3 ISSUES THAT MUST
BE ADDRESSED
It isn’t out of the ordinary for the Pittsburgh Penguins,
but after a high-scoring overtime victory against the Washington Capitals and
an embarrassing 5-1 defeat to the Montreal Canadiens on home ice, they have a
laundry list of problems to solve after just two games. Last year, the Penguins
surrendered 15 goals in their first two games, so the 11 they’ve given up to
the Capitals and Canadiens is sadly an improvement.
KRIS LETANG
Over the past decade, the team has rarely won playing
defense first. The Penguins have been reliant on their superstars and have
never been a shutdown team in their own end. For them, a good defense has
always been a good offense. After two games, they are 1-1-0, so it’s a far cry
from hitting the panic button, but here are three issues that need to be
immediately addressed:
MATT MURRAY’S LACKLUSTER PLAY
As long as Marc-Andre Fleury is still in the league,
there will always be a goalie controversy in Pittsburgh. It’s hard to argue
that the Penguins made the wrong move when they decided to hold onto Matt
Murray and hand Fleury over to the Las Vegas Golden Knights in the expansion
draft, but when Murray allows 11 goals in the first two games of the season,
doubts will surface.
Murray’s save percentage is an abysmal .831 in the last
two games, and while there have been a handful of goals that were a result of
defensive breakdowns, there are also a few he should have saved.
After the loss to the Canadiens, Murray said that he felt
better and was trending in the right direction, which is good news for Penguins
fans, but there isn’t much leeway for him to allow five or six goals per game
before head coach Mike Sullivan calls for backup netminder Casey DeSmith.
Sullivan was insistent that everyone in the room needs to
be better, and considering every team starts from the net and works its way
out, Murray needs to be the first to improve if the Penguins want to make any
noise during the early part of the season.
OLLI MAATTA – JACK JOHNSON DEFENSIVE
PAIRING
Before the season started, I noted that the Penguins have
a defensive gem in Juuso Riikola. However, he has been a healthy scratch for
the first two games. In return, the second defensive pairing of Olli Maatta and
Jack Johnson has been terrible. The pairing has a combined minus-5 rating and
zero points. Johnson, who signed a five-year, $16.25 million contract back in
July has been a step slow on every shift and has yet to show much promise after
being awarded such a large deal.
On the other side, Maatta has never been known for his
foot speed and could be used as trade fodder come deadline time, so it’s a
little puzzling why Sullivan would pair him with Johnson, but it’s clear that
this pairing is a liability. Look for Sullivan to insert Riikola into the
lineup, or swap up some of the pairings to try and get more from these two.
PATRIC HORNQVIST SCORING STRUGGLES
If Patric Hornqvist retired tomorrow, he would still be
considered a Penguins legend after scoring the Stanley Cup-winning goal against
the Nashville Predators two seasons ago but through two games, Hornqvist has
seven shots on goal, which leads the team but he has yet to tickle the twine.
He is on one of the most dynamic lines in the NHL
alongside Sidney Crosby and Jake Guentzel, and while the Penguins have scored
eight goals through two games, no. 72 needs to find a way to bury the puck if
this team is going to be successful. He has had plenty of chances and is
putting himself in the right spots but he needs to bear down and find a way to
score. Once he gets that first one, the levees could open and he could be on
track for a career year.
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