News Penguins Team Notes

Penguins call up Heinen, Graves, Murashov; Jarry, Acciari, Brazeau to IR

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Buckle up, big time changes are coming to the Pittsburgh Penguins’ lineup.

Departing the 23-man roster and headed to the IR will be Noel Acciari, Justin Brazeau and Tristan Jarry. Owen Pickering will be going back down the the AHL.

Coming up are veterans Danton Heinen and Ryan Graves, as well as rookie goalie Sergei Murashov.

Forward Danton Heinen, defenseman Ryan Graves and goaltender Sergei Murashov have been recalled from @WBSPenguins.

Defenseman Owen Pickering has been re-assigned to WBS.

Forwards Noel Acciari and Justin Brazeau as well as goaltender Tristan Jarry have been placed on Injured… pic.twitter.com/KJfeFTlG6H

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) November 4, 2025

As a refresher, the IR designation means players are out a minimum of seven days from their injury. In Brazeau’s case, that could be soon since he was injured in the game on 10/30 and was announced as a day-to-day injury. Acciari left last night’s game against Toronto after playing two shifts with an undisclosed upper body injury. Jarry finished the game, though he gave up four goals in the third period without any obvious injury concerns, and as of now there is no updates as to the severity of their injuries. This being a Kyle Dubas operation, naturally no one in the media sniffed anything out or knew anything ahead of time.

Coming up will be a pair of veterans looking for redemption, after taking the tough situation of a demotion well. Heinen scored 14 points in 10 AHL games, which is currently tied for the league-lead in points. Graves pitched in seven points (1G+6A) in 10 games.

The more exciting piece is Murashov, who was named the AHL’s goalie of the month for October today. The 21-year old could be in-line for his NHL debut, being as Jarry will have to stay on the IR for the upcoming stretch starting on Thursday where Pittsburgh plays three games in the next four days.

Pickering appeared in the last four NHL games, with the final two outings against Winnipeg and Toronto getting rocky for the youngster. The Pens have had an issue with the depth of their left shot defensemen with Caleb Jones sidelined with injury and gave Pickering the first chance to step in and run with the ball there. He wasn’t getting it done so now they’ll turn back to their free agent bust signing of Graves to start salvaging his career and part of their blueline.

Astute readers might also note that the team sent four players off the roster and only brought up three players from the minors and are light by one forward after all these moves. Forward Kevin Hayes, who has missed the balance of the season to date, is approaching a return from IR himself and could be activated at any time, which would only bring the team back to 22 healthy skaters.

Of another piece of interest is that rookie defenseman Harrison Brunicke was not included in the players who departed the roster today. Brunicke’s entry level contract will begin if he appears in one more NHL game, the team has not made the plans clear yet if they are going to keep him in the NHL or return him to his junior team. Of course, they could always slow-play the decision by making Brunicke a healthy scratch and play depth defenseman like Connor Clifton or Matt Dumba until further determination is made.

The Pens are scheduled to practice tomorrow and we should get indications of how the new players will be slotting back into the lineup, and perhaps more information on the severity of some of the injuries that came to light today as far as what return times could be on the players that hit the IR today.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/6879...n-graves-murashov-jarry-acciari-brazeau-to-ir
 
Wilkes Weekly: The first bumps in the road

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The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins suffered their first taste of adversity in the AHL this season with a 1-2-0 week, including dropping a heavyweight battle against Providence in what was a matchup of unbeaten teams. From there, WBS split the weekend by winning at home against Bridgeport but then losing to Utica. Here’s Nick Hart with the recap:

Wednesday, Oct. 29 – PENGUINS 1 vs. Providence 3
A three-goal second period from the Bruins was enough to end Wilkes-Barre/Scranton’s season-opening, seven-game win streak. Valtteri Puustinen recorded the lone goal for the Penguins on a shrewd feed from rookie defenseman Chase Pietila.

Friday, Oct. 31 – PENGUINS 3 vs. Bridgeport 2
The Penguins bounced back to spook the Islanders with an exciting win on Halloween. Sam Poulin scored two goals, while Danton Heinen added an insurance marker to send the Isles packing. Filip Larsson made 22 saves, improving to 3-0-0-0.

Saturday, Nov. 1 – PENGUINS 1 at Utica 3
The Penguins were defeated in a hard-fought matchup, their first of four clashes against the Comets. Utica tallied once in all three periods, ending with former Penguin Jonathan Gruden’s empty netter. Aidan McDonough almost sparked a rally, finding twine late in the scored period for Wilkes-Barre/Scranton.

In happier news, goalie Sergei Murashov was named the AHL’s goalie of the month.

Sergei owned October. And the league took notice.

Sergei Murashov is your AHL Goaltender of the Month.https://t.co/PkMSLGPp9B pic.twitter.com/E95Kv2V3Yd

— Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (@WBSPenguins) November 4, 2025

Murashov’s stat line is starting to resemble what Matt Murray did as a youngster, though 12 shutouts in 40 games for Murray as a 20-year old is something we might not see for a long, long time.

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In even happier news, Murashov was recalled to the NHL for the first time, much the same way a 21-year old Matt Murray once was to Pittsburgh in the 2015-16 season. (Murray did have a 72 – 23 edge in AHL games over Murashov in a testament to just how green the current Pens’ youngster is).

The losses of games weren’t the only thing that Wilkes will have to deal with, in addition to their star goalie being called up to the NHL, three of WBS’s top five scorers (Heinen, Koivunen, Graves) are now up in the AHL. Luckily the team is deep and has competent replacements, but it’s difficult to have that type of talent suddenly disappear and not miss a beat. That will be the challenge for them in the days and weeks ahead.

The good news is that the players can see that top performers have been going up to Pittsburgh and been getting opportunities to make their mark with the NHL club, which has to give a little extra fuel and motivation to those close to get to the front of the line to keep pushing in hopes they could be the next to make it.

Hart gives a preview of the upcoming week of games, starting tonight.

Wednesday, Nov. 5 – PENGUINS vs. Toronto
The Penguins open a week of interdivisional foes with a visit from the Marlies. Last season, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton split its two-game series against Toronto, taking a shutout loss at home and earning a high-scoring win up North.

Friday, Nov. 7 – PENGUINS at Rochester
The Penguins head to the Flower City for the first and only time in the 2025-26 season. The Amerks hold second place in the North, but just had a five-game win streak snapped on Saturday.

Saturday, Nov. 8 – PENGUINS vs. Utica
The Penguins look to avenge their loss from last Saturday now that the Comets come to Northeast Pennsylvania. Utica ended a seven-game losing streak with that win, but still sits last in the league with 1.63 goals for per game.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/wbs-weekly/68775/wilkes-weekly-the-first-bumps-in-the-road
 
Pens Points: Another rookie joins the ranks

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Here are your Pens Points for this Wednesday morning…​


The Pittsburgh Penguins made several roster transactions on Tuesday afternoon. Forward Danton Heinen, defenseman Ryan Graves and goaltender Sergei Murashov have been recalled from the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. Rookie defenseman Owen Pickering has been re-assigned to the American Hockey League, while forwards Noel Acciari and Justin Brazeau, as well as goaltender Tristan Jarry, have been placed on injured reserve. [PensBurgh]

While the young Pickering may have been sent down to the AHL, fellow rookie blue liner Harrison Brunicke has remained with the NHL club… for now. The Penguins will soon have to decide between keeping the 19-year-old Brunicke in the NHL (and using a year of his entry-level contract) or sending him back to junior hockey. [PensBurgh]

Defenseman Erik Karlsson has found himself in rather unfamiliar territory recently: on the Penguins’ penalty kill. [Trib Live]

News and notes from around the NHL…​


A few Dallas Stars players traded the rink for the gridiron on Monday night, taking in the sights and sounds of “Monday Night Football” from Dallas’ AT&T Stadium after it was announced that the venue will be hosting the 2027 NHL Stadium Series. [NHL]

The Vancouver Canucks announced Tuesday that forward Vitali Kravtsov has been placed on unconditional waivers for contract termination. [TSN]

Brendan Shanahan, the former president and alternate governor of the Toronto Maple Leafs, may be back with an NHL team sooner rather than later, if one insider is to be believed. [Sportsnet]

New York Islanders 18-year-old phenom Matthew Schaefer has continued the torrid start to his first NHL season with another record-breaking milestone: becoming the youngest defenseman in league history with a multi-goal game. [ESPN]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/6878...alled-pickering-brunicke-nhl-dallas-stars-mnf
 
Thoughts on Thoughts: Muse, Karlsson, rookie contracts

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Elliotte Friedman offered a written version of 32 Thoughts, with perfect timing since the Penguins just passed through Toronto and he has plenty of good nuggets to look at considering the national level media gets the best and most information these days under the tight ship known as the Kyle Dubas front office.

Written 32:https://t.co/xp1tIpDicZ

— Elliotte Friedman (@FriedgeHNIC) November 6, 2025

A few thoughts on the most interesting/relevant thoughts:

4. I don’t know that there’s anything going on trade-wise with Mason Lohrei. But I do know that when a talented, young player like him sits four games in a row, others call and ask what’s up.

Lohrei is not the absolute ideal style of defenseman that the Penguins need (he’s poor defensively, doesn’t kill penalties and isn’t established in a role against top competition), but then again Lohrei is a living and breathing left shot NHL caliber defenseman and a very good puck mover. Pittsburgh should probably at least be a little interested in monitoring what is going on there, even though Boston might not want to move him and the Pens probably don’t have anything they would part with that the Bruins would want. Still, any morsel about a talented defender being available has to command attention in Pittsburgh (and, in about 20 other NHL cities..)

12. An undrafted free agent picking up steam is soon-to-be 24-year-old Belorussian Vitali Pinchuk. Point-per-game player in the KHL, big, left-shot centre. There are several teams looking at him.

Maybe something to put deep in the files for now. Pinchuk played in the OHL in the 2019-20 season then stayed in Russia after COVID to become a top player in the KHL.

21. When Dan Muse was hired to coach Pittsburgh, one person who knew him said he wondered if Muse was “too nice” to be a successful head coach. Everyone knew his work ethic, his love and knowledge of hockey, but would he be able to command respect and bring the hammer down on a treading-water Penguins team with such dominant personalities?

Despite what happened Tuesday in Toronto, the early returns are strong. There’s a long way to go, and injuries are piling up, but Pittsburgh is better than expected and the kids look good. I posed the “too-nice” question to 19-year-veteran Kris Letang, who had a great answer.

“Sid, Geno and I have been around 20 years,” he replied. “We’ve seen all kinds. You know what matters? Can you make us believe in what you’re trying to do?” Letang called Muse’s training camp “the hardest I’ve ever had,” saying that the coach made every drill a competition with the losers getting bag skated. (Letang added that, due to the influence of fitness coach extraordinaire Andy O’Brien, those hard skates involved more crossovers as opposed to stopping-and-starting to avoid early-camp groin injuries.)

He also said Muse made sure to inform players of the drills before on-ice sessions began so there was no standing around and placed the onus on them not to forget what to do. Wins matter. It’s hard to sell your vision when you are losing. But Muse certainly got his veterans’ attention.

Always interesting to learn more about Muse, no surprise that the guys who have had him in the NHL see Muse in that ‘good cop’ type of special teams assistant coach and wonder how it will translate. Muse has only been a head coach at any level for five seasons (two in the USHL and three in the US National Program) and the NHL is a long way above those levels. We’ve seen him grow and admit some mistakes on the job in terms of light usage of Crosby in games that got away from him, but all initial impressions of the person and program he’s implemented so far have been positive.

22. Letang’s best quote was this one: “I said to Sid, ‘It’s tough out there. All that extra skating when you lose.’” Crosby replied to him: “My team didn’t lose.”

Classic Crosby quote.

23. Erik Karlsson is killing penalties again. It’s early, but he’s averaging 1:48 per game shorthanded, fourth-highest of his career — on the league’s 10th-best unit entering Wednesday’s games. He did it sporadically the last few seasons, but this is, so far, a bigger commitment. Karlsson said Muse is trying to challenge players with more responsibility, or different responsibilities than they were used to.

“I see him say, ‘Maybe you can’t help us the way X player can, but you can help us in another way.” One example was of a player who wasn’t physically dominant, but had a great stick. He encouraged that player by saying, “If you get the same results with your stick that the other player gets with his body, that helps us.”

The fresh challenges can keep it new, but as mentioned in the recaps putting Karlsson on the PK can also be seen as necessary too. Someone has to kill penalties, good to see it presented as a challenge.

24. Karlsson’s off to a strong start, and we’ll see where this goes. His dollars are now very manageable, and may be even more enticing with the cap’s rise. He’s got control of his future, but the better he goes, the more options there could be — including finishing his term in Pennsylvania.

Karlsson has never changed teams in the middle of a season, he’s very deliberate with his career decisions. I wouldn’t expect that to be any different this year.

To the salary considerations, Karlsson is owed $11.5 million in real money for the remainder of his contract since the Pens have already paid his 2025-26 signing bonus. He “only” makes $1.5 million in salary during the 2026-27 season after a July 1, 2026 $7.5 million signing bonus. That’s attractive to other teams, but could also present a trade hurdle next summer. If the Pens keep him as of July 2nd, it would make sense that they would want a favorable trade due to picking up the majority of the money he’s owed. That may or may not present issues for other teams looking to strike the best deal they can. It could also draw the desire to strike a deal to trade Karlsson before July 1, so that the new team picks up the tab on the signing bonus.

Long way to say, the situation might be slanted towards Karlsson remaining a Penguin for the full-term. Between his no movement clause and the way the actual money breaks out, there’s not a clear path for a trade, before getting into team performance and career desires that might come into play down the line.

25. Deeper down their organization, there is an unusual story involving one of Pittsburgh’s prospects: Emil Pieniniemi. A defenceman drafted 91st in 2023, he had 60 points in 60 games last season for OHL Kingston. Pieniniemi did not make the big club in training camp (as expected) but where this went sideways is he objected to going to ECHL Wheeling as opposed to AHL Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. He’s gone back to Finland, and is suspended by the Penguins. At issue is the belief that his skillset would be better served developmentally in the AHL than the ECHL, that the latter league isn’t the right place for him at this time. The Penguins are holding firm.

This situation has dragged out for a month now, the organization attempted to assign the rookie defender to the ECHL on October 5th and he’s been in the wind since that point. The Pens hold the cards here, they could toll Pieniniemi’s contract if they choose. The Penguins do feel the ECHL is the right place for him with the enhanced development that they are placing with Wheeling, the player disagrees. As of now, he stays in limbo until one side backs down. Pittsburgh could loan him to a Finnish team but they don’t have to and haven’t yet.

27. Not every team cares about the 10-game mark for rookies. What they all do care about is 40 on the roster. That’s where you accrue a season towards unrestricted free agency, and decisions will be made about who really gets to stick around.

Playing ten games to start the entry level contract takes up a lot of attention since it is often where teenaged players get sent back to junior. Being on the roster for 40 games is potentially a more important managerial checkpoint.

Take Ben Kindel, for instance, who at this point looks like he will be staying for the foreseeable future. If he stays on the roster (and IR counts) for 40-games, he accrues a year of service. Players reach unrestricted free agency when they get seven years or are 27-years old, whichever comes first. For the overwhelming majority of players the age comes into play. But when you talk about teenaged NHLers, the years become the key point.

Assuming that Kindel graduates into becoming a full-time NHL player for the duration, he will hit his seventh season and qualify for UFA after 2031-32, just prior to his 25th birthday. Granted, the Pens will have the opportunity to lock him up to a long-term deal by that point if all remains going on the trajectory it’s on, it just remains an angle to have in mind.

Similar with Brunicke, if he plays one more NHL game this season his ELC starts now, it would slide if the Pens return him to juniors now. That speeds up his contract by a year to make him a RFA after 2027-28 (instead of 2028-29 if he goes back). Not the biggest deal in the world. But if Brunicke stays on the roster for 40 games, and is also an NHL player in the following seasons, he too would be on schedule to become an unrestricted free agent earlier than most after 2031-32, months after his 26th birthday.

The tightrope to walk is weighing player development and contributions against stretching that team control out. If the Pens send Brunicke back now, he won’t become a UFA until 2033. If they keep him, he could be on track to get there in 2032. (Of course, next year Brunicke could conceivably be in the AHL for half of the season and not accrue a year towards UFA and get back to qualifying in 2033, when he will be 27 years old).

The difference of a one year might not seem like the biggest deal in the world right now in 2025, and perhaps it won’t be — it’s just another consideration that managers will have as they make these decisions. If Kindel keeps scoring goals and playing well, the trade off for putting him on track for early UFA is a nice problem to have down the roads. Nice problems are still problems though.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/68837/thoughts-on-thoughts-muse-karlsson-rookie-contracts
 
How recent Penguins goalie prospects have performed in their NHL debuts

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Sergei Murashov has arrived for the Pittsburgh Penguins, and probably much sooner than anybody could have reasonably expected. With the team going through an early season rash of injuries that now includes Tristan Jarry, and Murashov continuing to dominate in the American Hockey League, he finds himself in the NHL as the latest Penguins prospect and rookie to eventually make their debut this season.

Of all the prospects currently in the Penguins system, Murashov is by far the biggest wild-card and perhaps the biggest potential franchise-changer (at least that was the case until Ben Kindel arrived) if he can reach his full ceiling.

Murashov’s potential is sky-high, but because he is a goalie, and because there is always an insanely wide range of potential outcomes with goalie prospects, it is nearly impossible to have any sort of realistic vision for what he will be.

You just have things to dream on.

He is extraordinarily athletic. He is very raw. He has only played 53 professional hockey games in North America between the AHL and ECHL.

While the overall experience is low, the results have been high. All he has done since arriving in the organization is stop pucks, win hockey games and excite everybody that has watched him.

Now he is here.

Whether he makes his debut on Thursday or a different game over the next few weeks, he is going to eventually play.

So with that said, let’s take a look back at every Penguins goalie prospect/rookie that has made their NHL debut going back to the start of the 2000 season and how they did in their debut game.

Keep in mind, this is not every goalie simply playing their first game for the Penguins (so no free agents or trades). This is simply goalies making their NHL debut in a Penguins uniform.

Here is the most recent list.

GoalieDateOpponentAgeSavesShots AgainstGoals AgainstSave PercentageTeam Result
Johan HedbergMarch 16, 2001Florida Panthers2741443.9326-3 Win
Sebastian CaronJanuary 11, 2003New York Rangers22181801.0003-1 Loss
Marc-Andre FleuryOctober 10, 2003Los Angeles Kings1946482.9583-0 Loss
John CurryNovember 26, 2008New York Islanders24111101.0005-3 Win
Alexander PechurskiJanuary 16, 2010Vancouver Canucks1912131.9236-2 Loss
Brad TheissenFebruary 26, 2012Columbus Blue Jackets2522242.9174-2 Win
Jeff ZatkoffOctober 11, 2013Florida Panthers2624306.8006-3 Loss
Matt MurrayDecember 19, 2015Carolina Hurricanes2124262.9232-1 Loss
Tristan JarryApril 9, 2017New York Rangers2122253.8803-2 Loss
Casey DeSmithOctober 29, 2017Winnipeg Jets2612153.8007-1 Loss
Joel BlomqvistOctober, 10, 2024Detroit Red Wings2329323.9066-3 Win

What this really is is a game of remember some guys.

Brad Theissen?

John Curry?

Alexander Pechurski!

Pechurski’s debut was never supposed to even happen. If you recall, the Penguins were dealing with some goaltending injury issues at the time, were out on the west coast, and Pechurski, a recent draft pick of the team, was playing for the Tri-City Americans of the Western Hockey League. They signed him to a PTO so he could serve as their emergency backup and was then forced into action because Curry allowed five goals in 25 minutes. He ended up stopping 12 of the 13 shots he faced and was named one of the stars of the game by the Canucks media relations people.

The most impactful and memorable debut here is undoubtedly Marc-Andre Fleury, even though it came in a 3-0 season-opening loss. He was absolutely sensational in that game, stopping 46 shots as a 18-year-old, including a penalty shot. Even though the Penguins were awful that season, and even though they played horribly in front of their teenage goalie that night, it was still an incredibly exciting night because you got an early taste of what Fleury’s career could be. You knew you had a goalie, even if it was more for the future.

The most surprising debut has to be Johan Hedberg’s. The 2000-01 season was Mario Lemieux’s comeback season, and it was pretty clear it made the Penguins a Stanley Cup contender again. Goaltending, however, was a big concern. Instead of making a move for a more established goalie, they went deep into the San Jose Sharks prospect pool and dug out Hedberg in a trade for Jeff Norton.

Hedberg arrived in Pittsburgh still wearing his blue Manitoba Moose mask, was outstanding in limited action in the regular season, and then backstopped the Penguins to an Eastern Conference Finals appearance against the New Jersey Devils. He ended up playing a couple of years in Pittsburgh, was a fan favorite, and was eventually traded for a second-round draft pick. That draft pick turned out to be Alex Goligoski, continuing a trade chain that would eventually result in the Penguins getting Patric Hornqvist and a couple of Stanley Cup rings more than a decade later. This is why remember some guys is fun.

Between Fleury, Matt Murray and Jeff Zatkoff there are three goalies on this list that won Stanley Cup rings (and contributed to those championships) with the Penguins, while Jarry, for all of his flaws, has played a decade in the NHL and appeared in two All-Star games.

What is ahead for Murashov remains to be seen. That journey is about to begin.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...-prospects-have-performed-in-their-nhl-debuts
 
The good and bad from Bryan Rust this season

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Taking a quick look at the box score from the Pittsburgh Penguins 5-3 win over the Washington Capitals on Thursday night and it would indicate an absolutely monster game from forward Bryan Rust. In a lot of ways, it was. He finished with three points, including two assists and the game-winning goal in the third period, capitalizing on the power play and finishing a sensational cross-ice pass from Evgeni Malkin.

That goal is, to this point, one of the biggest goals of the Penguins’ season. It not only put them ahead and went in the books as the game-winning goal, it came after the Penguins had blown a 3-0 lead for the second game in a row.

They simply could not lose that game. They needed somebody to give them the next goal.

If they would have lost that game, after those first 30 minutes, the same way they had lost their previous game in Toronto after a nearly flawless 40 minutes, it would have been brutal for everybody. The locker room. Fans trying to convince themselves they should buy into this team. Everybody. The vibes would have been miserable.

As he has done so many times in his career, Rust was there in a big moment to score the big goal. It’s what he does, and it’s a big reason why he is such an important part of this era of Penguins hockey. He may not be on the Sidney Crosby, Malkin, Kris Letang level, but he is absolutely on that next tier right below them.

He is a major, major part of those 2016 and 2017 Stanley Cup banners being in the rafters, and big goals in big moments are as much of his legacy as his all-around play and the way he worked his way up through the farm system and turned himself into a core piece.

If you look at Rust’s stat line for the season, he also looks like a player that has been a huge part of their early season success, and perhaps even just as ageless as their other top stars.

And to a point, he has been.

He has 14 points in 13 games, has at least point in seven of his past eight games and multiple points in three of them (including two three-point games).

It is all very good. Very productive. Very important.

It seems that way on the stat sheet.

But there also seems to be a significant gap between the production you are seeing on the stat sheet, and what you are actually watching on the ice with him. Perhaps more than any other player on the roster right now.

Everything seems to be happening with him in slow motion. Handling the puck seems to be a problem at times. He just looks … slower.

The biggest concern, however, is what the Penguins are getting from him defensively. This also applies to that top line as a whole, as they are getting absolutely torched defensively almost every single night. They are getting beat in terms of goals against, they are getting beat (badly) in terms of scoring chances.

The Crosby-Rust duo, as great as they have still been offensively, are getting outscored (9-10) during 5-on-5 play. That duo is giving up 3.60 expected goals per 60 minutes, and 13.8 high-danger chances. Just for perspective on that, the worst teams in the NHL this season defensively are giving up 3.25 expected goals per 60 minutes and 14.9 high-danger chances.

When that duo is on the ice, the Penguins are defending like the worst team in hockey.

When they are not on the ice, the Penguins’ defensive performance improves significantly (2.68 expected goals against and 11.8 high-danger chances).

Over the past three games they’ve been outscored by a 5-0 margin during 5-on-5 play.

Their individual defensive metrics also place them near the bottom of the league for the season as a whole.

The offense is important. But they need more from that line defensively.

Defensive play has been a huge issue for the Penguins in recent years, and it was the biggest potential issue with this roster coming into this season and one of the main reasons they figured to be in the Gavin McKenna lottery. A lot of that concern was centered around the state of the blue line (and still is) given the ages of Letang and Erik Karlsson, as well as the state of the left-side of the defense and its makeshift build. But the defensive play of some of the forward lines is also a concern. The first line, great as they are offensively, might be the biggest concern defensively. Especially in the context of back-to-back blown three-goal leads, and Crosby being on the ice for five of the seven goals and Rust being on the ice for four of them.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/68877/the-good-and-bad-from-bryan-rust-this-season
 
Filip Hallander to miss at least 3 months following blood clot diagnosis

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Penguins forward Filip Hallander is expected to be sidelined for at least the next three month after being diagnosed with a blood clot in one of his legs.

Hallander played in the team’s game against Toronto early this week and left the ice early on Wednesday when the team said he was dealing with a lower-body issue.

The 24-year-old Penguins forward will be staying in Pittsburgh and missing the team’s upcoming trip to Sweden, where they will play two international games against the Nashville Predators as a part of the NHL’s Global Series.

“It’s terrible,” Penguins head coach Dan Muse said. “At the same time, though, when something like this comes up, this goes way beyond hockey. This is about the person, and I think we’re all very thankful and grateful that the medical staff here was able to figure this out as quickly as they did and now they can start to do everything they need to just get him back on track and take care of him.”

Muse said there is no long-term concern about Hallander’s health.

“This isn’t something that you’re looking at as life-threatening,” Muse said.

Hallander was drafted by the Penguins in 2018 during Jim Rutherford’s tenure as GM, dealt to Toronto, and then re-acquired by GM Ron Hextall, appearing in three games for Pittsburgh between 2021 and 2023 before returning back to Europe for family reasons.

Returning to North America this past offseason, Hallander re-joined the Penguins and had played on the team’s top line alongside Sidney Crosby and Bryan Rust prior to being sidelined.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/6...least-3-months-following-blood-clot-diagnosis
 
Game Preview: LA Kings @ Pittsburgh Penguins 11/9/25

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Who: Los Angeles Kings (6-5-4, 16 points, 5th place Pacific Division) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (9-4-3, 21 points, 2nd place Metropolitan Division)

When: 2:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Broadcast locally Sportsnet Pittsburgh and Fanduel Sports Network, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: After today the Penguins have a few days off to travel to Sweden for a pair of games against Nashville next week starting

Opponent Track: The Kings are 1-2-0 in the month of November, losing the last time out to Florida at home on Thursday. This is the first game of a six-game Eastern road trip for Los Angeles.

Season Series: The Penguins won 4-2 back on October 16th in LA. This will be the final game of the season series.

Hidden Stat: Anze Kopitar has announced his retirement after the season, today will be his final game in Pittsburgh and against the Penguins in general. Kopitar has 25 career points (8G+17A) in 27 games against the Pens.

Getting to know the Kings​


Projected lines

FORWARDS

Joel Armia – Anze Kopitar – Adrian Kempe

Kevin Fiala – Quinton Byfield – Alex Laferriere

Andrei Kuzmenko – Phillip Danault – Trevor Moore

Warren Foegele – Alex Turcotte – Corey Perry

DEFENSEMEN

Mikey Anderson / Drew Doughty

Joel Edmundson / Brandt Clarke

Brian Dumoulin / Cody Ceci

Goalies: Darcy Kuemper and Anton Forsberg

Potential scratches: Sam Helenius, Jeff Mallot, Jacob Moverare

  • The Kings are healthier than the last time the Pens saw them in October now that Kuemper and Kopitar are healthy again.

Season stats
via hockeydb

lakpen.jpg

  • Has Corey Perry found the fountain of youth? The veteran has scored 12, 12, and 19 goals in the last three seasons and already has six in nine games this year.
  • There has been a lot of talk and rumors going back and forth about impending free agent Adrian Kempe. He’s making his case to be the next in the Kyle Connor/Martin Necas/Logan Cooley tier of players in the $10-12 million long-range. Will the Kings ante up, or will he actually make it to free agency?

And now for the Pens​


Projected lines

FORWARDS

Bryan Rust – Sidney Crosby – Ben Kindel

Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin – Anthony Mantha

Joona Koppanen – Kevin Hayes – Ville Koivunen

Danton Heinen – Blake Lizotte – Connor Dewar

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Ryan Shea / Kris Letang

Ryan Graves / Connor Clifton

Goalies: Sergei Murashov and Arturs Silovs

Potential Scratches: Philip Tomasino, Matt Dumba, Harrison Brunicke

IR: Filip Hallander, Tristan Jarry, Justin Brazeau, Jack St. Ivany (lower body), Rutger McGroarty (upper body), Joel Blomqvist (lower body), Rickard Rakell (hand), Caleb Jones (lower body, out 6-8 weeks), Noel Acciari

  • Save us, Murashov? Could be the debut of the 21-year old goalie on the back-half of the back-to-back. The Pens could use the energy boost from the exuberant youngster and the natural added extra attention to detail to help out the first timer.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/penguins-...-preview-la-kings-pittsburgh-penguins-11-9-25
 
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