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| Friday, August 20 | | · | Washington Capitals in talks to move Fleischmann for Souray or Bieksa |
| · | Kaberle’s dad predicts a trade |
| Thursday, August 19 | | · | Getting a centre for Kessel |
| · | Maple Leafs Overview |
| · | Should the Oilers Make an Offer Sheet to Bobby Ryan |
| · | Kyle Wellwood forced to play waiting game … and he's not alone |
| Wednesday, August 18 | | · | Now It's Unsatisfying |
| · | Willie Mitchell visits with Caps |
| · | Where do the Leafs go from here? |
| Tuesday, August 17 | | · | Leafs lose "prized" prospect |
| · | Confident Burke opens up about Maple Leafs |
| · | Cup-winning goalie could land with Islanders: report |
| · | Deadline expires, Tomas Kaberle still a Maple Leaf |
| Sunday, August 15 | | · | More Kaberle and Bieska Trade Talk |
| · | BURKE: 'IF THESE OFFERS ARE ALL WE GET, KABERLE'S STAYING PUT' |
| Saturday, August 14 | | · | BURKE EXPECTING BEST OFFERS FOR KABERLE TO COME AT LAST MINUTE |
| · | Eric Belanger to sign with Capitals, possible trade in the works |
| · | Steve Yzerman at least kicks the tires on Tomas Kaberle |
| · | Tomas Kaberle trade watch heads to tennis court |
| Friday, August 13 | | · | Donovan itching to play in NHL |
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 | HTR Feature Article: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good |
nordiques100 writes " When a team that went all the way to the Stanley Cup finals loses 7 key contributors to that team, many expect a decline. Well for the Pittsburgh Penguins, the decline may not be very steep at all. At first glance, when you see all the players who left, it is very easy to hypothesize that the team has nowhere else to go but down.
Gone is Ryan Malone, the big power forward who showed a ton of heart and grit in the playoffs. Gone is Marian Hossa, the 3rd leading scorer in the spring and a tremendous two way threat not easily replaceable. Gone as well are players like the gritty Gary Roberts who was a heart and soul player for them, checkers Adam Hall and Jarko Ruutu, tough guy Georges Laraque and backup goalie Ty Conklin who saved the Pens mid year when Marc Andre Fleury was out with injury. However, the essence of the team still remains and all the key parts this team is built around are still here and very poised to make another long playoff run. The team still has its 3 headed monster up the middle with Sidney Crosby, Evgeny Malkin and Jordan Staal. They have a deep defence led by Sergei Gonchar and Ryan Whitney and they have an emerging star in goal in Fleury. To write them off is premature. GM Ray Shero has done a very good job at plugging the holes left this summer and he managed to keep arguably the team's most important free agent Brooks Orpik. Miro Satan and Ruslan Fedotenko are proven skilled NHLers who will add depth on the wing while Eric Godard and Matt Cooke will help replenish some of the grit and toughness lost. Were these players the best available? Are they a marked improvement over the players who left? Probably not. But kudos to Shero for not breaking the bank, overspending, yet maintaining the team's core. Pretty much this will be the team Michel Therrien will have to work with to get the Pens to the next level. One thing Therrien has managed to do is to get his team, no matter who is in the lineup, to play strong defensively. It has made Fleury's job easier in goal. It has helped a great deal having a veteran, talented and experienced defence. But players like Crosby, Staal, the younger players have given premium effort to the defensive side of the game. Therrien has implemented a solid system and the players are buying into it. Thats a tribute to sound coaching. To get back to the finals, the team just might have enough talent to return. But do not bet against Shero from making an aggressive pitch for a top forward by the trade deadline. While his time in Pittsburgh was limited, Hossa had an impact. Its unlikely Shero will shy away from moving young assets again if he feels that he can get a player of Hossa's calibre and productiivity. They did lose quite a bit of grit and toughness so that may be something Shero addresses as well. Like take Roberts for example. He didnt play in all the team's playoff games, but his first shift in the playoffs set the tone and got the Pens rolling all the way to the Finals. Look for Shero to try and add someone with that kind of experience and leadership. Lineup C: Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Jordan Staal, Kris Beech RW: Miro Satan, Petr Sykora, Matt Cooke, Eric Godard LW: Pascal Dupuis, Ruslan Fedotenko, Tyler Kennedy, Maxime Talbot There is no stronger 1-2 punch up the middle that Crosby and Malkin. Malkin came into his own after Crosby got hurt and took his game to the next level. He was a handful to contain and having the both of them in the lineup causes fits for opponents checking them. Though Malkin struggled some for parts of the playoffs, the experience gained should push him to reach towards yet another level of excellence. Crosby is arguably the world's best player. The vote is probably split between him and Alex Ovechkin. Crosby did show he could take his game to a new level in the playoffs and proved to be a horse when it mattered most. He will now need to go even further to take his Pens to championship status. There is probably no better playmaker in the game today and he is probably the most imaginative and creative player around. The team is hopeful Satan, Sykora and Fedotenko provide some solid support scoring for their stars. It might be a reach to expect Satan to be that 40 goal man he once was, but playing along side any one of the Pens top centres could turn his career around. Fedotenko was a key cog in the Lightning's championship from 2004 and his playoff experience will be invaluable. The Pens are hopeful he can replace some of the size and scoring ability lost with Malone gone. The addition of Cooke could be a quiet coup for Shero. He is an agitator and solid penalty killer who could really add some sandpaper to the Pens. With players like Talbot, Godard, Dupuis, Kennedy, the team has a decent group of blue collar, hard working individuals that are willing to do the little things that make up a successful team. Their leader in that regard is young Staal. Staal has grasped with open arms the checking line centre role and emerged in the playoffs as a great all purpose player. He can play the PP, he can score, he can check, he is a handful to contain with his size, he is starting to become a great faceoff man and he showed a knack for making big plays at key times. While he could play on other team's top lines for like half the league, he has embraced filling in this role with the Pens and will be a major piece of their puzzle in their drive for the Stanley Cup. D: Sergei Gonchar, Brooks Orpik, Ryan Whitney, Kris Letang, Hal Gill, Rob Scuderi, Mark Eaton, Darryl Sydor The Pens have ac*****ulated a significant amount of depth on defence and they know as well as anyone that they will need it. You know your defence is strong when a veteran and proven winner like Sydor is 9th on the depth chart. They have a ton of offensive skill with Gonchar, Whitney and Letang leading the way. Gonchar has also become a defensive stalwart adding to his tremendous offensive game that includes sound playmaking and a major league point shot. Whitney doesnt produce as much due to not being on the top PP unit, but he is an invaluable contributor who is tremendous at joining the rush. Letang is slowly but surely getting the hang of the pro game and while he is not big, he is very game and very willing to compete. His offence and skating are why he is here and if his defensive game continues to get better, he could be a big impact player. Players like Eaton, Gill and Scuderi know their role and that is to play a safe sound defensive game. Gill added a big need for size on defence, and while he is slow, he hardly looks that way with all the speed and skill the Pens have. The Pens kept the right free agent when they reupped Orpik long term. While he isnt a point getter, he can play mean and tough and brings those intangibles to a team that lost quite a bit of it in the off-season. That dominant shift he had in the finals was just a taste of the kind of impact he can have. All teams need this kind of character.G: Marc Andre Fleury, Dany Sabourin If there was any question about Fleury's ability to be an elite goalie, he answered them in the playoffs. While it is still necessary to see if he can consistently be a top goalie over the next few years, the Pens certainly know now he is capable of playing at a top level. Fleury was terrific in the playoffs and if he can carry over that momentum into this year, that will be music to coach Therrien’s ears. So long as Fleury can keep those soft goals at a minimum and make the big saves in front of his stingy defence, the Pens will be a difficult team to beat. Therrien will need to ensure though that Fleury does not get worn down. The injury was a bit of a blessing as he was fairly fresh for the playoffs. Without Conklin, Sabourin will need to play well when he gets his chance as the Pens need a reliable backup to take some pressure off Fleury. Spares F: Aaron Boogaard, Connor James, Dustin Jeffrey, Chris Minard, Bill Thomas, Adam Henrich D: TJ Kemp, Mark Ardelan, Paul Bissonette, Derek Engelland, Danny Richmond G: David Brown Prospects F: Jonathan Filewich, Ryan Stone, Kevan Veilleux, Joe Vitale, Johannes Salmonsson, Luca Caputi, Nathan Moon D: Brian Strait, Alex Goligoski, Alex Grant, Carl Sneep G: John Curry The Pens prospect ranks have been thinned out thanks to the team’s best players being with the main squad right now plus the Hossa trade which cost them top prospect Angelo Esposito and a 1st round pick. However they are not without some decent young talent. Filewich is a big body who has potential as a 4th line grinder. He lost a bit of his scoring touch this year and needs it back if he wants to be something more. Caputi had no trouble scoring, being among the leaders in the OHL. Veilleux is another big body the team has up the middle and if he can learn to use his size well, he should be an asset on the 3rd or 4th line. Stone is a checker and may make the team because he can fill that role. Goligoski could probably start playing regularly in the NHL if there weren’t so many blueliners with the team. If he continues to develop well, he could very well allow the Pens to move a veteran Dman. While Fleury is young enough to be around for the next decade, thus lessening the need for a top flight goalie prospect, the Pens may have found a future netminder in Curry who was on the all rookie team in the AHL and had a terrific playoff helping the farm team to the final. They will need this depth as they may need their next Conklin to perhaps step in and carry the parent team if Fleury gets hurt again. The Pens didn’t pick until round 4 in the draft but picked up a solid prospect in Nathan Moon who has shown some offensive ability in the OHL. Outlook Are the Pens as good as the team that went to the finals last year? On paper, they are not. The departures were significant enough to be damaging to any team. However, do the Pens have the capability to get back to that level this season? Absolutely. Any team with two elite players like Malkin and Crosby will always have some success. The fact is the dynamic duo is surrounded by a pretty good supporting cast still and they have good goaltending, good coaching and a manager willing to do what it takes to win. The pieces are still in place for another long playoff run. It will now be up to the young guns to take their games to the next level so they can lead their team to glory. "
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Untitled Document
Pittsburgh Penguins Free Agents
Gonchar, Sergei | Ponikarovsky, Alexei | Eaton, Mark | Guerin, Bill | Fedotenko, Ruslan | Leopold, Jordan | Cooke, Matt | McKee, Jay | Johnson, Brent | Bayda, Ryan| Lee, Chris | Engelland, Deryk
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| "Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good" | Login/Create an Account | 66 comments |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by habswinthecup-again on Friday, August 01 (User Info | Send a Message) | | I don't have time now to read the whole article (I will later), but I think it comes down to a couple of things for Pittsburg 1. was the second half for Fleury the real thing or fluke? (I think he is for real) 2. did they lose too much toughness letting Armstrong, Malone, and Laraque go? (in this case I think they did), so all in all I think they once again will be contenders but still fall abit short. |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by leafy on Friday, August 01 (User Info | Send a Message) | The Penguins are the latest team to get punished for their own success.
Next up: The Detroit Red Wings: Hossa, Zetterberg, Lidstrom, Franzen, Samuelsson, Kopecky, etc, are all UFAs on July 1st, 2009.
Yeah, gotta love the salary cap.
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by ranger_fan on Friday, August 01 (User Info | Send a Message) | Holy diving divers Batman
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by prospectiv on Friday, August 01 (User Info | Send a Message) | Pittsburgh weakness is definitly on the wings : Satan, Sykora, Dupuis and Fedotenko arent very fearsome. Even the leafs have better wingers!
As much as Crosby and Malkin may be dominant, it remains to be seen how they will deal throughout the whole season with a 2 man coverage and barely no passing options...
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by mojo19 on Friday, August 01 (User Info | Send a Message) | | With Crosby, Malkin, and a half decent supporting cast, this team is still a top 4 team in the East, and I like their defense too. |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by Archion113 on Friday, August 01 (User Info | Send a Message) | I wasn't impressed with the team last year to begin with. The team just had everything that could go right go right for them last year. They got a lot of bounces go there way. How many times did you see the Pens try a cross ice pass in front of the net only to watch it bounce off the opposing defender and in the net? Too often.
They played above their potential the year before. Last year was their year to win, this year isn't. |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by physicalsap on Monday, August 04 (User Info | Send a Message) | | "that's still very good." |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by PointMeAtTheSky on Tuesday, August 05 (User Info | Send a Message) | I don't think Pittsburgh will be terrible this year, however they will certainly not be the same force they were last season.
Although most of the focus on this team goes to Crosby, Malkin and Staal, The forward core lacks depth. The teams real strength lies in their defensive core, which may be the best of the division. Gonchar, Orpik, Whitney and Gill make up a formidable top four, with a good balance between offense and defense. Goaltending is of course a crap-shoot.
I'm predicting they finish fourth in th East, being barely nudged out of the division championship by the Flyers. Although I wouldn't be surprised to see the Penguins win the division. You cannot underestimate the power of a franchise player, and the Pens have two. Crosby and Malkin could make all the difference.
All in all, Pittsburgh is certainly a play-off contender, but how far they can go is still unknown.
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by kamullia on Tuesday, August 05 (User Info | Send a Message) | | In a nutshell, this team lost something at every position, and on the defensive side, where they needed to upgrade a bit defensively, their only accomplishment was to keep Orpik, which all it did was keep the same exact defensive side they had before.Things are positioned in such way, that more than likely, Sydor would be ideally moved out (and he would not reject a change in scenery) for more than likely unpolished help at forward (although that may take further assets.All in all the story remains the same in Pittsburgh, although at a different level: Depending on how much their younger players can step it up, that's how successful this team will be with one crucial caveat being goal tending.Fleury did prove some things last spring, but he has yet to put an entire consistent NHL season under his belt for diverse reasons with last year only playing 35 regular season games (and struggling at the beginning of the season). In the end, the team can only go as far as Marc-André can take them since although a good scheme on defense, this group of defensemen are certainly not the cream of the crop in their own end.As they are on paper, I think they make the playoffs and exit in the second round or Eastern Finals at best. No return trip to The Cup finals at this point. |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by BruMagnus (PensCup2009@hotmail.com) on Thursday, August 07 (User Info | Send a Message) | Excellent article!
My original prediction as of Crosby's drafting was that the Pens would win the Cup in 2010. Last year I upped that to 2009 given their rapid improvement.
I see no reason why the Pens cannot win next season given that the likes of the Hurricanes and Lightning with subpar teams have won in the past from the East... so long as they don't have to face Detroit again, in which case a repeat of this year's Final is likely. |
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Re: Pens May Not Be As Good But Still Very Good (Score: 1) by lukeleim on Thursday, August 07 (User Info | Send a Message) | 2008/2008 Prediction
Eastern Conference
1. Pittsburgh 2. Montreal 3. Washington ----------------- 4. NY Rangers 5. Philadelphia 6. Tampa Bay 7. Ottawa 8. Boston ------------------ 9. New Jersey 10. Carolina 11. Buffalo 12. Toronto 13. Florida 14. NY Islanders 15. Atlanta
Western Conference
1. Detroit 2. San Jose 3. Calgary ------------- 4. Dallas 5. Anaheim 6. Chicago 7. Phoenix 8. Vancouver ---------------- 9. Columbus 10. Edmonton 11. Minnesota 12. Colorado 13. Nashville 14. St. Louis 15. Los Angeles
Playoffs '09
1st Round
Pittsburgh vs. Boston: Penguins 4-2 Montreal vs. Ottawa: Canadiens 4-3 Washington vs. Tampa Bay: Lightning 4-2 NY Rangers vs. Philadelphia: Rangers 4-2
Detroit vs. Vancouver: Red Wings 4-1 San Jose vs. Phoenix: Sharks 4-2 Calgary vs. Chicago: Blackhawks 4-3 Dallas vs. Anaheim: Stars 4-2
2nd Round
Pittsburgh vs. Tampa Bay: Penguins 4-3 Montreal vs. NY Rangers: Rangers 4-1
Detroit vs. Chicago: Red Wings 4-3 San Jose vs. Dallas: Sharks 4-2
3rd Round
Pittsburgh vs. NY Rangers: Rangers 4-3 Detroit vs. San Jose: Sharks 4-2
Final Round
San Jose vs. NY Rangers: Sharks 4-3
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