RSS Penguins Team Notes

Penguins recall forward Rutger McGroarty

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With forward Bryan Rust serving a three-game suspension and defenseman Jack St. Ivany now sidelined following surgery, there was going to be a roster move coming for the Pittsburgh Penguins before they begin their current three-game home stand. That roster move came on Thursday morning, and it is the return of forward Rutger McGroarty.

The Penguins officially announced the recall of McGroarty after a four-game stop in Wikes-Barre/Scranton following his recovery from a concussion. He was injured during a collision with a teammate in practice. During his four-game stay in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton he recorded five assists, furthering his impressive AHL numbers for the season. He has four goals, eight assists and 12 total points in nine games at the AHL Level.

He has two goals and an assist in 16 games with the Penguins.

With McGroarty back, the question now becomes what sort of role he take with the Penguins and where he will slot back into the lineup.

The Penguins have recalled forward Rutger McGroarty from the @WBSPenguins (AHL).

Defenseman Jack St. Ivany has been placed on Injured Reserve. pic.twitter.com/HQBbqkxtSH

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 29, 2026

The Penguins have really settled their forward line combinations and have four lines that are working extremely well together at the moment. The easiest solution would be to simply plug McGroarty into Rust’s spot on the top line and keep the Evgeni Malkin-Tommy Novak-Egor Chinakhov line together, the Ben Kindel-Anthony-Mantha-Justin Brazeau line together and the Connor Dewar-Blake Lizotte-Noel Accairi line together.

Why disrupt multiple lines that are all working if you do not have to do so?

Crosby and McGroarty also produced well together in their brief ice-time together at the end of the 2024-25 season.

The other option could be a potential reunion of McGroarty with Ben Kindel, with one of the veteran forwards (Brazeau or Mantha) getting bumped to the top line.

Based on the lines at the morning skate, the Penguins are going to go with the latter option as Brazeau has skated on the right side of the Crosby-Rakell line, while McGroarty is on the left side with Kindel and Mantha.

At the end of the day, just so it is not Kevin Hayes drawing back into the lineup there really is not a bad decision here. The important thing is just putting a good lineup out there that can keep this run going. The other important thing is McGroarty making the most of this opportunity and making a good impression no matter what line he plays on. Making the playoffs is now a very realistic goal for this season, and perhaps even an expectation at this point, but seeing growth from young players and positive development there is also a big priority. Bryan Rust’s suspension is unfortunate for the Penguins, but it is still a big opportunity for McGroarty to get another look with the NHL team.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/72354/penguins-recall-forward-rutger-mcgroarty
 
Penguins/Blackhawks Recap: Pens score six straight goals, easily beat Chicago

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PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 29: Ryan Shea #5 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his second period goal against the Chicago Blackhawks at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 29, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Pregame​


New lineup for the Penguins, Ilya Solovyov makes his Pittsburgh debut, Rutger McGroarty is back from the AHL to get back in the absence of Bryan Rust (suspension). Arturs Silovs gets the call in the net.

Lined up.#LetsGoPens pic.twitter.com/riMgwsl3gB

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 29, 2026

First period​


Chicago starts the game with their third line, so Dan Muse elects to put his fourth line out to match for a curious opening faceoff. No Sidney Crosby and Connor Bedard squaring up right off the bat.

Sloppy and slow start for the Penguins. Ben Kindel takes a penalty six minutes in, the Blackhawks get a lot going on the power play but don’t score (Bedard dents the crossbar with a shot to come close). It keeps building, Ryan Greene pulls up and hits Connor Murphy with a pass. The defender takes a shot, Kris Letang backs all the way into Silovs, which couldn’t have helped matters. 1-0 Chicago.

#5 is right on target🎯 pic.twitter.com/VL7tsAoFBI

— Chicago Blackhawks (@NHLBlackhawks) January 30, 2026

Pittsburgh gets a spark from their sparkplug fourth line. Blake Lizotte might have got away with a trip (surely the only thing a Penguin player got away with in the first period, considering they ended up in the penalty box four times in the first 20 minutes) and that opening is all they need. Noel Acciari shoots, Connor Dewar eventually finds the rebound, wheels out into a shooting area and fires the puck in for his 12th goal of the year. 1-1 game.

HOW DEW YOU LIKE THAT FOURTH LINE?! 💪 pic.twitter.com/zN4c4SV0na

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 30, 2026

The refs make it up to Chicago by giving them their second power play of the game on the next shift. This one isn’t as good. Two coincidental minors later the period comes to an end. Not a pretty sight for the Pens still looking to get their legs back under them from the long road trip, but they get out of the first period even at 1-1.

Second period​


The Pens get to work, McGroarty causes mayhem in the crease, Chicago can’t clear a little later and Anthony Mantha feeds Ben Kindel in the middle of the ice. Kindel hesitates on the shot and gets goalie Arvid Soderblom to think high glove side. That leaves a lot open five hole. 2-1 Pens.

TEENAGE TALENT. pic.twitter.com/UwKth573ca

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 30, 2026

History strikes – kinda. For the first time in the last six periods, the Penguins are awarded a power play. They look out of practice and don’t get much going.

The Pens get a pretty goal on the rush. Parker Wotherspoon stands up Tyler Bertuzzi, blocking his attempt as the hit gets delivered. The puck rolls to Evgeni Malkin who is off to the races. Malkin pulls up with a spinning backhand centering pass to Egor Chinakhov. Chinakhov blows by Artom Levshunov and lifts the puck past Soderblom. 3-1.

EGOR = ELECTRIC. pic.twitter.com/3EwqHp4Qfe

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 30, 2026

31 seconds later, Pittsburgh strikes again. Kindel puts a great pass for a streaking Mantha for a breakaway. In a move that would make Mario proud, Mantha feints a forehand shot, Soderblom bites and it’s an easy finish to the backhand. 4-1 game just like that.

30 seconds later, Anthony Mantha scores, making it 4-1 Penguins 🤯 pic.twitter.com/0mT3ExGZkq

— SportsNet Pittsburgh (@SNPittsburgh) January 30, 2026

There’s blood in the water, Pittsburgh gets another before intermission. McGroarty was causing more mayhem in the crease, Mantha found the loose puck and sent it back to the point for Solovyov. Solovyov quickly bumped it over for Ryan Shea to hammer. It finds its mark. 5-1 game.

AND NOW RYAN SHEA JOINS THE SCORING PARTY

THAT'S A 4-GOAL PERIOD FOR THE PENGUINS pic.twitter.com/6xorjoIW3J

— SportsNet Pittsburgh (@SNPittsburgh) January 30, 2026

It took 20 minutes for Pittsburgh to get their legs back, they found them in the second and exposed Soderblom as the backup goalie he is, while throwing 23 (count ’em, 23!) shots on goal in the second period alone. Four goals in the middle frame opens up a sizeable 5-1 lead.

Third period​


The Blackhawks look like they are ready to get out of town, only one shot on goal in the first 14 minutes of the period. The Pens keep going, eventually the fourth line crashes the net, going crazy to smack another one home. Dewar gets there to do it for his second goal of the night. 6-1.

Connor Dewar scores AGAIN‼️

The Chicago Blackhawks seem to be handling their 6-1 deficit well 🤣 pic.twitter.com/qeOdpUkxfM

— SportsNet Pittsburgh (@SNPittsburgh) January 30, 2026

That wakes Bedard up, at least. He comes down on the rush and lets Brett Kulak slide himself completely out of position. Bedard has all day to pick a spot and snipe Silovs high to the glove. 6-2 game.

What a goal by Connor Bedard. #Blackhawks pic.twitter.com/1Fdl7s70xI

— Charlie Roumeliotis (@CRoumeliotis) January 30, 2026

Silovs actually has to make one more save on a good chance from in close, then things settle down and the teams ease onto the final whistle.

Some thoughts​

  • One of the trickle down effects of Bryan Rust’s suspension is that Egor Chinakhov is now on the top power play. Has shades of Jared McCann 2021 with that left handed option on the left side ready to fire that shot short-side.
  • The biggest impact of no Rust was Justin Brazeau moving up to the top line. He looked mostly in the way, isn’t easy to play with Crosby and the lack of familiarity was on display. Will be interesting to see if they give that more time to find more, Crosby rotated in with Malkin a couple times in the third period, Brazeau still only played 12:45 at even strength despite the label of being a first line player.
  • Keeping Mantha with Kindel proved to be worth whatever lead time the top line might need. They have something special going on. McGroarty didn’t register a point but was more visible in this game than he had been in several of his recent NHL showings too. Lots of chaos on that line, augmented by the skilled plays and finishes that Kindel and Mantha put on display.
  • The second period was a feast like nobody’s business; Mantha scored three points while only taking six shifts that period. That’s like ‘your best night happening against a bad team’ in beer league type of production there.
  • Speaks to just how dangerous and balanced the Penguins are when they score six goals on the night and their normal first power play (Crosby, Rust, Rakell, Malkin, Karlsson) have all of one assist on the night (Malkin’s pass to Chinakhov). Rust, of course, had a good reason for not producing any points since he wasn’t allowed to play, the rest of the most skilled and players relied on for offense weren’t required of much on this night. The third and fourth lines were more than Chicago could handle, combining for five goals between themselves.
  • Solovyov first impressions: good night and opening game. Has some good size, did pin Bedard to the wall once in the first. By design it was a quiet introduction to ease him in, with the blowout allowing him to get more ice time in each period. Earned a primary assist with a basic play but good idea. Stats were 16:51, 3 shot attempts (neither on net, two blocked, one missed), 1 hit, 2 giveaways, 1 blocked shot. (The giveaways stand out a little, but were nothing egregious. The NHL did change the standard and frequency of how they record giveaways before last season, increasing it dramatically). Too early to say much, Solovyov was deferring to his partner Shea to do almost all the heavy lifting moving the puck, but hey, to be expected on the first night with a new team.
  • It’s also too early to be watching the out of town scores for anything besides mostly fun, though it’s too much fun not to take a gander – especially when the Pens won their game without much despair. However, there was almost no help across the board so it’s not that much fun of an update besides holding serve. Carolina just scored three goals in the last two minutes to turn a regulation loss against Utah into a 5-4 win, the Pens remain six points out of first place as a result (with a game in hand). The Islanders defeated a hapless Ranger team to stay tied with the Pens (Pittsburgh does have two games in hand on NYI). The Devils earned an OT win, though they are seven points back of Pittsburgh. The Flyers lost again, which is always good, but losing relevance since they are way in the rearview mirror now (eight points back of Pittsburgh, who has one game in hand). Washington is currently tied.

Not the toughest of competition but the Pens can only play the team in front of them and handled business convincingly to keep their winning streak rolling. Next up is a visit from the Rangers on Saturday afternoon.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/game-reca...-score-six-straight-goals-easily-beat-chicago
 
Penguins announce Malkin and Letang to miss practice

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COLUMBUS, OHIO - NOVEMBER 28: Kris Letang #58 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his game-winning overtime goal with teammates Evgeni Malkin #71 and Thomas Novak #18 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in a game against the Columbus Blue Jackets at Nationwide Arena on November 28, 2025 in Columbus, Ohio. (Photo by Ben Jackson/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

An ominous update from the Penguins came out just before their scheduled practice at noon today. Kris Letang and Evgeni Malkin won’t be among them.

Forward Evgeni Malkin and defenseman Kris Letang will not practice today. Their statuses will be updated tomorrow. pic.twitter.com/as1DAv0noI

— Penguins PR (@PenguinsPR) January 30, 2026

Malkin’s status has been shaky for a while, he returned from a month-long shoulder injury on January 8th but looked in pain after Sunday’s game. He didn’t miss a practice this week and played last night but doesn’t look like he’s out of the woods with that issue for the team holding him out of at least today’s practice. Malkin recorded an assist an played 16:58 in last night’s 6-2 win over Chicago.

Letang has also had recent injury history, missing two games last week before returning to play in the last two games, including 21:15 during last night’s win over Chicago.

The team promised an update tomorrow, which will be the next game at home against the Rangers. The Penguins are on a five-game winning streak and have a heavy upcoming schedule with additional games next Monday, Tuesday and Thursday before the Olympic break starts. Whether or not some of their key veterans will be available to play in those games has yet to be revealed.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/72422/penguins-announce-malkin-and-letang-to-miss-practice
 
The Penguins scoring depth is becoming biggest surprise of season

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PITTSBURGH, PA - DECEMBER 30: Sidney Crosby #87 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates against the Carolina Hurricanes at PPG PAINTS Arena on December 30, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The thing that stood out the most to me about the Pittsburgh Penguins 6-2 win over the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday evening is not just the players that provided the offense. It is also the players that did not provide the offense. Consider these numbers.

Evgeni Malkin recorded one assist.

Sidney Crosby recorded zero points.

Erik Karlsson recorded zero points.

Kris Letang recorded zero points.

Bryan Rust recorded zero points because he is serving the first game of a three-game suspension.

Those are five of the Penguins highest paid players and five of their best players. They combined for one point. In a game the Penguins absolutely dominated for 50 minutes and scored six goals. That is significant.

This is continuing a trend and storyline that has perhaps become the biggest surprising development of the season. It is the scoring depth. It is the fact they have four balanced lines that can all provide offense, with more help waiting in the wings.

When the 2025-26 season began there was a belief that the forward group could be pretty good, at least as far as the top-six was concerned. Certainly good enough to keep the team competitive for a bit, especially if Crosby and Malkin continued to play like …. well …. Crosby and Malkin.

Then Ben Kindel showed up as an 18-year-old and immediately became an impact player.

Then free agent signings Justin Brazeau and Anthony Mantha showed up and became bargain addition free agent signings.

Tommy Novak started to figure things out and bounce back from a slow, frustrating start to the season.

Then the fourth line of Connor Dewar, Blake Lizotte and Noel Acciari became a thing,

Then Egor Chinakhov arrived and just started scoring goals.

Now they four lines that can be rolled out evenly. In Thursday’s game no line played more than 11:14, and no line played less than 9:16. Everybody was involved. Everybody contributed. Everybody stayed fresh.

It also helped that for as deep as the NHL roster has become, they still have plenty of help waiting in the wings. Top prospect Rutger McGroarty was recalled for Thursday’s game and looked outstanding, recording a game-high five shots on goal and providing a physical presence. It may not have resulted in him recording any points, but he was noticeable and looked outstanding. He looks like an NHL player.

Ville Koivunen did not produce much in the way of offense at the NHL level to open the season, his line always pushed play and drove possession and you can still see the skill. He has been a point-per-game player in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. He looks like an NHL player.

They have options.

The scoring depth is not just limited to the forwards, either. The defense is chipping in.

Erik Karlsson is on a 57-point pace over 82 games. Kris Letang is on a 41-point pace. Ryan Shea, who had a goal and an assist on Thursday and has now recorded a point in each of the past four games, has 21 points in 52 games, with all of them coming at even-strength. Entering this season he had just six points in 70 career games.

They are getting contributions from everybody.

It is a combination of new head coach Dan Muse getting the most out of everybody, the scouting staff and front office identifying talent — and in some cases undervalued talent — and the ability to put everybody into place. That does not even get into the fact the veteran players are still able to perform.

If you would have told me at the start of the season the Penguins’ top-six forward lines and the two two defensemen (Erik Karlsson and Kris Letang) were productive and everybody else around them struggled, that would have seemed reasonable. Not at all surprising. If you would have told me they would be able to go more than four lines deep and have three defensemen on pace for more than 30 points I would not have believed you.

They are doing it. It is really something to watch.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...-depth-is-becoming-biggest-surprise-of-season
 
Look I gotta hand it to the Pens here - that scoring depth is legitimately impressive and NOT something I expected to be typing this season. When you can beat a team 6-2 and Crosby puts up a goose egg? That's depth, baby.

But let's pump the brakes for a second here. Malkin AND Letang both missing practice today? That's concerning as hell, especially with Geno already dealing with that shoulder issue. Dude looked like he was hurting after Sunday's game and now they're being cagey about updates? Not great timing with the Rangers coming in Saturday.

The WBS situation is interesting too. Losing Broz for a few weeks hurts because that kid was cooking, but Klassen stepping up is exactly what you need from your AHL depth. That 4-2-1 stretch with all those injuries shows the pipeline is at least functional.

McGroarty looked GOOD against Chicago though. Five shots on goal, physical, creating chaos in front of the net - that's exactly what you want to see from a young guy getting another crack at the show. If he can keep that energy up while Rust serves out his suspension, he might force the coaching staff's hand on keeping him up.

The real question is whether this depth scoring is sustainable or if we're watching a hot streak. Because when playoff time comes around (and yeah, it actually looks realistic now), you're gonna need Sid and Geno carrying the load. Can't count on your fourth line to bail you out in May.
 
Taking a walk down memory lane with today’s ceremony celebrating the Penguins’ 2016 Cup team

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PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 31: Sidney Crosby #87, Evgeni Malkin #71 and Kris Letang #58 of the Pittsburgh Penguins watch the video board during the 10 year anniversary of the 2016 Stanley Cup winning team before the game against the New York Rangers during the at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

It was an emotional day at PPG Paints Arena as a reunion of sorts was held for the Penguins’ 2016 Stanley Cup team.

A large chunk of the team’s roster from the 2016 Stanley Cup team was back in Pittsburgh to be honored and celebrated before the Penguins’ game against the New York Rangers.

Nothing brings back memories like a team reunion 🥹 pic.twitter.com/kGl9TR0rpm

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) February 1, 2026

Penguins captain Sidney Crosby spoke at length about how it felt to be reunited with his teammates, saying that as you continue playing in your career, you tend to forget some of the big moments from the winning years, but that it was awesome to see everyone back in Pittsburgh.

As a tribute video to the team was playing in the arena, Crosby was visibly emotional on the ice.

Sidney Crosby has all the feels looking back at the 2016 @penguins team that won the #StanleyCup 🏆

📺: ABC pic.twitter.com/5yxrRLf64p

— NHL (@NHL) January 31, 2026

“I just you know, obviously loved that group and it’s pretty special when you have that bond and you win together,” Crosby said to Kevin Weekes during an interview on the ice. “When you see them all here and you see some of those clips, it’s definitely emotional but it’s still awesome to see them.”

Bryan Rust shared a similar sentiment.

The nostalgia is real 🐧 pic.twitter.com/GAl22uyZg5

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 31, 2026

“We were hockey players, and that’s our goal, to win Stanley Cups,” Rust said. “To be able to do this, and do that with the group that we had and all the amazing memories, it brings back so many smiles. It brings back happy tears.”

Patric Hornqvist said he didn’t come back to town just for the ceremony, but to take a little walk down memory lane as well.

Taking a trip down memory lane. pic.twitter.com/dtRtolEPis

— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 31, 2026

“We rented a car yesterday to drive around, see our old houses, where my kids went to school, and the grocery stores,” Hornqvist said. “We almost lived our old life for one day, not playing hockey, and then the same night, you meet these guys who are like family. When you win, that’s how close you get to each other.”

As for this year’s Penguins, Pittsburgh defeated the Rangers in a 6-5 barnburner of a game.

Pittsburgh has now won six straight games and are 7-0-2 in their last nine games with their last regulation loss coming on January 11.

The Penguins are back at home on Monday night as they host the Ottawa Senators and then hit the road to face the New York Islanders and Buffalo Sabres before the NHL’s Olympic break.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/7...remony-celebrating-the-penguins-2016-cup-team
 
Penguins/Rangers Highlights: Holding on for a win

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PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 31: Egor Chinakhov #59 of the Pittsburgh Penguins carries the puck against Vincent Trocheck #16 of the New York Rangers at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

six goals ended up being enough for the Penguins to get a win out of a game against the Rangers. Enjoy some highlights here

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/game-recaps/72458/penguins-rangers-highlights-holding-on-for-a-win
 
Sunday Standings: Time to believe?

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PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 31: Noel Acciari #55 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his first period goal against the New York Rangers at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Over the summer, a respected voice like Elliotte Friedman really drove home a lot of feelings about the Pittsburgh Penguins in a podcast:

“It’s really hard to make deals right now because there are 31 teams in the NHL attempting to get better….then there is Pittsburgh”

Turns out the signings of players like Anthony Mantha, Parker Wotherspoon, Justin Brazeau and Connor Dewar didn’t impress many people in the moment. Someone forgot to tell the Penguin players they were going to be uncompetitive this year. Rolling on a six-game winning streak, Pittsburgh has climbed solidly into second place in the Metropolitan Division.

As the Olympic break approaches this Thursday, here’s the picture in the Eastern Conference.

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The mission is becoming clear for the Pens: stay ahead of Columbus, Washington, Philadelphia and New Jersey and they will make the playoffs. Considering that Washington has been stuck in neutral for a while, Philadelphia has melted away and New Jersey has yet to put it all together, that mission for the Penguins looks more achievable with every passing game.

What a shocking season this has been. The two time Stanley Cup champion (and, let’s not forget 3x Eastern Conference champion) Florida Panthers are eight points out of a playoff spot. Other, almost near unanimous preseason playoff shoo-ins like Ottawa, Toronto, New Jersey and Washington find themselves in the bottom-half of the block too.

Pittsburgh is one of many surprise stories and success stories. John Gibson has boosted Detroit, Matthew Schaefer is absurdly good for the Islanders. Buffalo fired their GM and somehow shook themselves out of the doldrums at a most unexpected time. Ditto Columbus, just replace the word ’GM’ in last sentence with ‘coach’.

But, bias aside, Pittsburgh might be the most astounding stories of them all. The team that was pushed to the side and about unanimously picked to finish last – in the division, if not the conference or the entire league, instead has been one of the best teams and stories across them all so far. Now almost two-thirds of the way through the season (at 53 games, they’ve completed 64.6% of it), it’s no fluke or something to be written off as a small sample.

Team Graphic – February 1https://t.co/WtmCOa0EkL pic.twitter.com/jbZZQcVYpg

— JFresh (@JFreshHockey) February 1, 2026

The Penguins have a good process offensively. Defensively they’re nothing special but not to a harmful amount, and they still keep shots down. Both of their special teams are top-5 level. They are getting great goaltending inputs and finishing chances when they shoot. Pick a category, Pittsburgh is pretty darn good at just about all of them.

Many of the popular models are starting to buy in at this point to shift and adjust their pictures that now include the Penguins in post-season outlooks.

Playoff chances as of Sunday https://t.co/RbnckCLHNP pic.twitter.com/BqI35gzvgd

— MoneyPuck.com (@MoneyPuckdotcom) February 1, 2026

The Athletic: 76%
HockeyStats.com: 90%
Hockey-Reference: 87.6%

Not bad for the team supposedly in a different category from everyone else in the league when it came to assembling a competitive team this season.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/72461/sunday-standings-time-to-believe
 
Pens Points: Familiar trends emerging again

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PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 29: Connor Dewar #19 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates his first period goal against the Chicago Blackhawks at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 29, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your Pens Points for this Monday morning…​


The Pittsburgh Penguins welcomed old running mates to remember and honor the 10th anniversary of the 2016 Stanley Cup-winning team before Saturday’s game against the New York Rangers, including that team’s fourth line of Eric Fehr, Matt Cullen and Tom Kuhnhackl. Those players (among the rest of the bottom-six) made key contributions on the scoresheet, which helped round out that championship side. Fast forward 10 years, and we’re seeing that trend emerge again. [Trib Live]

Penguins defenseman Kris Letang is expected to miss a minimum of four weeks and was placed on injured reserve due to a fracture in an unspecified foot. [Trib Live]

Updates from around the NHL…​


The International Olympic Committee is “absolutely certain” that the Olympic ice rink is good to go. [Sportsnet]

The Edmonton Oilers have placed veteran goaltender Calvin Pickard on waivers, the team announced on Sunday. [TSN]

Gavin McKenna, the projected No. 1 overall pick in this summer’s draft, had a day to remember in front of 74,000-plus people inside Penn State’s Beaver Stadium over the weekend, recording a goal and two assists for the Nittany Lions in their 5-4 overtime loss against Michigan State. [NHL]

The Tampa Bay Lightning rallied from a four-goal deficit to beat the Boston Bruins 6-5 in a shootout at Raymond James Stadium during the latest Stadium Series game on Sunday night. [Associated Press]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/7248...ang-nhl-ioc-mckenna-penn-state-stadium-series
 
The week ahead: Big games ahead for Penguins before Olympic break

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PITTSBURGH, PA - JANUARY 31: Sidney Crosby #87 of the Pittsburgh Penguins carries the puck against Vladislav Gavrikov #44 of the New York Rangers at PPG PAINTS Arena on January 31, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

There were some sketchy moments over the past two games, but the Pittsburgh Penguins kept their winning streak going this past week with a 6-2 win over the Chicago Blackhawks on Thursday night and a 6-5 win over the New York Rangers on Saturday afternoon. The week got off to a rocky start with a sloppy first period against the Blackhawks before they flipped the switch and absolutely steamrolled them over the remaining 40 minutes. Saturday’s game against the Rangers was pretty much the exact opposite as they dominated the first 44 minutes and jumped out to a 5-1 lead, before having to cling to a one-goal lead in the closing seconds after allowing four third period goals.

The third period goals against are concerning given what this team has done previously this season, but they still managed to get the two points. They enter this week having won six games in a row, seven of their past eight games and have at least one point in each of their past nine games. That has them sitting on Monday with the sixth-best points percentage in the entire NHL and the third-best points percentage in the Eastern Conference.

Lately, they have done what you would expect a good team to do and beat up on teams below them in the standings.

This week the schedule gets a little bit tougher with three pretty significant games against potential Eastern Conference playoff contenders as they go into the Olympic break.

The week begins on Monday night, at home, against the Ottawa Senators.

From a record and standings perspective, the Senators have been one of the more disappointing teams in the NHL this season having gone from a playoff spot in 2024-25, to a team that is struggling to stay in contention. But their record is also a little misleading and not a great reflection of the way the team has played.

There might not be a team in the NHL that has been hurt by goaltending more than them.

Ottawa is a top-10 goal-scoring team this season (ninth in the NHL at 3.33 goals per game) with a 54.01 percent expected goals share during 5-on-5 play (fourth-best in the NHL). They do a lot of things well, and have typically controlled the pace of play in their games.

They just can not get a save. From anybody. The Senators enter play on Monday with an all-situations team save percentage of just .868, which is 32nd out of 32 teams in the NHL. With even adequate or league average goaltending this might be a playoff team again. This is not a game to be taken lightly, especially with the Senators coming in having won three games in a row, outscoring their opponents by a 16-4 margin. It is also worth noting that two of those wins were against the Vegas Golden Knights and Colorado Avalanche.

They are capable of playing very well. Lately, they are. They are also finally getting some saves. Ottawa won the first meeting this season by a 4-0 margin, in Ottawa, back in December.

The Penguins then have a quick turnaround with a back-to-back situation on Tuesday night when they travel to Long Island for a massive game against the New York Islanders.

The Islanders are right behind the Penguins for the second spot in the Metropolitan Division.

Entering play on Monday, the Penguins are two points ahead of the Islanders for that second spot with two games in hand.

The Islanders also play on Monday night against the Washington Capitals (at Washington), so both teams will be playing the second half of a back-to-back with travel. That helps even things out for both teams.

The outcomes of Monday’s games could really change the stakes for that Tuesday game on Long Island.

A Penguins win, combined with an Islanders loss, would give the Penguins a four-point lead over the Islanders going into Tuesday’s game (with still two games in hand) and give them a chance to take a really commanding lead in that race for the second spot in the Metropolitan Division.

A Penguins loss on Monday, combined with an Islanders win, would draw the Islanders even in terms of total points and give them a chance to move ahead on Tuesday with a win.

There is potentially a lot happening there.

This Islanders team is also winning in the most New York Islanders way imaginable. They do not really do anything particularly well. They are not a great offensive team. They are 32nd out of 32 teams in expected goals against per 60 minutes of 5-on-5 play. They are 29th in the NHL in expected goal share during 5-on-5 play.

So how are they winning and staying in the race? It is the goaltending. Ilya Sorokin is playing out of his mind, and after a couple of down years (by his standards, anyway) he is back to playing like one of the truly elite goalies in the NHL.

They also have Matthew Schaefer. The No. 1 overall pick has stepped right into the NHL and made an almost unbelievable impact. We really have not seen an 18-year-old defenseman impact games and a team the way he has in decades. If ever. He is legit. He is the real deal. The Penguins won the first meeting of the season by a 4-3 margin in their home opener.

The Penguins then close out their pre-Olympic break schedule on Thursday with a road game at the Buffalo Sabres. It was not even two months ago that game looked like a potential win that you could pencil in given how bad the Sabres started the season and how they looked like every other Sabres team from the past 14-15 years. Lately, though, they have been one of the hottest and best teams in the league, look like a playoff team, and are playing like a playoff team. That is not going to be an easy game.

Not only is Buffalo playing exceptionally well, it also has some really high-level players that can take over games in forward Tage Thompson and defenseman Rasmus Dahlin. The Penguins won the first meeting of the season against the Sabres, in Pittsburgh, but it was not one of their crisper or cleaner games.

This is going to be a challenging week, not only in terms of opponent, but also because of going on the road and having another back-to-back situation. The good news: They will have Bryan Rust back for Tuesday’s game against the Islanders, even if that creates a lineup crunch that will probably take Rutger McGroarty out of the lineup. If the Penguins can get three or four points out of this week, that would be a fine result and really keep their momentum going into the Olympic break and keep them in a great position in the Eastern Conference playoff race.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/...games-ahead-for-penguins-before-olympic-break
 
NHL suspends Caleb Jones for 20 games for violating terms of Performance Enhancing Substances

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PITTSBURGH, PA - OCTOBER 11: Caleb Jones #82 of the Pittsburgh Penguins skates during the game against the New York Rangers at PPG PAINTS Arena on October 11, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Defenseman Caleb Jones has been suspended for 20 games by the NHL

Caleb Jones of the @penguins has been suspended for 20 games. https://t.co/0wmbboradV pic.twitter.com/gSFLFsNb8G

— NHL Public Relations (@NHLPR) February 4, 2026

From the league:

Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Caleb Jones has been suspended for 20 games, without pay, for violating the terms of the NHL/NHLPA Performance Enhancing Substances Program.

Under the terms of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, the suspension is accompanied by mandatory referral to the NHL/NHLPA Player Assistance Program for evaluation and possible treatment.

The National Hockey League will have no further comment on this matter.

Jones issued a statement this afternoon:

Statement from Caleb Jones on his suspension. #LetsGoPens pic.twitter.com/WLSR3ACBNw

— Mark Scheig (@mark_scheig) February 4, 2026

The Penguins also issued a statement on the matter.


Jones was injured in October with a foot injury. He was assigned to the AHL in January and suffered a different upper body injury in the AHL.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/7267...ing-terms-of-performance-enhancing-substances
 
Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ Buffalo Sabres 2/5/2026

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PITTSBURGH, PA - NOVEMBER 26: Tage Thompson #72 of the Buffalo Sabres handles the puck against the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG PAINTS Arena on November 26, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (28-15-12, 68 points, 2nd place Metropolitan Division) @ Buffalo Sabres (32-18-6, 70 points, 3rd place Atlantic Division)

When: 7:00 p.m. eastern

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

Pens’ Path Ahead: The path for most of the players is an enviable one to spend some time with their families in tropical confines during the NHL’s three-week Olympic break that starts after tonight. The Pens don’t play again until three weeks from tonight at home against New Jersey (Feb 26) leaving for a lot of R&R in the future for most of the team.

Opponent Track: The Sabres have slowed down recently, if ever-so-slightly. They’ve traded wins and losses in the last four outings (beating LA, losing to Montreal, beating Florida and losing to Tampa [OT]) and are 6-2-2 in their last 10. That’s pretty decent, but then again they were 8-2-0 in the prior 10 game stretch and 8-3-0 before that. Since Thanksgiving, Buffalo’s 23-8-2 record is the best in the NHL.

Season Series: The Penguins won 4-2 back on November 26th, dropping Buffalo to 29th place in the NHL with a 9-10-4 record. That wasn’t quite rock bottom for the Sabres (they would lose 5-0 to NJ in the next game) but it was close. After tonight’s game, Buffalo makes one more trip to Pittsburgh on March 5th to close out the three-game season series.

Hidden Stat: Pittsburgh has points in five-straight road games (4-0-1) and are 7-1-1 in their last nine road games, per Pens PR.

Getting to know the Sabres​


Projected lines

FORWARDS

Peyton Krebs – Tage Thompson – Alex Tuch

Jason Zucker – Ryan McLeod – Jack Quinn

Josh Doan – Noah Ostlund – Konsta Helenius

Isak Rosen – Tyson Kozak – Brock Malenstyn

DEFENSEMEN

Mattias Samuelsson / Rasmus Dahlin

Bowen Byram / Owen Power

Zach Metsa / Jacob Bryson

Goalies: Alex Lyon and Colten Ellis

Potential scratches: Zach Benson, Jordan Greenway, Michael Kesselring

Injured Reserve: Josh Norris, Justin Danforth, Jiri Kulich, Josh Dunne, Connor Timmins, Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen

  • Norris, who last played on Jan 14, was nearing a return. It remains unknown as of now if he’ll be able to comeback for this last game before the break or if they will keep him to the side until afterwards.
  • The break is coming at a good time for Buffalo, Benson and Greenway are also dealing with injuries and starting goalie Luukkonen unfortunately had to pull away from Team Finland due to his injury.

Season stats
via hockeydb

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  • The man dubbed the ‘Lyon King’ has been instrumental in Buffalo’s turn of play. Alex Lyon is 11-1-0 with a 2.08 GAA and .930 save% since December 7th when the Sabres started making their big turnaround. Ellis played on Tuesday against Tampa, so presumably the net will be Lyon’s tonight.
  • Many others, of course, have been stepping up too. Thompson has 36 points (17G+19A) in the last 28 games. Dahlin (10G+19A) has been amazing as well. McLeod (6G+20A) has been stacking up points. Tuch (13G+11A) in his last 27 is playing his way into a big ticket in his contract year.
  • It’s a big shame that Norris (who has played 8, 50, 56 and now 19 games this season) can’t stay off the IR. His talent is right there but his availability has not allowed him to unlock it.

Key to the game: Which offense comes through?

This game features the two hottest offenses since Christmas, with Pittsburgh and Buffalo tied at exactly 4.05 goals/game. The better question could be reversed for which defense and goaltending can stand up to those offenses but it does stand to reason that the winning team is going to need (at least) four goals tonight.

Another key will be the first period. The Penguins are tops in the NHL with 28 total goals in the first periods since Christmas, the Sabres aren’t far behind with 26. Pittsburgh has been stingier by only allowing 11 first period goals, compared to 20 by Buffalo. A strong first is a great base to have for the rest of the game, the Penguins can’t rest on that alone since Buffalo has been great in the second periods (outscoring opponents by a combined score of 26-13). As a result, the Sabres have only been trailing in one game out of their last 20 after the second period mark.

A troubling statistical outlook shows the Sabres as a team that gets stronger as the game goes along (29 third period goals). The third has been the weakest for the Pens, giving up 20 goals. This likely will not be a comfortable game if the Pens are clinging to a late lead, but that situation is often times better than the alternative.

And now for the Pens​

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Projected lines

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Egor Chinakhov – Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin

Anthony Mantha – Ben Kindel – Justin Brazeau

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Brett Kulak / Ryan Shea

Ilya Solovyov / Connor Clifton

Goalies: Arturs Silovs and Stuart Skinner

Potential Scratches: Rutger McGroarty, Kevin Hayes, Ryan Graves

IR: Kris Letang, Filip Hallander, Caleb Jones (suspended), Jack St. Ivany

  • The Penguins had an off day yesterday as they finish out this stretch.
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Mantha has been red hot lately, almost a shame the break is coming up to stop his recent tear. It’ll be interesting to see how the Pens’ productive second line stacks up against a Buffalo team that can roll two solid defensive pairs in the matchup category there.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/penguins-...w-buffalo-sabres-pittsburgh-penguins-2-5-2026
 
Pretty impressive stretch for the Pens heading into the Olympic break. Six wins in a row and sitting third in the East is a lot better than most people probably expected back in November.

The Ottawa game is interesting - their underlying numbers are actually solid but that goaltending situation is rough. An .868 save percentage is brutal. Still, they've been hot lately and already beat Pittsburgh 4-0 this season, so definitely not a gimme.

That Islanders game feels like the biggest one of the week though. The standings implications are huge and Sorokin has been standing on his head. Plus Schaefer is something else - haven't seen an 18-year-old defenseman make that kind of immediate impact in a long time. Kid's legit.

The Caleb Jones news is unfortunate. Not great timing with Letang already on IR, though Jones wasn't really contributing much anyway between his injuries. At least the defense has been holding up reasonably well without him.

Buffalo scares me a little for Thursday. They've been the best team in the league since Thanksgiving and Lyon has been playing out of his mind. That's a tough matchup to close things out before the break. Both teams can score in bunches so it could turn into a track meet.

Getting Rust back is huge. Hopefully they can grab at least 4 points this week and head into the break in good shape.
 
Pens Points: Sabre Rattling

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PITTSBURGH, PA - NOVEMBER 26: Josh Dunne #44 of the Buffalo Sabres battles against Ryan Shea #5 of the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG PAINTS Arena on November 26, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

With the NHL prepared to hit pause on the 2025-26 season, two of the most unlikely playoff contenders will meet before the Olympic break begins and players scatter either to Italy for The Games or to some far away dentation for some earned R ‘n R.

On the shores of Lake Erie, the Pittsburgh Penguins and Buffalo Sabres will meet later this evening in a crucial showdown of two teams with playoff aspirations looking to build momentum heading into their extended time off.

Puck drop between the Penguins and Sabres is scheduled for 7:00 PM and will be broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh.

Pens Points…​


At 3:00 PM on Wednesday, the NHL’s Olympic roster freeze went into effect, putting a temporary stop to most player movement until later this month. When the freeze lifts, it will be a sprint to the NHL trade deadline which will be less than two weeks away. [Pensburgh]

Two wins in two tried made for a perfect weekend for the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins with victories over Syracuse and Lehigh Valley. To top it off, defenseman Matt Dumba was named AHL Player of the Week after recording six points across the two games. [Pensburgh]

There were serious injury concerns surrounding Anthony Mantha when the Penguins signed him over the summer, but the thought was if he could stay healthy and produce, he could be flipped at the deadline. Well he’s stayed healthy and has been productive, but don’t hold your breath for a trade to come. [The Hockey News]

It’s barely February and already several Penguins have posted career seasons or are well on course to do so. Connor Dewar is one of those players, having setting new career marks in goals and points while playing a pivotal role of the Penguins lethal fourth line. [Trib Live]

In hopes of getting his develop back on track, the Penguins recalled prospect Melvin Fernstrom back to North America from his pro team in Sweden and have assigned him to the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins where he will spend the rest of the season. [Trib Live]

Defenseman Caleb Jones has been suspended 20 games for violating the NHL performance enhancing substance policy. The suspension is without pay and Jones will receive a mandatory referral to Player Assistance Program for evaluation and possible treatment. [NHL Relations]

NHL News and Notes…​


For years, Pierre-Edouard Bellemare tried and failed to help his native France qualify for hockey at the Olympic Games. Now 40, Bellemare will captain his home country in its first Olympics since 2002, and the tournament will serve as his swan song as a player. [AP]

A pair of NHL superstars will have the honor of carrying their nation’s flag at the Opening Ceremony of the Olympics this Friday in Milan. Leon Draisaitl will escort the German flag around the San Siro while David Pastrnak will do the same for his native Czechia. [NHL]

Just before the Olympic freeze went into place, the long rumored trade of Artemi Panarin was completed, with the New York Rangers sending the winger to the Los Angeles Kings for a prospect and a pick. Panarin signed a two-year extension with the Kings as well. [Sporting News]

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/news/72659/pens-points-sabre-rattling
 
Avery Hayes says he “kind of blacked out” after two goals in his NHL debut

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BUFFALO, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 5: Avery Hayes #85 of the Pittsburgh Penguins reacts after scoring his first career goal during the first period of an NHL game against the Buffalo Sabres at KeyBank Center on February 5, 2026 in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Joe Hrycych/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Avery Hayes made his NHL debut for the Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday night and it’s safe to say it was a memorable start for the 23-year-old rookie.

Hayes, who was called up from the AHL earlier in the day ahead of the team’s game against the Buffalo Sabres, scored two goals in the first period of his first NHL game.

“Honestly, I can’t say much right now,” Hayes said after the first period ended during an interview with SportsnNet Pittsburgh’s Hailey Hunter. “I kind of blacked out, but it was a big goal for the team which is most important and yeah, I just gotta keep this thing going.”

Avery Hayes on his first NHL period, two goals ⬇️

"Honestly, I can't say much right now. I kind of blacked out." 🥹@TheHaileyHunter / #LetsGoPens pic.twitter.com/J5Wody73Oa

— SportsNet Pittsburgh (@SNPittsburgh) February 6, 2026

Hayes said that the process of being called up and making his debut in Buffalo was a quick turnaround, but said that was probably a good thing because it didn’t give him time to get stressed about the situation.

“We drove in and I was ready to go and it was fun,” Hayes said.

With two or more goals in his NHL debut, Hayes joins Jake Guentzel and Rob Brown as the only other Pittsburgh Penguins players to match that achievement.

Prior to being called up, Hayes had scored 13 goals with 10 assists in 31 games for Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in the AHL this season.

Time will tell if Hayes will end up sticking around on the Penguins’ roster when the team returns from the NHL’s Olympic break.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/general/7...-blacked-out-after-two-goals-in-his-nhl-debut
 
The many positive surprises of the 2025-26 Penguins

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VANCOUVER, CANADA - JANUARY 25: Ben Kindel #81 of the Pittsburgh Penguins is congratulated at the bench after scoring his second goal during the second period of their NHL game against the Vancouver Canucks at Rogers Arena on January 25, 2026 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. (Photo by Jeff Vinnick/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

The Penguins find themselves holding a playoff position at the Olympic break almost entirely because of a series of surprise contributions. They’re exceeding any and all realistic preseason expectations as a result. This break gives a good chance to circle back at the preseason to re-emphasize just how incredible many things have worked out on an individual level.

The reasons are as long as you care to keep looking.

  • Parker Wotherspoon (at $1.0 million this season and next) has to be the best value signing free agent in the NHL. Perhaps in quite some time. Wotherspoon has been a legitimate first-pair defender, is solid physically, can move the puck, skates well. Does everything right. What a revelation he’s been.
  • Ben Kindel’s stats are somewhat modest though still impressive with 27 points to rank seventh among rookies this season. His impact on the team and in the games sure isn’t. Despite his age and not even being a top-10 pick, Kindel has gone to almost unprecedented territory as a ready-made NHL player at age-18 and is quality enough to perform well as one of the more shocking developments that remains unimaginable.
  • Anthony Mantha, fresh off an ACL surgery, is setting up for a career-year at age 31 (25 goals and 48 points back in 2018-19), having already produced 20 goals and 42 points in 56 games with the Pens.
  • Evgeni Malkin is an all-time legend, so it’s odd to list him as a surprise but not many thought he would be 43 points in 44 games type of good at age-39 coming off his worst season in 2024-25 (50 points in 68 games).
  • Justin Brazeau has 15 goals and 27 points in 42 games this season. He only had 16 goals and 29 points in 94 career games prior to joining the Penguins.
  • Connor Dewar has 13 goals and 24 points, both career-highs and coming almost entirely from a low-minute, defensive-oriented fourth line role that makes his impact even greater than the impressive stat line.
  • Brett Kulak has steadied the defense and helped to unlock Kris Letang’s game in major ways.
  • Tommy Novak has proved he can perform without being in a sheltered role and keep his production going.
  • Egor Chinakhov has exploded into a modern day Alex Kovalev or James Neal, harnessing his shooting ability in a spot where he can succeed filling the net.
  • Ryan Shea is closing in on 20 assists and has been a viable player up and down, left and right within the lineup as needed.
  • Arturs Silovs and Stuart Skinner have had their ups and downs but the goaltending has improved from a bottom-five NHL unit last season to more than respectable this season.

Add it all up and the results are astounding, even before getting to the least surprising element of all that 38-year old Sidney Crosby remains one of the league’s top players and keeps leading the way.

Ironically enough, most of the players we tabbed in preseason (Hallander, Brunicke, Alexeyev, Silovs) have had no to minimal impact, except for Silovs who is on track to lead the team in games played by a goalie this year. Which goes to show how remarkable it’s been, it’s one thing if a player or two hits a best case scenario, it’s another when across the board everyone is playing to a high level.

When that’s the case, coaching and management impacts have to be considered as well. Dan Muse has done a great job in his first season as an NHL head coach, his whole staff including assistants Todd Nelson and Mike Strothers deserve a lot of praise and recognition as well. Kyle Dubas gets a lot of the spotlight pp a level from there, his staff with Jason Spezza, Wes Clark and Vukie Mpofu have pressed a whole lot of the right buttons to add no shortage of incoming talent large (Chinakhov, Skinner, Kulak) and even small (Solovyov) while the season has been ongoing.

Success has many fathers, as the old saying goes, and that certainly applies on the individual level when it comes to the impressive team results that the Penguins have received so far this season.

Source: https://www.pensburgh.com/analysis/72617/the-many-positive-surprises-of-the-2025-26-penguins
 
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