The Pittsburgh Penguins are at the bottom of
the standings for the first time since the 2005-06 season. Will they be able to
turn things around and replicate a feat they achieved in 2010-11?
There is no denying the Pittsburgh Penguins have struggled
mightily through their first 17 games of the 2018-19 season. With a record of
7-7-3, Pittsburgh is near the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings. They
also face a steep uphill battle to reclaim the power in the Metropolitan
Division, Eastern Conference, and NHL.
While it is hardly time blow the
roster up, more changes appear to be on the horizon. Based on comments from
general manager Jim Rutherford, the team may have an extremely different look by the conclusion of
the regular season.
Back in the 2010-11 season, the
Penguins faced a similar situation. A record of 8-8-0-1 stood after the first
17 games and many of the same questions were present. Questionable goaltending,
unbalanced scoring, and a team built for success were struggling to find
cohesion.
FORWARD THINKING
This season the Penguins have
scored 56 goals. The top line of Sidney Crosby(eight), Jake Guentzel (six) and Dominik Simon (four) have scored 22 goals,
or 32 percent of the team’s total goals. Meanwhile, Evgeni Malkin (seven) and Phil Kessel (nine) contributing
another 28 percent of the goal total. Together that accounts for 60 percent of
the Penguins’ total offence spread across the top two lines.
In 2010-11, the Penguins scored
six fewer goals (50) than the current season total with the top line of Crosby
(11), Chris Kunitz (five), and Pascal Dupuis (four) producing 40
percent of the team’s total offense through 17 games. The rest of the goal
output was dispersed fairly equally through the rest of the lineup with only
two players (Eric Godard and Chris Conner) failing to register a point.
In comparison, five players on the current Penguins roster have zero points.
The bottom line is the Penguins
will need some serious contributions from the bottom six forwards if they want
to drive up their win total.
BETWEEN THE PIPES
The goaltending situation in
2010-11 is eerily familiar to the scenario Pittsburgh faces today. In 2010-11,
their number one goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury struggled to find
his game and faced some stiff competition from Brent Johnson, who provided the strength
between the pipes for the Penguins. Johnson was 6-2-1 with a goals-against
average of 2.11.
Fleury would be able to
sympathize with Matt Murray‘s current predicament. In eight
starts, Fleury was 2-6, with a goals-against average of 3.23. He allowed 18 of
33 goals that were scored against the Penguins.
Murray’s current record stands at
4-5-1 with a goals-against average of 3.90. He has also allowed the bulk of the
goals scored against the Penguins with 36 of 52 opposition goals coming while
Murray has been in net. Casey DeSmith has reprised Johnson’s
role as the backup this season, earning a record of 3-3-2 and a goals-against
average of 2.25.
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