Thursday, June 28, 2012

Malkin fishing pics from Twitter



Have to love the Pensblog Parise fish photoshop!!

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Other Free Agents Pittsburgh should look at

With free agency looming, and the Penguins having cap space with the movement of Michalek and Staal, along with the ability to move Martin, Pens fans are giddy with the prospects of Pittsburgh being able to get either Ryan Suter or Zach Parise.  Some even think that getting both of them is possible!  Personally, I think both are long shots financially and potentially cap strappers for Pittsburgh.  Suter prefers the western conference, but is a better fit in terms of a real need for Pittsburgh, and Parise will likely command more than 7M dollars.  I have already discussed my preference for the Penguins trading for Bobby Ryan if they can do it with Martin, Kennedy, and some combination of one of their A rated defensive prospects or picks.  He makes them bigger, tougher, and more dangerous, while saving 2-3M per year in cap space over Parise.  If not, there are some more reasonably priced wingers that will upgrade their situation on the wing.  Defense however is their issue, and the Penguins needed to get bigger and tougher on the back end in my opinion, and may need a veteran if they move Martin to help make the transition to their young core of defensemen.  There is another big time name in Alexander Semin who is available as part of the big three names, but I dont think he fits the direction that Pittsburgh is taking.  I prefer some lesser known names for Pittsburgh.




From three big-time names, to a bit more obscure offering. Florida’s Jason Garrison is going to get some serious money in the next week.  I like Garrison due to his size at 6'2" and 218 pounds, and his tough game.  Undrafted out of the University of Minnesota-Duluth, he signed with Florida after a 14-point campaign in his last year at school. He spent a year and a half in the AHL before Florida called him up full time in 2010-11. In 2012, along with the rest of Florida’s re-tooling, Garrison took off. He can set the table with a nice pass (which he did frequently to Brian Campbell on the power play) or clear it with a booming shot (which he did frequently from Brian Campbell). He pounded home 16 goals and 33 points this season (only Weber and Erik Karlsson had more goals) while being a plus-6.
The kicker is…he’s a defensive defenseman. He’s a rather physical, shot-blocking defensive defenseman that routinely played against the best competition Florida had to face nightly. Garrison paired with Mike Weaver on the Panthers top PK unit and then paired with Campbell on the top power play unit much of the season.  He scored 16 goals last year, and 9 on said power play!  The defense-first d-man might have a hard time approaching 20 goals again, but with his shot, anything is possible. It wouldn’t be unreasonable to expect Garrison to command at least $4 million per year on the open market given how narrow the marketplace is right now for quality defensemen.  If you add his experience playing with elite players in his pairing (Campbell) and his shot blocking (124), hitting (127), TOI which was 23:41, Garrison looks like the guy I would go after.   He would look very good  as a replacement for Paul Martin, and can be had most likely for around what we pay for Martin or a little less.  He is also still young at 27.  I love the idea of a "thumper" on the back end, particularly one who can join the rush and score too.  My personal choice for the Penguins.




Another name of interest to me for Pittsburgh is Carolina UFA Bryan Allen who is a 6'5" 226 pound defenseman who is a solid 31 year old veteran.  His game is not flashy, but he made 2.9 M last year, and would add a tough steady veteran presence to the Pittsburgh blue line.  He was one of the leaders for the Hurricanes last season.  He only added one goal and 13 assists, but played a tough stay at home game with physicality.  In the tough Atlantic Division, Allen would look in Vegas Gold and Black!



Hal Gill is another player who adds a veteran presence and size to a back end that may go younger with the Bortuzzo,Strait, Despres, and Morrow kids pushing for time on the big team.  Gill, at 6'7" and 241 pounds adds size, grit and a steady influence to stay at home for Pittsburgh.  He may look very good on a third pairing, and should come in at around the 2M mark again.  His downside is skating, and age at 37, but he looked good as a shot blocking physical player for Nashville, and he was a big part of the 2009 Stanley Cup run.



Mark Eaton is also a UFA and has ties to Shero at Nashville and also played a solid role in the Stanley Cup run of 2009.  Easton will add no real offense, but he is a steady player with good size at 6'2" and 212 pounds at the age of 35.  He will likely be at 2M or so again this year as well.  If Pittsburgh is looking for a reliable veteran presence without killing the cap, Eaton is not a bad way to go.  I am a big fan of the Penguins adding Jason Garrison or Bryan Allen should they feel that Suter is not in play or not in play for the right money.



As far as wingers go, I highly prefer Bobby Ryan due to size, production, skill and cost.  If he is not available by trade, and Parise will not take a discount to compete for the Cup with Crosby, the Penguins have some other decent options for a lot less money.  Remember, offense was not an issue, grit and defense were.  The first intriguing option is Shane Doan, the 6'1" 223 pounder from Phoenix who might be interested in taking a shot at the Cup.  Phoenix went deep this year, but there are a lot of questions surrounding the team's future.  Doan made 4.55 M last year, and might be willing to take a shot at a Cup run for a 4M or so deal.  He adds leadership, grit, and 20-25 goals to a strong lineup.



Ray Whitney is another winger who has been tied to Pittsburgh for a long time.  Another Coyote, who is now 40 years old had 24 goals and 77 points last season, and may have another year like that in him.  He played for 3M last season, and a Cup run at his age might look attractive.  I think he signs with Phoenix again though.



PA Parenteau of the Islanders is an intriguing option too.  Parenteau has had 18 goals/67 points and 20 goals/53 points in his past two seasons.  He played for a bad Islanders team and only cost 1.25M per year.  He would be an upgrade to the top line, and at 6'0" and 195 pounds he has decent size.  He will be due a raise, but would still fill a solid top six role at a reasonable price.  Allan Walsh his agent has a good relationship with Pittsburgh and he is a solid playmaker, used to playing with quality players like Moulson and Tavares.




Jiri Hudler of the Wings is an intriguing player for Pittsburgh too.  Last year, the 5'10" and 190 lb center had 25 goals and 25 assists for the Wings and played to a plus 10.  He is a competitive, combative forward who has obviously played in many big time situations as a member of the Wings.  At 28 years old, and coming off a 3M per year deal with Detroit, Hudler could be worth a look dependent upon how things unfold.






I have no idea what Pittsburgh will do, and they also have interest in players who are bigger and tougher on the bottom 6 such as Travis Moen who is 6'2" and 215 pounds.  I favor the Penguins adding depth, size and toughness to the team, and like the idea of clearing more cap space by moving Martin, and adding Garrison or Allen as the key defensive acquisition, and either Ryan, or one of above wingers as the key addition to the top six.  I think the Penguins can then add a gritty bottom six forward with size, attitude and a defensive mind set to help Pittsburgh make the deep run to the Cup again.  Remember, with the 1980 Olympic team Herb Brooks proved that winners are not always the biggest collection of the best stars, but often the group that meshes as a team, where roles are defined and followed.  It it is time to let some of the young blue liners come up, but adding some size with Garrison would look great.  Adding Doan or Whitney and Parenteau up front, and a big grinder for the third or fourth line at the expenses of Martin would add to the top goaltending tandem and star power to make a better team than overpaying for more stars will.



Some other interesting free agents include the following for Pittsburgh.  Filip Kuba of Ottawa is an interesting Plan B or C kind of guy.  He is 6'4" and 226 pounds and at 35 years old would be a decent option as a transition player for a year or two for Pittsburgh.  Daniel Winnik at 6'2" an d 210 pounds is an interesting option for a size upgrade on the fourth line of Pittsburgh

Jordan Staal Trade

I am a huge fan of Jordan Staal's.  He was one of my favorite players on the Penguins, a rare combination of size and skill, who was just beginning to get comfortable with the offensive capabilities he possessed.  I had really never imagined a scenario in which the Penguins did not have Staal on the PK, or available to replace Malkin or Crosby if injured.  June 22nd, 2012 changed all of that when Ray Shero was forced to trade Staal when the young cetner iceman turned down a 60 million dollar contract extension over 10 years.  He was headed to the last year of his 4M per year deal, and Shero had two choices.  Hope that Staal's obvious need to get out from under the shadow cast by Malkin and Crosby would not be a distraction, and hope that the three center model would win him another Stanley Cup before Staal, a valuable asset walked away for nothing via free agency.  Lack of a Cup that only one of 30 teams will win would make that a big gamble, and one that Shero decided not to take when he pulled the trigger on a deal that sent Staal to Carolina to unite with his brother Eric in return for Brandon Sutter, Brian Dumoulin and the 8th overall pick in the draft which became Derrick Pouliot.  A lot of my friends texted me and asked if Staal was worth more than that, and did the Penguins make a mistake with this deal.  My emphatic answer despite my feelings about Staal, was NO, the Penguins did not make a mistake.  I will give you a summary of why they did not, and then I will tell you more about each player the Pens got back for back up.  First off, we all know about Staal.  Second overall pick in the 2006 draft, youngest player to score on a penalty shot, youngest to record a hat trick, most short handed goals by a rookie (7), momentum turning goal in 2009 SCF, and 25 goals and 50 point in just 62 games last season.  As I said, Staal is a horse who would be the second line center in  just about any other situation, with definite first line skills on some teams.

So, what did we get back in return for this dynamic player?  As noted above, Brandon Sutter was the centerpiece of the deal that Shero had to have in order to make this happen.  What about this Sutter guy?  Well folks, Brandon Sutter is not chopped liver.  Sutter has played three full NHL seasons, and in those seasons he has put up 21, 14, and 17 goals.  Not Staal's numbers, but not bad at all for a third line center on an average to poor team.  Last year Staal had 50 points in 62 games and Sutter had 32 points in 82 games.  Staal is a superior offensive player at this point in his career.  But think about this when you consider Sutter as his replacement as the third line center for Pittsburgh.  First, he is enough of a leader that he wore the A as assistant captain for the Hurricanes at the ripe old age of 21.  He was also the 11th overall pick in the draft the year he came out.  He is a big player also at 6'3" tall and 185 pounds.  Sutter was a better defensive player than Staal, with the Canes giving up less than 2 goals per 60 minutes of Sutter ice team at even strength, while Pittsburgh gave up 2.83 goals in the same time frame.  Another complicated formula that rated 221 forwards over the past three years on goals against every 20 minutes, and several other factors rated Sutter the 7th best forward of 221 with 2000+ minutes of even strength ice time over the past three years.  SEVENTH of 221.  Staal was ranked 91st in the same poll.  Also, Sutter led the Hurricanes in blocked shots last season with 85, while Adams led Pittsburgh with 45, and Staal had 23 blocked shots.  Sutter had three times the blocked shots than Staal.  Geno led the Penguins in takeaways at 53, while Sutter had nine more than Geno with 61 takeaways.  Sutter was the man the Hurricanes relied on to take big defensive zone draws, with him winning 654 faceoffs or 50.5%, while Staal won about the same at 51%.
As I chewed on the above information, and weighed the postion Shero was in, I marvel at the fact that we got Brandon Sutter as the centerpiece of a deal coming back.  Hey, Staal is the better player, and surely he is better offensively, but Sutter may be the better FIT.  Staal was miscast as a third line center, and would have to play out of position at wing to be in the top six, while Sutter is the perfect complement to Malkin and Crosby.  Sutter also ranked higher in general defense, blocked shots and takeaways than Staal.  Sutter also has not seen the ceiling to his development at the ripe old age of 22 either.  And there are a few more things to consider also.  Sutter will save Pittsburgh about 2M in cap space this year as opposed to Staal and 4-5M next season based on Staal's anticipated contract.  That money along with the other two assets that came back in this trade will go towards Pittsburgh filling other gaps on the team.  Sutter is then only an RFA v UFA, so Pittsburgh will remain in control of keeping Sutter for the long term.  Head to head Carolina got the better player, but Pittsburgh got a better fit at a lower cap hit, AND two other valuable assets in Brian Dumoulin and Derrick Pouliot.  Here is a little bit about those two players.

Brian Dumoulin is a 6'4" and 210 pound two way defenseman drafted in the 2nd round of last year's draft, 51st overall.    He won  the 2009-2010 NCAA championship at Boston College and last year won Best Defenseman in Hockey East, East First Team All-Star, Frozen Four Tournament Team, NCAA First Team All-American.  He was a plus 90 during his Boston College career.  NHL scouts have said, "he's a huge asset to their organization," "he is one of the best college defensement in the country," he is a complete 2 way defenseman with great poise with the puck, strong skating ability, and he's really progressed rapidly due to great coaching."  Finally, some scouts compare the type of game he plays to that of Gary Suter, and many think he will be NHL ready after one season in Wilkes Barre Scranton, in other words for the 2013-14 season.  Dumoulin is a big time player, who has played in big time competition and won.  He is also a very big player.

Derrick Pouliot is a 5'11" and 185 pound offensive defenseman who played for the Portland Winterhawks this past season, and was the 8th pick of this year's draft.  NHL Central Scouting had him ranked as the 12th best North American skater, as did Red Line Report.  The Hockey News had him as the 13th best prospect in this draft.  Pouliot who played on Portland with Penguins prospect Scott Harrington, was a big part of the offensive point production on the blue line for Portland who went to the Finals.  NHL scouts say that "he is an effective puck handler who can carry the puck up the ice."  Further they say that "he is an 18 year old who has a crisp pass and a deceptively powerful shot from the point."  He is also known as a great skater who draws the opponent to him, and is projected to be a top four defenseman with lots of power play potential in this league.  His game is compared to Brian Campbell of the NHL.
In short, if you factor in the fact that Staal's decision to turn down 60M made it obvious Pittsburgh was going to lose him one way or ther other,  with the quality of player Sutter is, the extra cap space, and the value of Domoulin and Pouliot as part of a young defensive corps in a couple of years, or as key pieces in additional trades, Shero made lemonade out of the lemons dealt to him this past June.  Hey, I already noted that I  was and remain a big fan of Staal and his game.  I also generally subscribe to the adage that the team who gets the best player in the trade wins the trade.  The more I chew on this trade, the better I feel about it.  Staal IS better than Sutter overall as a player, BUT Sutter may be better defensively (which the Pens needed most), and he saves a lot of cap space that can be put toward replacing that missing offense or adding more defense.   In addition, Sutter played with Nodl and Dwyer last season, so the combination of third pairings he will see and the upgrade in wingers assuming it is Kennedy and Cooke, you can feel good about Sutter's chances to break 20 goals.  If that is the third line next year, you will pay the ENTIRE LINE what Staal TURNED DOWN to be a Penguins.  Also, you have to factor in the meaning of Pouliot and Dumoulin to this team.  The Penguins now have SEVEN former first or second round picks in their stockpile of young defensemen!   I think their presence opens up options for Shero to move some of that DEEP stockpile of young defensemen to bring back another key asset for Pittsburgh i.e. Goligoski for Neal/Niskanen and Whitney for Kunitz/Tangradi.  I will miss Jordan Staal, but I think Sutter and the other people who join the Pens due to cap space and asset trading will make me feel a lot better before all of the dust settles!

Monday, June 25, 2012

Ray Shero interview

http://www.1059thex.com/player/?mid=22211055

Brandon Sutter interview

http://www.1059thex.com/player/?mid=22211055

Slow your roll on Parise/Suter?

I have been out of town since Thursday and officially on vacation as of yesterday, but like all Penguins fans, I have been on the edge of my seat dissecting all of the reasons why Zach Parise would want to be a Penguin, and why he MIGHT take less than full market value to do so.  I have done much of the same relative to Gary Suter, and have even gone nuts thinking of having them BOTH land here.  After way too much refection for a guy who is in the Outer Banks, I think I have modified my opinion and wish list.  First, lets look at Parise. He is an unreal talent, one of my favorite non-Penguins in the NHL.  He missed most of last season, but this season he scored 31 goals and 69 points, while putting up 38 goals/82 points and 45 goals/94 points two and three years ago.  Dynamic offensive output, and he would give the Pens two top lines of Crosby, Parise, and Dupuis, along with Malkin, Neal, and Kunitz, pretty much a nightmare matchup issue for any opposing head coach!  Add to that, Parise as UFA comes to Pittsburgh if they get him, without the Penguins giving up assets!  Wow!  And hey, he goes to a team where he can win the Cup, and he is a winger for friend and all world center Sidney Crosby!  He plays for player friendly and offensive minded coach Dan Bylsma too!  Sounds great, right?  On the other hand, Parise is from Minnesota, and his home town team is 20M under the cap, and has their sights set squarely on Parise.  What if they offer him 9-10M for a long term deal?  The Red Wings are also about 20M under the cap, and have Parise in their sights, among other teams. The Penguins to me cannot afford to go more than 7M per year, and need to keep the term to 5 years or under in my opinion with Letang due for a raise, along with Malkin in two years.   I truly get the excitement and temptation to go after the 5'11" 195 lb. scoring dynamo, but I worry about the likley cost of doing so, as well as the competition to do so.



 To me, I am intrigued by the need for Anaheim to move Bobby Ryan, and wonder if that is not the better long term move for Pittsburgh.  First, Ryan is a big player at 6'2" and 210 lbs, and that would keep in line with the desire for Pittsburgh to be bigger and tougher up front.  And folks, Ryan is no scoring slouch, scoring 31, 35, 34, and 31 goals respectively in the four years he has played a full season in Anaheim.  Ryan has notched 30+ goals every full season in the NHL, so he truly is a sniper of the highest order.  Better still is the fact that Ryan is signed for 3 more years at a reasonable, James Nealesque 5.1M per year.  That would leave 2M per year over what I think the Parise cost would be, minimum.  The question is what would it take to get him?  As I look at the Ducks' roster, they are short on defensemen, having only five players signed at the NHL level on the blueline, and three of them only have a single season left to boot.  The players are Francois Beauchemin, Toni Lydman, Luca Sbisa, Cam Fowler, and Nate Guenin.  It would seem that they need some defensemen, and guess what?  The Penguins are looking to move a defenseman who was one of the most sought after UFA defensemen two years ago in Paul Martin.  They also seem willing to move impact defenseman Simon Despres who would seem to be NHL ready, playing solid minutes in Pittsburgh last season, and he should be a top four pairing  player in the next year or two.  He is signed to an entry level contract at 840K per year for the next two seasons, and then is only RFA.  I would hate to lose Despres, but he may be the odd man out given the glut of depth on defense for Pittsburgh, and the use it or lose it status of Bortuzzo and Strait, along with the impact of Morrow, who almost made the big club last season.  Add Harrington, Sneep, Samuelsson, and the three blue chip prospects added Friday, and the Pens can afford to move the assets required to get Ryan.  This move at this point is basically break even for Pittsburgh (Martin/Despres for Ryan), leaving the remaining cap space available to address the blue line.  If you need to add another asset to the mix, perhaps they look at the 2M in Tyler Kennedy to add to the mix, giving them 8M to play with to improve the team.


Now, onto Gary Suter.   He surely is a super star defenseman, who has had 30 plus assists in each of his past four seasons in Nashville, and has been near the top of the charts in hits, blocked shots and plus minus ratings.  He is a guy you would LOVE to have on your team also.  Again, my concern is two fold.  First, he will be the most sought after defenseman in free agency, he has openly stated his desire to stay in the Western Conference, and he is the top target of the Red Wings who are short two of their top four defensemen in Niklas Lidstrom and Brad Stuart.  With 20M in cap space, I cannot imagine the Wings not landing Suter given all of the above.  To me, for Pittsburgh to pry him away from the top Western Conference teams will take big money, and long term, which would seem unnecessary given the depth on defense for the Penguins.  I know that the window for Pittsburgh is now, but there are reasonable defensemen available through free agency who may be able to fill the needs of the Penguins for far less.  One notable UFA is Bryan Allen, who at 6'5" and 226 lbs is the big physical blue line presence the Penguins are lacking, and he adds blocked shots, takeaways, and strong zone coverage to the mix as well.  Two ex-Penguins who won a Cup here are also available as well in big Hal Gill and steady Mark Eaton.  Both players were in the mid 2 million range, and could be solid players for Pittsburgh along with Allen if they want to keep some veteran presence at a reasonable price to a blue line that could compete for the Cup. I am not claiming that these players are the same talent as Suter, but merely that the necessary improvments to the blue line could come without creating such stress on the rest of the financial needs of the team.


In addition to the rumored discussions with Phoenix about Keith Yandle, signed for four years at 5.25M, Shero is talking to both Tampa and Nashville about possible trades involving Martin.  Tampa has only four NHL defensemen signed, one of which is Marc Bergevin, who is old and tiny, so Martin  may make sense here.  An asset that they have that could be of interest to Pittsburgh is RW Teddy Purcell at 6'2" and 201 lbs.  He is signed for 2.362M for another year and had 24 goals and 65 points last season.  Intriguing to me, as Purcell is a solid upgrade to our top six, with a good price, and would not require the movment of Despres.  It would also be a savings of about 2.6M in cap space should it happen.  I am not a fan of taking on the Malone contract in return for Martin.  My point is that with both Suter and Parise there is a large amount of money and term necessary to get either or both players, and there are trade options available to save the team money over the long run.  I am not saying I would NOT like to see either or both players here, but I think they are longer shots, especially Suter, than we may think.  I also think that there are other options like Ryan that merit consideration.  We have an interesting week or two ahead of us!


Saturday, June 23, 2012

Penguins off season to date

Looking at the Penguins' offseason moves, it is pretty obvious that they were not too happy about the early exit from the playoffs this year.  It has been pretty busy thus far, with the moves of Friday opening up 6M in cap space for Pittsburgh.  First, off of Staal's lack of interest in signing a 60M, 10 year extension with Pittsburgh, Shero dealt him quickly to Carolina bringing in Brandon Sutter, the 8th overall pick in the draft with turned into Derrick Pouliot, and solid defensive prospect Brian Dumoulin.  Later in the evening, Shero sent Michalek back to Phoenix in return for Harrison Ruopp, a big physical defensive prospect, borderline goaltending prospect Cheverie, and a third round pick i the draft that was converted into center prospect Oscar Sundqvist.  These day one moves put the Penguins 6M under the cap, added to a ridiculously deep group of defensive prospects, opened up room for Niskanen, and some combination of Strait, Bortuzzo, and Despres, while making one of them very moveable in their efforts to go after a big name like a Bobby Ryan of Anaheim.  They also have the cap space to be in on Zach Parise or Gary Suter on July 1st, two impact moves.  If they can move Paul Martin, they may have the money to go after both. Let's not forget that Shero had already made an impact move in bringing in Tomas Vokoun to give Pittsburgh one of the best goaltending tandems in hockey.  An interesting development for me is to think that one of my two favorite Pens prospects, Simon Despres might be in play for trade purposes.  First, the Penguins went VERY heavy again in terms of getting solid, large puck moving defensemen in the draft and in draft day trades, second Ray Shero hinted that there are/were possible trades he could have made already, and finally Dan Bylsma made an interesting comment today.  He was giddy in noting that Scott Harrington, Joe Morrow, Derrick Pouliott, and Olli Maatta could be the core of the best defense corps in the near future.  Putting the Shero and Bylsma comments together, it sounds as if Despres is being asked about (he is a great young Dman), and could be part of a big deal(Bobby Ryan from defense starved Anaheim).  Bylsma may have spoken off the cuff, but Despres has been slated as making the team, and having top four potential, so his ommission in the comment of the young core MAY have been an accidental hint.  Or a telling sign that he is the desired bait to complete another big time tranasaction given the NHL ready nature of Bortuzzo and Strait, whom they either use on the big club or lose on waivers.  Time will tell, but one thing is for sure, and that is that the Penguins have made big changes, and seem poised to add more top notch talent to this club. 



SUMMARY:

IN  via trade-Brandon Sutter C, Tomas Vokoun G, Brian Doumalin D, Harrison Ruopp D, Derrick Pouliott (8th pick), Oskar Sundqvist (81st pick), Marc Cheverie G

OUT-7th round pick, Jordan Staal C, Zybnek Michalek D



The new Penguins Draftees:

As discussed in yesterday's post the Penguins added lots of defensive depth in the trade with Brian Dumoulin, and then with the 8th pick Derrick Pouliot, and the 22nd pick they got Olli Maatta. Finally as part of the Michlek trade they brought in tough defenseman Ruopp from Phoenix.  There is no need to reiterate their abilities in this post.  Today the Penguins added the following players:

Second Round-Teddy Blueger 52nd overall, Center, 6-0 171 lbs from Shattuck St. Mary's.  In 51 regulars season games he had 24G and 64A to lead the team with 88 points.  He led to team to its second straight U-18 US Title. Scouts say that Blueger possesses very high offensive upside and sees the ice extremely well;

Third Round-Oskar Sundqvist-81st overall, Center, 6-3 172 lbs from Skellefta SWE-JR.  He had 61 points (26G and 35A) in 43 games with 132 PIMs. Scouts say he plays a lot like Peter Forsberg, is big and rangy, skates hard with good hands and skills in tight;

Third Round-Matthew Murray-83rd overall, Goaltender, 6-4 160lbs from Sault Ste Marie (OHL).  He was ranked 18th among North American goaltenders, and scouts say he is a project, but he possesses tremendous size and athleticism;

Fourth Round-Mattia Marcantuoni-92nd overall, Forward, 6-0 195 lbs from Kitchener (OHL).  He had 9 G and 14 points in just 24 games before a concussion shortened his season.  He is a possible boom or bust pick who was ranked in the top 20 at one point by some scouts prior to his concussion.  He has speed to burn and a high intensity level with a motor that is always running;

Fourth Round-Sean Maguire-113th overall, Goaltender, 6-2, 180 lbs.  He will attend Boston University next year, and made the BCHL 2nd team allstars last year.  Scouts say he is not as big or athletic as Murray but has great upside and four years at BU to develop;

Fifth Round-Clark Seymour-143rd overall, Defense, 6-4 205 lbs from Peterborough (OHL).  Seymour is a defensive minded defenseman.  Scouts say that he is a very good skater who plays a hard physical game.  They call him a "denter.";

Sixth Round-Anton Zlobin-173rd overall, Right Wing, 5-11 195 lbs from Shawnigan (QMJHL).  Zlobin had 40 G and 76 points in 66 regular season games, he also had 5G and 4A during the 2012 Memorial Cup Run for Shawnigan, including the championship clinching OT goal.  Scouts call him a short stocky player with good speed and skills in tight.  He has top 6 potential. 

While the Penguins lost Staal and Michalek this offseason, they have added Vokoun, a potential starter to back up Fleury, and Sutter, a very solid third line center.  In addition, through the trades and draft, the Penguins added 5 more defensive prospects, 3 wingers, 2 centers and 2 goaltenders, while opening up 6M more in cap space to use for impact plays.  They possess almost scary depth at defense with Orpik, Letang, Niskanen(likely), Martin, Engelland, Lovejoy all on the big club, with Bortuzzo and Strait NHL ready, along with Despres and Morrow who almost made the team last year.  Behind them, they have Sneep and Samuelsson in the system.  In the past two days they added high end prospects Domoulin, Pouliot, and Maata to the mix, and defensive grinders like Ruopp and Seymour.  Some of this depth will be used to fill the other holes in the coming weeks.  Look for Shero, who claims he had/has offers on the table to activley seek impact moves in the next two to four weeks. 

Great Read from Detroit relative to Parise and Suter destination


It’s Down To Two

If Zach Parise and Ryan Suter landed in Minnesota, we’d be highly pissed. Because it’s the Wild and we fear them as legitimate contenders for Detroit’s Cup? No. They won’t and wouldn’t win it with or without Parise and/or Suter. We’d be upset because the two most sought-after free agents in history will have landed anywhere but the (Hockey) town where they belong.

It cannot be overstated just how badly the Wings need at least one of these players, and most likely both. Missing out on one, should they leave their current cities, would be hard to handle.
Failing to bring in either would be crushing. Like losing a Cup in Game 7 type of pain. It would be like losing a Cup to the team that Gary Bettman coronated, led by a petulant, diving, yam sacking, “captain” and fabricated “icon”, then watching that same Bettman fantasy-child lift our Cup on our ice.
With me? I’m getting to a point here.
There are two teams with dynasties at stake right now. One real, breathing dynasty. Another one that is two signatures away from reality. Parise and Suter are gonna sign somewhere together (I believe that) and it’s going to come down to one of two places, because those two franchises offer so much more than any others in Gary’s soon-to-be-locked-out-again league.
San Jose’s not going after both of our guys. They have 11 million in Cap space, only 15 guys signed and a history of losing horrifically, probably because they’re “led” by a big, soft, Jumbo pile of red-haired shit.
Chicago has all of 8 million left (that’s about 1 million less than it’s going to take to sign Parise) and I believe their management doesn’t have the smarts or the sway to get both.
LA: oh, I know. I know. They want to “stay competitive”. They’ve “had a taste” and once you’ve been there, boy, you want more and more. Got it. Wanting ain’t getting. Not when you have less than 12 to spend and little to offer in terms of firepower to surround Parise with, although Kopitar is something, I’ll grant you that. And, despite the skepticism with which I view these “Suter is a small-town boy” reports coming from Josh Cooper’s generator-powered basement, LA doesn’t seem like his kind of town.
Colorado literally believes they have a shot at both. Bitch, please. Yeah, they’ve got plenty of Cap room. At 40 million, they’ve got an entire team to buy if they want to. Fortunately, Parise, Suter and their agents should be smart enough to see that despite all that room and money there is no core in place. All their arrival there would mean is a potential playoff berth. No. These guys are going to land in a city that immediately becomes The Favorite the minute they sign. Denver is not that city. Denver’s a lot of things, a pisspot wannabe hockey city with six “fans”, a beat writer who moonlights for Cosmo, male bloggers who hyphenate their last names, but it’s not the town that is two superstars away from the Cup.
St. Louis, quiet to this point but loaded with all that cash stashed away from Pall Mall sales at the middle schools, is a player. I do believe that. Plenty of money and a dangerous, internal belief that they are close. They actually think they’re a player away from Glory. I happen to believe they’re a goaltender, about three scorers and a coach who isn’t going to alienate his players within the first three months of the season away. But, they don’t see it that way and they’re going to make a pitch for both. If they haven’t already.
But they won’t get ‘em. They’re close but they can’t offer what the Wings and another team can: the certainty that their signing will lead to multiple Cup Finals appearances, if not Cups themselves.
It’s down to Detroit and Pittsburgh and that should be enough to make you just lose it, physically. I’m talking all bodily functions. And it’s not because you hate Pittsburgh. It’s because if Parise and Suter sign there, it’s done. Sealed. Schedule the parade and start the photoshops of Bettman and Rosby, faces smeared with Yoohoo, giving each other eskimo kisses, while Hall and Oates’ timeless classic “Maneater” blares in the background of a Cup celebration.
And like the kids would say? It’s getting real, now.
Yahoo
But Staal’s now-former Penguins teammates could celebrate there, too, toasting their buddy and their GM. Shero should have had little leverage in trade talks. The news had broken that Staal, a year away from unrestricted free agency, had turned down the offer of a 10-year contract and would consider an extension only with Carolina. Still, Shero finagled center Brandon Sutter, a good, young, two-way, third-line center who can fill Staal’s role, plus the No. 8 overall pick and a prospect.
Then he wasn’t done. He traded defenseman Zbynek Michalek to the Phoenix Coyotes for a third-round pick and two prospects. Staal was going to average about $6 million for the next decade, while Sutter has a cap hit of $2 million for two more seasons. Michalek has a cap hit of $4 million for three more seasons. Shero freed up a lot of money, which means he can make more trades or go after the biggest fish in free agency July 1 – winger Zach Parise or defenseman Ryan Suter.
Asked if he could add yet another impact player, Shero said: “Yeah, possibly. Possibly. We’ll look to do that.”
“Possibly”, my ass.
You read about Parise wanting to play with Datsyuk? That’s nice. You think he wouldn’t want to skate with shitbag Rosby and Malkin, too? As much as we hate them both, they’re dynamic, amazing players. And they’re younger than our guys. LA’s not the place for Suter, neither is New York? Ok. Try Pittsburgh on for size, Ryan. Rust belt, and all that. Blue collar. Just like Detroit. Talent already in place? Proven winners? Style of play? Money to spend? Detroit and Pittsburgh.
I’m telling you now, it’s down to us and them. You think ‘08 and ‘09 was stressful? We haven’t seen jack squat. Whatever happens over the next ten days or so is literally more important than either series three and four years ago. Whoever wins this particular battle for these two players will determine at least two Cups over the next five years.
Shero made it known last night. He’s clearing space and the shady little bastard has his eyes set on our guys.
Kenny, they’re doing it again. The Pens. Just when you thought we’d gotten rid of them, they’re back.
It’s only your legacy at stake, Kenny. And our future. Tick Tock. Spare no expense. I’m serious. Capgeek, and god I love that site, says we have 24 million to spend. Khan(!) keeps saying it’s less than that and I have no idea why. Either way, spend it all, sugarfoot. Every. Last. Dime.
I’ve said it for years. There are two “elite” organ-I-zations in this league. One of them is going to get a whole lot better in the next couple weeks. Two best teams, two best players, two best coaches and now we’ll see who has the Best GM.
Well, Kenny?

Thanks for some great memories #11

29 goals in year one, when we was not supposed to be in the league with 7 shorthanded goals
 I remember this one pretty damn well too
Some recent post season magic
Seven shorties as a rookie
Short handed against Montreal in 2009-10 playoffs
First goal of game six Stanley Cup Finals
Turned the series around for us!
Post cup interview
Jordan Staal, good luck in Carolina.  Thanks for some great memories along the way.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Ray is not taking 3 early exits well. bye bye Z

In the moments after day one of the draft, Ray Shero made another big move by trading defenseman Zybnek Micalek to Phoenix for a third round pick, third round pick in last year's draft Harrison Ruopp, a big physical defensman, and 2006 7th round pick Marc Cheverie. In short, Shero cleared 4M more in cap space to make the Penguins bigger players on July 1st.  He is also giving a vote of confidence to the young stable of defensemen the Penguins possess.  I look for other moves based on his comments to me on Wednesday, and the action seen thus far. A top six winger, a top defenseman and or some tougher bottom 6 forwards remain on the radar of Shero. Oh, and apparently Ruopp likes to fight!

Big Day for Penguins-expect more moves



Well, yesterday was an odd day for the Pittsburgh Penguins.  Jordan Staal was one of my favorite
Penguins.  I loved his game, his size, his clutch play, and I think he is only going to get better.  The kid came in as the second overall pick in the draft, and forced the Penguins to keep him in his first year.  Since then, the 6'4" 220 lb Staal has been a prominnet figure in the Penguins great reversal of fortune since his first year.  He is the first pick ever made by Ray Shero, and the lanky kid from Thunder Bay put up 120 goals and 248 points, and played to a plus 53 in the regular season in those six years.  He added 23 goals and 36 points in the playoffs in that time frame, including the series turning short handed goal in Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Finals in 2009.  Yesterday, Staal made his movement from Pittsburgh inevitable by turning down a 6 year 60 million dollar deal with Pittsburgh.  Given the fact that it was pretty obvious Staal was likely to leave Pittsburgh, give Shero credit for maximizing the return on Staal.  Coming back to Pittsburgh was Brandon Sutter who was picked 11th overall in the 2007 draft, and has played three seasons already at 22 years old, and has netted on 17, 14, and 19 goals on some bad mediocre Carolina teams.  He is a very good third line center, who is a great penalty killer, a threat short handed, and a guy who can score some too.  In addition, the Penguins got defensive prospect Brian Doumalin in the deal. Doumalin, who is a 6'3" left shooting defenseman was picked in the second round of the 2009 draft, 51st overall.  He won the NCAA championship and established himself as a top defenseman in the NCAA as a freshman.  He is a big, highly regarded prospect who is described as a playmaker with great vision, and a great skater who is repsonsible in his own end.  Could be a top 4 defenseman in the NHL, and should make the show in 2-3 years.   In addition, the Penguins got the 8th pick in the draft as part of moving Staal, and to me made a curious move there.  They drafted Derrick Pouliot a defenseman from Portland in the WHL.  He is a another highly regarded offensive defenseman who can skate, and has excellent offensive skills.  Pouliot was ranked 12th among North American skaters by NHL  Central Scouting, and the 5'11" 186 lb defenseman was 4th among NHL defensemen with 59 points last season.  I love how Shero stockpiles defensemen and turns them into wingers like Neal and Kunitz, but frankly I  was shocked that he did not take Filip Forsberg, a top five prospect at left wing given the glut of young defensemen and lack of quality forwards in the system.  I suspect that the addition of Pouliot and later, Olli Maata another young defenseman, means that Shero will be using current and future defensemen as trade bait to bolster other areas of the lineup.  He was talking a lot today to Phoenix about the rights to Ray Whitney, and Keith Yandle, as well as to Nashville and Ottawa.  Olli Maata, taken 22nd from London of the OHL was projected as a top 12 pick, and starred for Finland in the World Junior Championships.  He has good size and is projected as a top end NHL defensman, and power play quarterback.  The 6'2" 202 lb Maata was ranked 8th among North American skaters by NHL Central scouting, and he led all OHL rookie defensemen with 32 regular season points after being taken first overall in the CHL draft.  Maata's play propelled the OHL's London Knights to the OHL championship, and the runner up in the Memorial Cup this past May.  Maata was teammates with Penguins prospect Scott Harrington.  He tied for team lead with 23 points in 17 playoff games.






 In short, Shero turned Jordan Staal, who only has one year left on his current deal at 4M per year, and who turned down 60 million dollars to stay into Sutter, a strong 3rd line center picked 11th overall, the 8th pick in this draft(Pouliat), and Doumalin, picked in the 2nd round in 2009 (51st overall). The Penguins could have taken a shot this season with Staal to win another Cup with him in the lineup, and likely lose him as UFA for nothing or maximize a return and make a run without him. Sutter is not as good as Staal, but he is very good, has upside, and is a hair under 2M per year cheaper now, and about 4.5M cheaper next year.  Doumalin and Pouliat who were  part of the trade create an opportunity for Shero to move some young defensemen for other pieces of the puzzle on this  team.  I have heard that Shero intends to be a serious contender to pick up Zach Parise on July 1st as a UFA, or trade earlier for his rights.  Parise and Crosby are friends who played together at Shattuck St. Mary's.  He sure would like great parked right next to Crosby on the wing, no?   I could also see Pittsburgh making a move for Ryan Suter, or a trade for Bobby Ryan, or both.  Look for Martin to be gone in the next week, along with some other players or prospects in preparation for that run.

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

2012 - A Tribute To Evgeni Malkin Interviews

gotta love Geno

The PensNation Radio Show-Scott Harrington & Michael Houser 06/19 by thepensnation | Blog Talk Radio

The PensNation Radio Show-Scott Harrington & Michael Houser 06/19 by thepensnation | Blog Talk Radio

Rumored Staal trade examined more closely

First off, as of today, Ray Shero is still telling teams that inquire about Jordan Staal that the Penguins hope to resign him, and that further, he is not on the market for a trade.  He also states that Staal has not indicated a desire to be moved.  And I still hope that he is not moved.  I do wonder however, if Staal will want to remain the third line center, or a winger in the top six while playing in the shadows of Malkin and Crosby?  Or will he want to go somewhere to be one of the "Aces?"  If he is traded or moved up to the wing on the Malkin or Crosby line, the Penguins are badly in need of a third line center, and could revisit some targets they were after at the deadline.  If they trade Staal, the big one that is out there as a rumor from Rob Rossi is the Hurricanes offering Brandon Sutter, the 8th overall pick of the draft and either young defensive prospect Ryan Murphy or young defensive prospect Justin Faulk.  It is also rumored that the Canes who are way under the cap are willing to take on the contract of Paul Martin as part of this deal.  The deal is a bit intriguing, as I think the Penguins could get more still and move the Martin contract.  The intriguing part to me is the following:



Brandon Sutter is a young center who at 22 years old already has 3 NHL seasons under his belt and has scored 21, 14, and 17 goals on a bad hockey club. He has also been durable, missing 10 games his first season, and none in the following two.  He has decent size at 6'3" tall and 185 pounds, and is a prototypical third line center for Pittsburgh.  He is signed for two years at a hair over 2M per season, and then he is only an RFA.  Those terms offer Pittsburgh an effective and cost effective solution for their third line center position;



Justin Faulk is a very young US born defenseman who at the age of 20, has already completed a season in the NHL, and is currently listed on the top pairing of Carolina.  Faulk had 8 goals and 14 assists in 66 games, and played to a minus 16 in his first year.  He has good size at 6'0" and 205 lbs on a stocky frame, but is agile and skates well according to scouting reports. He possesses a big shot from the point, and as a college and US development team prospect graded out as top 4 NHL potential.  He was picked in the 2010 entry draft, in the second round at 37th overall. Pretty good pedigree and a year of NHL experience under his belt.  Further, Faulk is signed for two more years at 900K per year, and then is ONLY an RFA.  I like that he can skate in our system and adds size and physicality, as well as a good shot from the point;



Ryan Murphy is a young phenom coming from the Kitchener Rangers who was picked 12th overall in the 2011 draft.  He is a little smaller than Faulk at 5'11" and only 176 lbs, but Don Cherry felt he was good enough to be picked first overall last year. His Kitchener coach, Steve Spott said, "He's like no one else in the league. You can't get to him, you can't hit him.  He's a kid that's slippery, his vision is second to none, his hockey sense is second to none.  He can skate and he's got a rocket."  He is an offensive dynmao logging 79 points in 63 games with Kitchener before getting drafted.  He had 26G and 35 A.  This kid is higher risk and higher reward than Faulk, but to me Faulk is more what the Penguins need. He is also a bit more costly than Faulk at 1.344M per year for three more years before becoming RFA.  He is only 19 years old;



The Hurricanes are also adding the 8th overall pick in the draft to the deal according to rumors.  This is a pick that is high enough to add an impact player for Pittsburgh, or can be used as trade bait to get a current player that fits their needs.  The Penguins already own the 22nd pick in the draft.



Here is what is intriguing to me, a guy who really covets Staal, by the way.  Staal remains the best player in this deal, and that hurts, BUT here are some interesting tidbits. If you take Faulk, Sutter, and the 8th pick, I think you can still get more in return, especially adding Martin as rumored. As it stands, if the Canes take Staal and Martin, the Penguins move 9M in current cap value, and more like 11M or more in cap value after next year, and if they go with Faulk who fits better  than Murphy they only bring back just under 3M in salary.   Those salaries are locked in for 2 more seasons, then both players are only RFA.  This gives them 6M in extra cap space to add other parts to their team, and more assets to move.  Shero said he is likely to move 2 defensemen or defensive prospects due to a glut of talent and waiver issues.  The addition of Faulk makes another defenseman available and gives the Pens 6M in cap space to add wingers or go after Parise, or Suter?  What if the Oilers covet Faulk or Murphy?  Would one of them, the 8th pick and 22nd pick be enough for the Pens to get the rights to Yakupov?  Or the 8th, 22nd, and one of our good defensive prospects?   How good would Yakupov look with Malkin?  The thought of getting a quality 3rd line center, and the assets and cap space to make serious improvements to other parts of the roster including the blue line is intriguing to me IF we have to lose a player like Staal.  On top of that, I think the Pens could get a bit more to make the deal, if they were interested. Interesting SPECULATION.  I hope more details on the supposed pieces has some value to you.

Monday, June 18, 2012

The PensNation Radio Show - Live with Joe Morrow (10 PM) 06/18 by thepensnation | Blog Talk Radio

The PensNation Radio Show - Live with Joe Morrow (10 PM) 06/18 by thepensnation | Blog Talk Radio

Let's try this one....on near the end...last 12 minutes or so

Yo, STFU and give Shero his due!

Okay, I admit that I am a Ray Shero lover.  First, the Penguins went to the Finals and won the Stanley Cup on Shero's watch.  He had the guts to cut a Head Coach who went the the Stanley Cup Finals the year before, and replaced one Michel Therrien with a Head Coach (Dan Bylsma) who only had half a season of head coaching experience IN THE AHL before becoming bench boss of Pittsburgh in mid February 2009.  All he has done since that day is win the Stanley Cup in 2009, and the Jack Adams as the league's best head coach in the 2010-2011 season.  Since then, the naysayers have tried to creep in.  It started with saying that the Stanley Cup winning team was really loaded with Craig Patrick's players such as Crosby, Malkin, Orpik, Fleury at the core.  Then, people began to hammer at the choice of Jordan Staal, who was Shero's first pick in 2006, and second overall.  Critics stated that the Penguins could have had players who score more than Staal who were chosen later, such as Jonathan Toews who was taken third, Nicklas Backstrom taken 4th, or Phil Kessel taken 5th.  Others will even bring up Claude Giroux, who was taken 22nd by the Flyers in criticizing the pick of Staal.  First, folks, as Seth Rohrabaugh pointed out in his column today, Shero was late to the party in 2006, and had to rely on the scouting done by Craig Patrick's group before using his own scouts after the draft.  Second, though the three guys taken right after Staal have scored more goals and points, Staal was a better FIT for Pittsburgh, adding that complementary third line center who played the PK, scored BIG goals(see SCF 2009), and fit a ROLE to the tee.  The only player I might rather have of those three picked after Staal is Toews, but I doubt he would have stayed like Staal has to this point.  As far as Giroux, there are 21 GM's who might want to rethink that first round in 2006.   Staal scored 29 goals as a rookie in 2006-07, played a key role in the Stanley Cup run in 2009, scoring a short handed goal in Game 4 that may have turned the momentum in Pittsburgh's favor, and played a key role for the last year and a half in the extended absences of Malkin and Crosby.  Staal was the best player for Pittsburgh this year in their early playoff exit, and will either stay here or net a huge return ala the early offer of Carolina who is willing to give up Sutter, Faulk, and the 5th overall pick now for Staal and the big salary of Paul Martin.  Sorry, folks, Staal who will only get better is NOT A SHERO miss, and he will be a key part of at least one or two more Stanley Cup teams, here, elsehwere or both.
There was a statistic thrown out there that of the 35 players drafted under Shero, only Staal has played a regular role in the NHL, leaving 34 others falling short.  The article was written by a favorite writer of mine, Post Gazette beat writer Dave Molinari.  If you read the article closely, Molinari does talk about the depth on defense currently, and I don't think meant to set a negative tone tied to Shero, but yinzer nation is hanging on the first statistic talking of 34 out of 35 Shero draft picks not playing a significant role in the NHL.  In fact, Dustin Jeffrey has the second most man games of the crew, with a "whopping" and undistinguished 66 man games played.  Another noted and respected Penguins writer, Seth Rohrabaugh today wrote about the Penguins having the 6th least man games played by players drafted since 2006.  Rohrabaugh did a great job of putting this in perspective by also noting that the top two and bottom two teams in terms of man games played put this stat in question to begin with.  The teams with the most man games played are the New York Islanders with 1510 man games played by their draft choices in that time frame, and the Columbus Blue Jackets have the second most man games played with 1348.  Conversely, the teams with the least man games played from these drafts are the Vancouver Canucks with 104 man games played from these drafts and the Detroit Red Wings with 165 man games played during that stretch by players drafted from 2006 on.  Vancouver has won back to back President's Cups and went to the Finals last season before losing to Boston, while the Wings won the 2007-08 Stanley Cup, and contend each year for the holy grail.  Rohrabaugh also mentions the use of draft picks for key trades, and the fact that good players like Simon Despres may have logged more man games for a lesser team.  Kudos to Rohrabaugh on both fronts as it correctly makes man games played by draft picks one of MANY ways to analyze the job done by a GM.  You can get hung up on the one player of 35 getting significant NHL time from Shero's drafts OR you can look at how Shero has used all of his assets, including trading draft choices for specific team components to challenge for the Cup.  I will take playoff runs and Stanley Cup rings thank you.
First, lets look at how Shero has used draft picks and an overloaded blue line to build a perennial contender.  And I will start this by stating that in the seasons since Shero took over from 2006-07 through the current year 2011-12 there have been 6 seasons played.  The Penguins have been to 2 Finals in that stretch and won the Stanley Cup in another.  They went to the Finals in Shero's second year, and won the Cup in his third.  They also have endured two seasons full of key injuries that may have killed a lesser team, and have finished near the top of the regular season standings in spite of the adversity in front of them.  In one season, HIS coach, did such a great job he won the Jack Adams award as the best coach in hockey.  Yes, I am saddened and almost sick about the three post season runs since the Cup win, but really this season is the only one without some sort of excuse.  In 2009-10, it was the third year in a row they had played more hockey than anyone else, and maybe they ran out of gas.  Last year, they entered the playoffs without their two top guns, and 2 of the top 5 players in the world and one of their two key penalty killers in Matt Cooke.  They still took a team that went to the Conference Finals to 7 games before losing by one goal.  I have none and will offer no excuses for what happened this year, but the Penguins were odds on favorites to win the Cup and have already been named the favorites by Vegas to win it next year at 7 to 1.  So in six years he took a team to their first playoffs in years in year one, their first finals since 1991-92 in his second year, their first Stanley Cup in his third, a Jack Adams winning hand picked coach in his fifth, and the odds on favorite to win the Cup in his sixth, and again in his seventh.  How bad of a job is that?

Second, in general, Shero's family friendly, straight up style has made Pittsburgh a favored spot for great players as witnessed by Petr Sykora asking to come here to start free agency in the 2007-08 off season, and Shero's ability to keep the core of this championship team together with players like Crosby, Malkin, Staal, Orpik, Fleury, and Letang all signing post entry level contracts for less than market value to stay in Pittsburgh and try add more hardware to their resumes.  How did Shero help to build a championship caliber team for now and the forseeable future outside of the generalities described directly above?  The following are some key moves involving key parties to the team's success:  In the 2006-07 offseason Shero drafted Jordan Staal second overall, and added steady defenseman Mark Eaton to the mix, and quality agitator and sandpaper in Jarkko Ruutu.  In keeping with the theme of getting Pittsburgh tougher, and more difficult to play against, on February 27th, 2007 he sent AHL prospect Noah Welch to Florida to get the tough net front presence and leaderhip of Gary Roberts, a key element in the 2007-08 run to the Finals.  He also added premiere enforcer Georges Laraque when he sent assclown Daniel Carcillo and a late round draft pick to Phoenix.   The Penguins were now a really tough team to play against, and their stars could be protected and given room by the presence of Laraque.  In 2007, ahead of schedule the Penguins made the post season, only to be beaten in the 2007 playoffs in the first round by Ottawa.  The Penguins entered the 2007-08 season hoping to improve upon their showing from the year prior, especially the sting of their first round exit at the hands of Ottawa.   Shero then made some key moves involving draft picks that propelled Pittsburgh to elite status for the next several years.  On February 26th 2008, Shero traded the 2008 second round pick and the 2009 fifth round pick to bring in shut down defenseman Hal Gill, a key component in the both Stanley Cup runs.  He then made the move that to me propelled Pittsburgh from fringe contender to bonafide contender when on the same day he sent Colby Armstrong, Erik Christenson, 2007 first round pick Angelo Esposito, and their 2008 first round pick for Marian Hossa, a bonafide top flight winger, and Pascal Dupuis a versatile winger, who is still contributing to this hockey club.  Pittsburgh went on a roll, cut through the 2008 playoffs like a knife before losing in six games in the Finals to Detroit.  At the time, many thought we gave up too much for Hossa, especially when he did not re-sign in favor of Detroit in the 2008-09 offseason.  But, the move signalled to the team that the time was now and they were good enough to win it all.  They learned what it took to win it all that year, and I don't think they win in 2009 without the Hossa deal propelling them to the Finals in 2008.  Also, Armstrong and Christensen have never been much in the NHL since, and Esposito has never made the league at all. Today it was announced that Dallas is not even bringing Esposito back to their AHL club.  We will never know who Pittsburgh may have taken with their 2009 first round pick, but Dupuis has been the most valuable player in the NHL dollar for dollar the past two seasons, and Pittsburh was the clear cut winner of that deal. Shero shocked the hockey world with that one!
The 2008-09 season saw Shero have to scramble to replace Hossa, Roberts, Ruutu, and Laraque in the offseason, and he added Fedotenko, Cooke, and Satan to do so.  He also had to fire Therrien in February as the Penguins fell to 10th place after getting crushed by Toronto.  He chose an inexperienced Dan Bylsma in a move that many thought signalled an acknowledgement that Pittsburgh was giving up on the season and looking to the following year.  Instead, Shero traded highly regarded Ryan Whitney to Anaheim in return for Chris Kunitz and prospect Eric Tangradi.  He then claimed key penalty killer Craig Adams off of waivers in March, then completed his team at the deadline sending a conditional pick to New York for veteran leader Bill Guerin.  Shero had now given Crosby a gritty puck retrieving winger in return for a defenseman, and a leader and sniper in return for a draft pick.  The rest is history as Pittsburgh won the Stanley Cup with a group of players that Shero built around the core.  Fedotenko, Cooke, Kunitz, Gill, Eaton, Staal, and Guerin played key roles in the championship run..

Post cup win, Shero continues to do a wonderful job.  Noting the lack of scoring on the wings, and the overlfow of young defensemen, Shero sent Alex Goligoski to Dallas in the spring of 2011 in return for power forward James Neal, and young defenseman Matt Niskanen.  Shero was questioned when both struggled a bit to close out the 2010-2011 season.  Well, in the 2011-12 season, James Neal was a big part of the best line in hockey, netting 40 goals, and in his first full season with Pittsburgh, Niskanen was arguably one of the best and most consistent blue liners on the team.  So, in return for a young defensman whom we have plenty of, Shero got a premiere power forward and a top five defenseman.  Since then, Neal has been locked up long term to a good contract for Pittsburgh.  And oh, yeah about those draft picks.  Pittsburgh is poised to make some trade noise this offseason, as some of Shero's draft picks such as Despres, Morrow, Strait, Bortuzzo, Morrow, Sneep, Samuelsson, and Jeffrey are valuable assets that could be used to bring in more assets to reload this team for another Cup run.  In addition, there is a rumor that Carolina is willing to take on the bad Martin contract and Jordan Staal in return for solid young center Brendan Sutter, large young defenseman Justin Faulk and the eighth overall pick in the draft.  Sutter is a good third line center, Faulk would add a piece to the blueline or be a good trade bait, the early pick could give Pittsburgh an impact player in the draft and two round one picks AND 6.5 million additional dollars in cap space.  In short, Staal will either sign here and be a big part of our future OR he will bring a return that could help Shero reload this team for the future.  Yinzers, you could have a team run by Scott Howson or Garth Snow that is bad enough every year that draft picks play a lot of games, or you can have a GM like Shero who uses all of the team's ASSETS to build a team capable of going all the way every year!  Any way you slice it, all in all, IN SHERO WE TRUST!  Thanks for helping to make the Penguins an elite franchise Ray.