in the last 20 years? To me, yes.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/67796/ranking-the-recent-pittsburgh-penguins-alternate-jerseys
 
Big deal, little deal, no deal: Ville Koivunen sent to AHL edition

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Welcome back to the first installment this season of ‘Big Deal, Little Deal, No Deal’ where we discuss how important the ramifications are for the topic of the day. Leading off the 2025-26 season is a doozy; Ville Koivunen went from playing on the first line in the first two games of the season to the AHL in the swipe of a pen. Koivunen got sent back to WBS yesterday to create room for Bryan Rust to come off the injured reserve.

The Penguins have activated forward Bryan Rust from Injured Reserve.

Forward Ville Koivunen has been assigned to @WBSPenguins (AHL). pic.twitter.com/TMk3iM7NMR

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 11, 2025

Big deal

The case: Koivunen was listed as a fringe Calder trophy contender during the preseason. He finished the season with seven assists in eight NHL games and was seen as a slam dunk in about 19/20 reactions on this blog and social media. Going back to the AHL by game three after a pair of quiet games isn’t the most promising start to the season and puts off some uncertainty about how or when the 22-year old will get the opportunity to make the next step. This development of him playing his way off the roster almost immediately could have implications that ripple throughout the rest of the season.

Little deal

The case: Sending Koivunen down represents the path of least resistance for the Penguins, since Koivunen was the only player on the NHL team who could go to WBS without needing waivers (or being assigned back to juniors for the season). Koivunen may have faded as preseason went on and been invisible for the regular season, but it’s still very early on and there’s plenty of time to right the ship and get back on track. It’s not nothing that Koivunen is outside of the NHL plans and failed to seamlessly build off the impressive end of last season, but this move doesn’t have to be a major one. Perhaps Ben Kindel stays for six more games in the NHL and gets sent back to juniors and Koivunen can be right back up and resume a role somewhere in the top-nine forwards within a couple of weeks, get his season off the ground and this transaction will be a minor footnote in the story of his season that still has the chance to make the strides that everyone was hoping he would make.

No deal

The case: To keep it real, it’s difficult to take the position to try and frame this decision as no big deal for Koivunen and the Pens. It’s a disappointment on some level for how he played and now that he’s gone — especially considering that with Rutger McGroarty and Kevin Hayes are on the mend and make the numbers could shift even further away from making the situation favorable for Koivunen. (Until the next wave of injuries or some trades kick in). Any time a player takes a step backwards from the NHL to the AHL, especially at age-22 and when they were expected to a piece of the team on the growth of importance to become established and they instead move back out of the league completely, that’s a difficult and unfortunate development.



Best bet: somewhere in between big deal and little deal. It’s unavoidable that to a degree Koivunen got caught up in the numbers for a decision like this. At the same time, it’s telling and a bad outcome that Koivunen didn’t do enough to play himself above being a casualty of numbers. Players who are going really good at the moment like Ben Kindel, and even to a degree Filip Hallander and Connor Dewar are not getting caught up in the numbers at the moment.

With that being said, the Pens have further soul-searching to do when it comes to tough roster decisions. They’ve already waived Ryan Graves and Danton Heinen — but are players like Noel Acciari, Matt Dumba and Connor Clifton really needed? That’s a rhetorical question, since we all know the obvious answer to it. In the bigger scheme of the picture when taking into account chemistry, cohesion and all the like Kyle Dubas and company might not want to flood the AHL with an unlimited number highly-paid and potentially unhappy wanderers of washed up veterans at the crossroads of a fading career. Unfortunately for him, the 23-player limits of an NHL roster are starting to give him little other choice.

Surely before too long the Pens are going to want to see players like Koivunen, McGroarty, Avery Hayes, Tristan Broz and Owen Pickering up in the NHL. That can’t happen so long as a bunch of hangers-on are, well, hanging on to the bottom of the lineup for little good reason besides them having a contract. The onus is at least partially on management to figure out a way to make the roster composition right.

While that perspective above makes sense, it’s also important to remember that the player himself carries responsibility. There’s a reason that Koivunen is in the AHL and why Kindel is sticking around, for the time being at least. Kindel has been making a better case for himself almost literally with each passing day to continue to prove himself and excite with his quality play. Outside of a few brief flashes in the preseason, Koivunen hasn’t done that. Koivunen hasn’t held up his end of the bargain, so he made it easy to be sent packing.

Rust’s late-camp injury gave Koivunen a wonderful opportunity to start the season out with Sidney Crosby. Unfortunately it wasn’t one he grabbed the ball and took off with, but the good news is it is still early on in the year and the future is always uncertain about when that next chance might come around.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/6...al-no-deal-ville-koivunen-sent-to-ahl-edition
 
Penguins/Rangers Recap: Reality check, Pens rocked 6-1

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Pregame​


Bryan Rust comes off the IR and bumps Ville Koivunen all the way to the AHL. Otherwise the rest of the Penguins are the same as last game, except Arturs Silovs gets back in the net.

How we're lining up tonight vs. NYR 🏒 pic.twitter.com/HYWoIV8jCG

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 11, 2025

The Rangers are missing Vincent Trocheck, who went down with an injury on Thursday night, so their lines look different from Tuesday night in the opener between these two teams.

With no Trocheck, #NYR lines are:

Panarin – Zibanejad – Laf
Cuylle – Miller – Sheary
Pärssinen – Laba – Raddysh
Edström – Carrick – Rempe

— Vince Z. Mercogliano (@vzmercogliano) October 11, 2025

First period​


The Penguins give a very nice welcome back video to Mike Sullivan at the first commercial break.

To the winningest coach in franchise history, thank you, Sully. pic.twitter.com/E8x6Ky5YMI

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 11, 2025

Pittsburgh gets the power play, but the Rangers get the goal. Adam Fox helps them break out and Sam Carrick makes a really nice pass right through Erik Karlsson that leads to a relatively easy finish for Mika Zibanejad. 1-0 NYR.

Carrick with the feed + Mika does his thing for the shorty. pic.twitter.com/SA0lI0pvd0

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) October 11, 2025

Shots in the first end up 9-4 PIT. One flub puts the Rangers on the board but it wasn’t a bad period in totality for the home team.

Second period​


Pittsburgh gets on the board with Ben Kindel’s first career goal. Kindel jolts up the ice on a rush and fires a super-hard shot short-side on Igor Shesterkin.

TAKE A BOW, KID 🙌 pic.twitter.com/b50gMVpl7d

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 12, 2025

Matt Rempe should have scored from in front, but alas, scoring from in front of the net isn’t where Rampe excels. The Rangers were able to work the puck around with the Pens scrambling a little and Fox found his mark. 2-1 NYR.

A gorgeous sequence + Foxy buries it through traffic. pic.twitter.com/vIiLAUV3fC

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) October 12, 2025

The Rangers score on their first power play of the night. Former Penguin Conor Sheary makes a nice play to bank a puck in off Will Cuylle right in the crease. 3-1 NYR.

Cools in front for the PPG. pic.twitter.com/2ltqBzQ5Bc

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) October 12, 2025

The nightmare period for the Pens continued, they got caught with not just six players on the ice but none even trying to change or get off the surface. Can’t do that. The Rangers won the initial faceoff and Fox continued his great game by floating a puck all the way in. 4-1 NYR.

Power play Foxy from the point for his second of the night. pic.twitter.com/wz5AG07r81

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) October 12, 2025

Shots in the second go 14-3 Rangers. Easily the worst period of the young season for Pittsburgh, and one that has tipped this game heavily towards New York.

Third period​


The bleeding doesn’t stop for the Pens when Ryan Shea knocks Rempe down and takes out Silovs in the process. Goal ends up getting credited to Rempe, 5-1 New York.

Eddy puts away the rebound. pic.twitter.com/rQYuuNjVZR

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) October 12, 2025

Taylor Raddish beat Caleb Jones to the far post and another one goes in. 6-1 Rangers.

Laba with the set up + Raddysh buries it. pic.twitter.com/wCkRmvqU81

— New York Rangers (@NYRangers) October 12, 2025

Luckily that’s all the action.

Some thoughts​

  • Great to see Rust return, and just 11 days after he was officially announced that would“miss a minimum of two weeks”. The phrasing of “be out a minimum of __” seems to be the new team nomenclature — and as it turns out more of a general guideline than literal declaration. Anyways, thought Rust was probably the best player on the ice in the first period, he was sharp right from the start of the game.
  • You never like to see a defender let a pass go through him on a 2-on-1 like it did on Karlsson, but at the same time a tip of the cap to Sam Carrick for the speed, angle and lift that he fired through the legs/stick of Karlsson. Sometimes the other guys makes a nice play, or in this case a really nice one.
  • There’s something precocious about Kindel, beyond just his baby face. Right before his goal, he started skating so fast he awkwardly tipped back a little and chugged and almost could have gone down as he was making a cross-over and almost got his legs hung up on each other. He made it work, take nothing away from him, it’s just that he’s not completely polished or smooth out there in an NHL world where these guys make everything looks so fluid and natural. It’s tough to shoot on the rush with the velo that Kindel got, nothing awkward about that.
  • At times you get reminders that the left side of the defense is Parker Wotherspoon/Ryan Shea/Caleb Jones. As the game went on this was one of those times. The talent limitation there is going to be glaring, even more when Karlsson and Kris Letang can’t cover it up. Those veteran RHDs did a better job in the first two games than they did tonight.
  • Letang also left the game in the third period and not so coincidentally the Rangers scored two out of their three ES goals on the night in the short time after that happened.
  • You could chalk this up as a special teams loss. The Rangers scored on two out of their three power plays AND scored a shorthanded goal. That’s three goals of the 4-1 lead after two periods. The Pens went 0 for 4 on night on the power play, giving up that goal. That’s no way to go through a game.
  • Speaking of that, Acciari lost the faceoff clean that led to Fox’s PPG and stood to put the game out of reach. Acciari is definitely reaching that Jack Johnson/Jeff Carter level of a washed up veteran that the coaches inexplicably trust to go get the job done next time — despite all recent evidence clearly shows that they are inadequate and there’s no good reason to continue to have confidence in them any longer. Coaches are always the last ones to come to that realization to pull the plug on a trusted veteran but the sooner that Dan Muse and company can get there on Acciari, the better. He just doesn’t have much that’s going to contribute positively and the team isn’t going to miss out on anything to stop using him. There might be bigger picture considerations involved, but for a focused output on the game action, it’s been tough to see Acciari out there for a while now. And yet, he still gets out there.
  • No one can justifiably be that upset with Silovs, he had tough circumstances for a goalie and the game got out of hand. (Now you know the ’but’ is coming..) But, after Silovs made 25 saves on 25 shots on Turesday, he gets touched up for six goals on 30 shots tonight. That’s been his career story to date – a goalie that is not without talent but has had issues keeping the puck out of the net consistently. Silovs will get plenty of grace on a night like tonight, and deservedly so. Just saying that despite the circumstances and context of this night that will be something to track in the bigger picture about how effective Silovs can be behind this Penguin defense in the long-run. It’s not an easy job.
  • Well, this was a dose of reality. Muse’s systems and instruction aren’t the magic bullet and Mike Sullivan, it turns out, can get the Rangers to play a good game. RIP in peace to a lot of feel good narratives from earlier this week. Nothing is ever as good as it seems when it’s going well (or as bad as it looks when it’s going poorly) and the former part of that saying holds a lot of truth for the Penguins in the first two games. It’s nice they got some results, but they remain the team that they are going to be in the long-run. Tonight serves as a reminder of that.

The Pens don’t have a good night tonight, but they do win two of their first three and now get to shift gears in major way. They go out to California for three games next week, starting Tuesday night in Anaheim for the first game on the trip. Time to flip the page and move on.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/game-recaps/67861/penguins-rangers-recap-reality-check-pens-rocked-6-1
 
Wilkes Weekly: WBS Penguins win first two games

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Is WBS going to be nasty this year? Based on their lineup strength and opening weekend the answer looks like a yes. Wilkes-Barre defeated Hartford 2-1 on Saturday night and then followed that up with a 4-1 win over Lehigh Valley on Sunday for a perfect start to the season.

Game one lines 😤

Tune in on AHLTV on FloHockey: https://t.co/CrNDVVHuPj pic.twitter.com/3967SQWHTe

— Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (@WBSPenguins) October 11, 2025

Owen Pickering’s third period goal proved to be the difference on Saturday night to break the tie and send WBS to a 2-1 victory in their first game of the season. Sergei Murashov made his season debut and stopped 23 of 24 shots that he saw in the victory. Valtteri Puustinen also scored a goal for Wilkes on opening night.

Some shuffling around for our second game of the season

Catch the action on AHLTV on FloHockey: https://t.co/CrNDVVHuPj pic.twitter.com/OzB0WHo26V

— Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (@WBSPenguins) October 12, 2025

Sunday turned into the Tristan Broz show, the Penguins center put up two goals and one assist to provide most of the power needed to down Lehigh Valley 4-1. Ville Koivunen chipped in two assists in his first AHL game of the season shortly after being assigned to the AHL. Avery Hayes added a goal and an assist on the night. Filip Larsson earned the win by stopping 26 out of 27 shots that he saw.

The veteran situation

WBS is having to juggle extra veterans after the decision in Pittsburgh to waive Danton Heinen and Ryan Graves.

In a nutshell, the AHL rule stats that at least 13 of the 18 skaters dressed on a given night have to be “developmental players”. Teams can dress a maximum of five veterans (who are players with 361+ professional games at the start of the season), plus one veteran-exempt player (who has played 261-321 games prior to the start of this year).

For the Penguins, Alexander Alexeyev fits as their current veteran-exempt player. They have seven veterans, therefore two players from this list much be scratched in every game: Ryan Graves, Danton Heinen, Sebastian Aho, Boko Imama, Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Joona Koppanen and Valtteri Puustinen.

Aho didn’t play in either weekend game, on opening night Imama was out and Harvey-Pinard was held out for Saturday’s game. If there are injuries to any of these players that helps break up the logjam, but otherwise it looks like they will rotate through who comes out of the lineup. It’ll be interesting to see if players like Graves and Heinen get included in that rotation.

There was no mention of an injury to Aho, so we’ll see how that ends up playing out. Memories of Libor Hajek and Andreas Johnsson linger, sometimes European players who find things not going as they expected or wanted decide to go play somewhere else back across the pond. Not that we know that to be the situation in this case, but it wouldn’t be unprecedented to someone like Aho to either be seeking a trade or considering moving onto the next chapter of his life and career by stepping away from the Pens organization.

Prospect update

Koivunen coming down seemed to ignite Broz for the second game where he scored two goals and had three points (one into an empty net). That’s a good sign, and from the AHL perspective WBS needed the pure skill infusion of Koivunen to put them over the top on that department. Hayes also did his part to keep up with those two by having a multi-point night of his own on Sunday.

It’s personally not nice for Koivunen to be out of the NHL, but he didn’t let it effect his play, was great on this sequence to turn into Broz’s first goal on the season.

Brozer’s on the board! pic.twitter.com/gHBDtx7NGd

— Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (@WBSPenguins) October 12, 2025

Pickering scoring a goal on opening night is a welcome sight, the blueliner only had two goals in 47 AHL games last season.

The path ahead

Wilkes hits the road next weekend, playing in Hartford for a rematch on Friday and then heading over to Bridgeport for Saturday night.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/wbs-weekly/67889/wilkes-weekly-wbs-penguins-win-first-two-games
 
Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ Anaheim Ducks 10/13/25

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Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (2-1-0, 4 points, 4th place Metropolitan Division) @ Anaheim Ducks (1-1-0, 2 points, 4th place Pacific Division)

When: 10:30 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on KTTV, Victory+ and SN-PIT, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The West Coast road trip continues with a Thursday game against the Los Angeles Kings and Saturday game against the San Jose Kings. Then it’s back to Pittsburgh for a home game next Tuesday against the Vancouver Canucks.

Opponent Track: The Ducks fell to the Seattle Kraken in 2024 No. 3 pick Beckett Sennecke’s NHL debut last Thursday, then earned their first win of the season Saturday with a wild back-and-forth 7-6 overtime win. The victory featured a last-minute tying goal from Chris Kreider followed by an extra-time dagger by Leo Carlsson.

Chris Kreider nets his second of the night and ties this game up 6-6! 😮 #NHLFaceOff pic.twitter.com/c0TVXUgltI

— NHL (@NHL) October 12, 2025
TOUCHDOWN 🏈

Leo Carlsson scores in @Energizer overtime to give the @AnaheimDucks the 7-6 win! #NHLFaceOff pic.twitter.com/ZKM2kP2RqZ

— NHL (@NHL) October 12, 2025

Season Series: The Penguins will meet up with the Ducks once more, this time in Pittsburgh, on Dec. 29. Last season the Pens claimed a 2-1 overtime win over the visiting Ducks in October before conceding a 5-1 road decision in January.

Hidden Stat: The Ducks lead the NHL with 40 shots per game through the first two contests of the season.

Getting to know the Ducks​


Projected lines (from Monday’s practice)

FORWARDS

Chris Kreider – Leo Carlsson – Alex Killorn

Cutter Gauthier – Mason McTavish – Beckett Sennecke

Frank Vatrano – Mikael Granlund – Troy Terry

Ross Johnston – Ryan Poehling – Nikita Nesterenko

DEFENSEMEN

Jackson LaCombe – Radko Gudas

Olen Zellweger – Jacob Trouba

Pavel Mintyukov – Drew Helleson

Goalies: Lukas Dostál – Petr Mrázek

Scratches: Sam Colangelo

Injuries: Ryan Strome

Tonight marks the home opener for the Ducks, who spent the first two games of the season in San Jose and Seattle.

  • The Ducks have quite a few fun young players in this lineup, including a must-watch second line of Cutter Gauthier (21), Mason McTavish (22) and Beckett Sennecke (19). That trio combined for all three goals in Anaheim’s season-opening loss to Seattle and was once more all over the scoresheet in lass weekend’s win over the Sharks.
  • Speaking of youth, Jackson LaCombe (24) is returning after a breakout season as the Ducks’ top defenseman that led to him inking the most lucrative extension in Ducks history.
  • The Ducks are also playing under a new head coach, although one with considerably more experience than Dan Muse, in former Chicago Blackhawks bench boss Joel Quenneville.
  • Per Andrew Knoll of the Orange County Register, McTavish “said the emphasis would be on tightening up defensively” against the Pens after Saturday’s 13-goal battle with the Sharks.
  • Mrázek struggled on Saturday in a game that required Kreider’s late-regulation heroics go to overtime despite the Ducks outshooting the Sharks 44-23. Dostál, who broke out as his team’s go-to starter last season, could be back in net and looking for his first win of the season tonight.

And now for the Pens​


Projected lines (from Monday’s practice)

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Anthony Mantha – Evgeni Malkin – Justin Brazeau

Tommy Novak – Ben Kindel – Philip Tomasino

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Filip Hallander / Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Ryan Shea / Kris Letang (?)

Caleb Jones / Harrison Brunicke

Goalies: Arturs Silovs, Tristan Jarry

Potential Scratches: Connor Clifton, Mathew Dumba

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

Monday grind 😤 pic.twitter.com/KTL4BVq7bQ

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) October 13, 2025
  • The big question for today will be the status of Kris Letang, who is day-to-day with a lower body injury after an awkward collision late in Saturday’s loss to the New York Rangers. After missing Sunday’s practice and participating Monday, head coach Dan Muse said that Letang’s status for tonight’s game hadn’t yet been decided.
  • Clifton or Dumba could get the call to step in if Letang is unavailable for tonight’s matchup. Both rotated with Brunicke behind Karlsson in the right-side defense depth chart during Monday’s practice, per Seth Rorabaugh of the Tribune-Review.
  • Important update:
On the Penguins team plane, the card table of Malkin, Letang, Karlsson and Hayes is back for another season (with Geno louder than ever 😂), while Clifton, Dumba, Wotherspoon and Mantha is all new.

♦️♠️❤️♣️

— Pens Inside Scoop (@PensInsideScoop) October 12, 2025

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/67907/game-preview-pittsburgh-penguins-anaheim-ducks-10-13-25
 
Pens Points: Quack Attack

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After three east cost friendly start times, including two home games, the Pittsburgh Penguins took a cross country flight to California to begin their annual three game tour of The Golden State. This trip has become a yearly tradition for the Penguins and they are getting it out of the way early this time around. This trip also means we will have to put up with a few late starts this week to account for the time difference. The trip begins tonight in Anaheim against the Ducks then takes them to Los Angeles and San Jose to close out the week.

Puck drop tonight is scheduled for 10:30 PM EST and will be broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh.

Pens Points…​


Just like their NHL counter parts, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins began their 2025-26 AHL campaign by winning their first two games of the season. The Baby Pens were 2-1 winners on Saturday then followed it up with a 4-1 win on Sunday. [Pensburgh]

When Erik Karlsson came to Pittsburgh back in 2023, he knew he was going to be joining ranks with Penguins legend Kris Letang. Now on season three of their blue line partnership, Karlsson detailed the great respect he has gained for Letang by being his teammate. [Sportsnet Pittsburgh]

There aren’t many lines in the NHL these days where the shortest player measures in at 6’ 5” but that is what the
Penguins have built by pairing Evgeni Malkin with Justin Brazeau and Anthony Mantha so far this season. [Trib Live]

It’s only been three games into his NHL coaching career, but the early reviews on Dan Muse from those around the Penguins have been nothing but glowing. A good first step as he builds his reputation as a head coach. [The Athletic $$]

Speaking of Penguins earning early high marks for their performance, rookies Ben Kindel and Harrison Brunicke are going to make it awfully hard for the front office to justify sending them back to juniors by the nine-game deadline. [The Hockey News]

Kris Letang left Saturday’s game against the Rangers early and is listed as day-to-day, but he will be joining the Penguins on their California road trip. Injured forward Kevin Hayes also packed his bags and is heading west with the team. [The Hockey News]

NHL News and Notes…​


It’s the first NHL Three Stars of the Week selection and the red hot Pavel Dorofeyev of the Vegas Golden Knights leads the way with First Star honors after scoring five goals in his first three games of the season. [NHL]

Fresh off winning the Calder Trophy as the NHL’s top rookie last season, defenseman Lane Hutson and the Montreal Canadiens reached an agreement on an eight-year contract extension that will carry an AAV of $8.85 million. [NHL]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/67896/pens-points-quack-attack
 
This Penguins team will find ways to lose games

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It always seems to be a controversial take among hockey fans, but I love the puck over the glass rule. In my opinion, it is one of the best rules in the sport. There is very little gray area with it. It is the one penalty where there is rarely anything to argue about. You can not be mad about it. Everybody knows the rule. Everybody knows the consequence.

It is also in place to try and force players to make a play with the puck. It is designed to encourage a player to do something with it other than just flip it over the glass to get a whistle. Ideally it is in place to encourage them to not even take the chance.

Make a play. Find a teammate. Skate it out of danger. Make a pass. Keep possession. Do something.

I love it. I love the mindset. I love the punishment. I love that it exists. It is not that hard to avoid it.

That is why when Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Parker Wotherspoon was called for a delay of game penalty with just over a minute to play in regulation on Tuesday night, I did not really feel any sort of emotion. It was just … what should have happened.

It was an instance where he had time, he had space, and he had an opportunity to do something with the puck. Anything other than what he did. But instead of trying to make a play, he just tried to flip it off the glass and get it out of danger when there really wasn’t any danger to contend with. It was not even a case of the puck rolling on him. He just airmailed it. It was a deserved punishment.

Then the Ducks scored the game-winning goal on the power play just off the ensuing faceoff.

Again. A justified result.

I say all of this not just because Wotherspoon’s penalty reminded me of my thoughts on that rule. I say it because it also was a nice reminder that this team, no matter how much talent remains on the roster, and no matter how well they play at times, is going to find ways to lose hockey games.

Probably a lot of them.

They will probably be maddening ways.

Even if Dan Muse implements a good structure. Even if the future Hall of Famers and remaining All-Star level players produce and perform. Even if some young players take big steps forward and show they belong in the NHL. There are just still way too many players on this roster that are not good enough. That especially applies to the defense, and more specifically the left side of the defense where there is not a single player that should really be playing regular shifts for an NHL team. At least not an NHL team with sights on contending this season.

As long as that is the makeup of your roster, games like this are going to happen.

And it’s not even that the Penguins played especially bad on Tuesday. At least not during 5-on-5 play. The penalty kill was obviously a mess, and has been for two games now. But they had a 17-6 advantage in high-danger chances during 5-on-5 play and a 63 percent expected goals advantage.

In a lot of ways it was very similar to the way a lot of Penguins games have done over the past few years.

Strong underlying numbers. A lot of good chances. Not many chances against. But not enough of the Penguins chances ending up in the net, and too many of the chances against them finding their way in. It’s what happens when you have bad goaltending, defensemen that are prone to the big mistake, and not enough high-level finishers on the lower part of the lineup.

It’s going to happen, and it’s going to keep happening. Those are the mistakes sub-par players consistently make.

There might be nights where the goalies stand on their head for 60 minutes, or where the Penguins play a strong overall game and get a win like they did in the season-opener, but those will likely be few and far between.

This is a rebuilding team. This is what rebuilding teams do. This is why I keep saying I’m not worried about them being “too good” and not worried about there still being good players here. This team will organically be bad enough without having to totally gut it and tank.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/statistics/67973/this-penguins-team-will-find-ways-to-lose-games
 
Pens Points: All the Kings Men

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Hopefully everyone has recovered from Tuesday night because it’s time to gear up for another late one this evening as the Pittsburgh Penguins remain on the west coast for game two of their three game road trip through California. After dropping a tight contest to the Anaheim Ducks, the Penguins now head to the City of Angels to face-off against the Los Angeles Kings. Thankfully, this will be the last weeknight late game until January so load up on the coffee and enjoy the game.

Puck drop is scheduled for 10:00 PM EST and will be broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh.

Pens Points…​


There will be plenty of times this season that we are reminded that the Penguins are a rebuilding franchise, and Tuesday night in Anaheim was one of those times where a rebuilding team fumbles away a game they perhaps should have won. [Pensburgh]

Many Penguins fans raised their eyebrows when Justin Brazeau opened the season on the second line, but perhaps Dan Muse was on to something when he penciled in the big man alongside Evgeni Malkin to start the season. [Trib Live]

A second straight game of subpar penalty killing cost the Penguins dearly against the Ducks on Tuesday night. Like the Rangers game on Saturday, the Penguins surrendered a pair of goals down a man, including the eventual game winner late in the third period, to the Ducks. [Trib Live]

In a scary off-ice situation on Tuesday night in Anaheim, television play-by-play announcer Josh Getzoff was taken to a local hospital after fainting during the second intermission. Color analyst Phil Bourque passed along that Getzoff was fine after the incident. [Barrett Media]

NHL News and Notes…​


Chicago Blackhawks captain Nick Foligno will be taking a leave of absence from the team to be with his daughter as she undergoes surgery for her congenital heart disease. Foligno’s daughter, now 12, underwent her first heart surgery for the condition at just three weeks old. [NHL]

Construction delays could cause issues for the arena set to host the ice hockey competition at the upcoming Winter Olympics in Italy. Depending on when the arena reaches completion, there may not be enough time to fully test the playing surface before play begins. [Sportsnet]

Injuries just keep stacking up for the Florida Panthers in the early going this season as they try for three consecutive Stanley Cup titles. The latest victim is defenseman Dmitry Kuliov who will be sidelines five months after undergoing surgery. [USA Today]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/67984/pens-points-all-the-kings-men
 
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
 
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