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Return of the Penguins
By Bob Grove
In Craig Patrick’s version of Extreme Makeover, it took him
19 months to tear down the house. And 35 days to rebuild it.
The Penguins’ general manager began taking apart a team that
came within three victories of reaching the 2001 Stanley Cup Finals
in July of that year, sending Jaromir Jagr to the Washington Capitals.
Darius Kasparaitis was next, followed by Robert Lang and, in February
2003, Alexei Kovalev. When the dust settled, the Penguins were
on the ground floor, finishing 29th in 2003 and dead last in 2004.
Patrick’s plan was part fiscal survival and part gamble, because
his rebuilding blueprint also called for the achievement of a
collective bargaining agreement that brought meaningful change
to the NHL’s absurd economic landscape. When commissioner Gary
Bettman delivered that this summer, Patrick packed his lucky four-leaf
clover, won the Sidney Crosby sweepstakes and, with a financial
boost from ownership, retooled his roster in five weeks.
Four days after Crosby was drafted first overall, defenseman
Sergei Gonchar signed a five-year contract. Five days later, right
wing Ziggy Palffy joined him. It took two more days to trade for
goaltender Jocelyn Thibault, and John LeClair and Lyle Odelein
soon followed.
“I knew it was going to happen,” said right wing Mark Recchi,
whose free agent signing in July 2004 suddenly seemed almost surreptitious
given the late summer events of 2005. “I just didn’t know it was
going to happen this quick.”
This
month the new Penguins – new in almost every sense of the word
– begin the 2005-06 season trying to do nothing less than make
NHL history. Owner and captain Mario Lemieux spent the late summer
and preseason reminding everyone that “respectable” and “competitive”
would not be the buzzwords for this team.
“When I got traded here, I talked to Mario that day and he mentioned
to me that we were going to try and win the Cup this year,” recalled
Thibault. “That feels great that they went out and got players
they think they can win with. It’s awesome with all the signings
they made. It’s very exciting, and very motivating.
“That’s the best word to describe how I’m feeling – very motivated
to come to the rink in the morning and work hard, be part of a
winning team. It should be an interesting year.”
Oh yeah. No NHL team has ever won the Cup after finishing last
overall the previous season. In fact, only seven teams – three
in the modern era – have won the Cup after missing the playoffs,
including the 1991 Penguins.
There are several reasons Lemieux has set the bar so high. He
feels good one year after his most recent competition in the World
Cup of Hockey, and he’s anxious to join the celebrated Crosby
on the ice.
“I’m looking forward to playing with him, maybe teaching him
a few things,” Lemieux said. “Obviously, what he’s done on the
ice is impressive. He probably could have played (in the NHL)
last year if he was allowed.”
Moreover, Lemieux knows that the Pittsburgh roster is built
to take advantage of every nook and cranny of the rule changes
now in effect to emphasize skill and speed – and the new NHL standard
that outlaws all defensive use of the stick and all clutching
and grabbing.
“In my opinion, it seems like we’re going to have a lot of fun,”
says Gonchar, the former Capital and Bruin who has more goals
(74) and points (241) than any NHL defenseman over the last four
seasons. “We’re going to have a lot of high-scoring games, and
as a hockey player, it’s what you live for.”
In his nine years as a full-time NHL player with the New York
Islanders and Los Angeles Kings, Palffy has scored 308 goals,
more than all but five players. The speedy sniper who grew up
idolizing countryman Jagr may get the chance to fill Jagr’s old
spot on Lemieux’s wing. Interestingly enough, LeClair also has
scored 308 goals over the past nine seasons with the Flyers and
Canadiens and will benefit from a rules standard that no longer
permits defensemen to cross-check his surgically-repaired back.
It’s unclear just how opponents will try to move LeClair from
the front of the net on the Pittsburgh power play, which should
score bushels of goals.
At 35, Recchi finished 12th in the league in scoring. Factor
in the presence of defenseman Dick Tarnstrom, who led the Penguins
in scoring last season, and left wing/center Ryan Malone, who
finished fourth in rookie scoring in 2003-04, and it’s clear the
goals, alas, will take care of themselves.
What will ultimately decide the Penguins’ fate this season will
be their ability to prevent goals. Second-year coach Eddie Olczyk
knows it, too.
“You can ask Mario – we’re going to have to be better defensively
if we’re going to have success,” Olczyk says. “We really feel
if we can play that pressure game, play with the puck 180 feet
from our goal. . . that’s the best defense there is. We’re going
to give up chances like everybody else. But whatever success we
have is going to be based on how well we play defensively.
“What’s an important part of that is we need goaltending. We
need goaltenders to stop pucks. We have an opportunity to do some
good things, but at the end of the day it will be coming down
to how well we play in our own zone and the goaltending that we
get.”
That’s where Thibault comes in. At 30 he’s played 536 NHL games,
thus adding badly-needed experience to a depth chart that includes
2003 No. 1 overall pick Marc-Andre Fleury and Sebastien Caron.
But Thibault won’t happily subscribe to the theory that he just
needs to make the big save at the right time.
“Obviously, it’s a lot more fun to play with a team that scores
a lot of goals,” he said. “It takes a little pressure off, but
my job doesn’t change. If I give up four goals and we win, 6-4,
it’s great because it’s a win, but I hate giving up four goals.
If we score six, I’ll try to give up one or none. I won’t be happy
with four or five goals against a game.”
Odelein’s presence helps because he’s a badly-needed right-handed
shot and he joins Brooks Orpik and Josef Melichar in adding some
toughness to a defensive corps that’s longer on skill with Gonchar,
Tarnstrom, Ric Jackman and perhaps Ryan Whitney.
But clearly the forwards must help – even the skilled players
on the top two lines – given the fact the makeup of the checking
line looked like the team’s biggest preseason mystery. But even
the scorers should recognize that, especially with the red line
taken out of the two-line pass equation, the transition game that
comes from playing well without the puck will be perhaps more
of a weapon than ever before.
“What’s going to benefit us is we’re going to be a very fast
team,” said Recchi. “We’re going to be able to skate ourselves
into position. You can use your body to get in front of people
but you can’t use your stick, so it’s going to be a skating game.
“And myself, Mario, LeClair, Ziggy. . . you’re going to see
(defensive) commitment from us that is going to make younger players
follow. That’s where it all starts, with us, and we have to make
sure that responsibility follows from us. Because we all know
that’s what wins.” |