The second half of
the 2018-19 NHL season is here, so let’s take a look at what is ahead for the
Pittsburgh Penguins.
Once the Penguins wrap
up this five-game western road trip on Saturday (a road trip that ... has not
gone great so far!) they will have eight days off as part of their NHL bye
week, as well as the NHL All-Star break.
They will not return to the ice until January 28 when they host the New Jersey
Devils to kick off what will be their stretch run for the
2018-19 season.
It’s going to be interesting because we’re really not sure
what the team is going to look like, while they are going to be in a fight for
playoff positioning. Perhaps even a playoff spot.
LET’S TAKE A LOOK AT A FEW THINGS TO WATCH FOR...
WHERE THEY STAND RIGHT NOW ... IN THE STANDINGS — The
Penguins are in a bizarre spot in the standings right now. Their two-game skid
out West, combined with Buffalo’s overtime win against Calgary on Wednesday
night, leaves the Penguins in the second wild card spot ... just two points
ahead of the first non-playoff team, the Buffalo
Sabres (the Penguins also have a game in hand). That’s not
exactly an ideal position to be in because, at least on paper, looks to leave
them in a vulnerable spot when it comes to simply making the playoffs. And if
they did make it as of these standings their first-round opponent would be ...
the Tampa Bay
Lightning. Nobody wants that in round one.
But they are also only three points out of first place in
the Metropolitan Division, and just a single point from being back in the
top-three.
When it comes to a playoff spot I’m not too worried about
it. They are going to be there. Only having a two point cushion at a little
more than the halfway point is kind of jarring to look at when you’re a team
that is used to competing for the Stanley Cup, but there
is really only one team on the outside of the playoff picture (Buffalo) that is
a threat to any of the teams currently in the playoffs. And if
there is a team in a playoff spot that is more vulnerable I would put my money
on the New York
Islanders or Montreal
Canadiens.
When it comes to playing for seeding, I’m of the belief that
it does not particularly matter what seed the Penguins are ... as long as they
end up in the Metropolitan Division bracket. I like them as a matchup against
any of Washington, Columbus, or even the Islanders should it get to that point.
Not saying they will win any or all of those matchups, but they
absolutely can win any or all of them no matter where they
might have to a play a potential Game 7.
The problem with their current position, as it stands on
publication of this post on Jan. 17, is that they would end up in the Atlantic
Division bracket against the Lightning.
Now, if the Penguins are going to emerge from the Eastern
Conference they are probably going to have to beat one of Tampa Bay or Toronto
to get there. But you would probably much rather have to face just one of
challenges in the Conference Final instead of what would most likely be each of
the first two rounds.
WHAT THE SCHEDULE LOOKS LIKE — This past week
Travis Yost at TSN looked at each
team’s remaining strength of schedule and the Penguins’
schedule looks ... kind of brutal, at least based on each team’s “expected
goals” number. What will also make it impactful is they have a lot of “four
point games” coming ahead of them.
Remember how I said Buffalo is the only team outside of the
playoff picture that is a threat to them? They play two of their three games
against Buffalo in the second half. Both in March. Both in Buffalo.
Carolina is the team right behind Buffalo in the standings,
but they are seven points back of the playoffs. That is a huge gap at this
point in the season. What might close that gap is Carolina winning a few
head-to-head matchups in regulation. They have three such matchups with
the Hurricanes in
the second half.
Head to head matchups are the best ways to gain ground in
the standings.
The problem with the Penguins’ second half schedule is they
only have four head-to-head games remaining with teams they are chasing (three
against Columbus, one against Washington).
They also have one game against Montreal (the team ahead of
them in the first wild card spot, which would put them back in the Metropolitan
Division bracket).
Take care of those head to head games, and everything else
takes care of itself.
They do only have five sets of back-to-backs remaining,
which is good and the majority of their games are at home. Also good.
WHO WILL BE ON THE TEAM? — It is nearly
impossible to predict where this team will finish in the standings, who it will
be playing in the playoffs, and what its potential path through the playoffs
will look like. Too many possible outcomes and possibilities. What is not
impossible to predict is that the roster they have on paper right now will not
be the roster they have on paper in March, April, and potentially May or June.
Jim Rutherford has at least one more trade cooking. He always does.
He has already traded Carl Hagelin, Daniel Sprong,
and Derek Grant and
you can bet that is not all he sees needing done to get the Penguins where they
want to be.
It seems to be a foregone conclusion that Derick
Brassard’s time in Pittsburgh is probably best measured in days,
not weeks or months, which would almost certainly mean another center is coming
back to Pittsburgh (especially with Grant’s
recent departure).
Will he ship out a defender once Justin
Schultz returns, or will he stick with the logjam of depth
under the assumption that somebody, at some point, will get injured. Having
eight interchangeable parts on defense was a big part of the 2016 and 2017 blue
lines that won Stanley Cups because even when somebody did get hurt there was
always a capable player ready to fill in. The 2017 defense may not have had a
No. 1 player with Kris Letang sidelined,
but it had seven or eight players that were all of NHL quality and were not out
of place when they had to play. There is something to be said for that.
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