When Letang was asked the other day what kind of money he’d be looking for in his contract extension, he said, “there is no number.”

Posted by TPB Staff on .

If you haven't read part one of Mike Colligan's Kris Letang breakdown, you should. [ THW ]

Letang's future is really the main focus of the Penguins off season at this point. After what we saw Mark Streit get from the Flyers today, could Colligan's assertion that the Pens could pay Letang nine-million a year still be in play? Yikes.

UPDATE:

Here is Part 2.

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LINK CITY: How the Malkin deal got done, Haters guide to Bylsma

Posted by TPB Staff on .

( Biznasty tweeted that Thursday)

-- Great read from Rob Rossi on how the Pens and Malkin came to an agreement. [ trib ]

Last fall, upon returning to Pittsburgh from playing with his Russian hometown Metallurg Magnitogorsk during the NHL lockout, Malkin informed his agent, J.P. Barry, he wanted to sign a long-term deal with the Penguins. However, he did not want to negotiate until after the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Also interesting to see that Shero spoke to Crosby to make sure it was okay with him that Malkin will technically be the Penguins' highest-paid player.

-- PSAMP owns the Internet after this post. [ PSAMP ]

Late-January, 2014 - Pens slump heading into the Olympics. Tell your dog that you can't see Bylsma as head coach once everyone returns from Russia, and you would've gotten rid of him back in June if you had your way. The dog humps your leg.

--GIF OF THE DAY

-- iPhone Wallpapers for every team. [ IMGUR ]

-- AA rounded up some tweets from people watching Game 1. [ Awful Announcing ]

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Evgeni Malkin Gets an Eight-Year Contract Extension

Posted by Rick on .

The deal is eight-Years, $76 Million. It's a $9.5 million cap hit per season. That's more than Crosby per season, but still decent. It's much less than he could have received as a free agent.

Via the Pens:

The Pittsburgh Penguins have agreed to terms with forward Evgeni Malkin on an eight-year $76 million contract extension, it was announced today by executive vice president and general manager Ray Shero.

The deal begins with the 2014-15 season and runs through the 2021-22 campaign, and has an average annual value of $9.5 million. He will earn $9.5 million for each of the eight seasons.

Malkin, 26, is one of just three Penguins in franchise history to win multiple Art Ross Trophies as the NHL scoring leader (2012, ’09), joining Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr. He has also won the Hart Trophy (2012), Ted Lindsay Award (2012) and Calder Trophy (2007). A three-time 100-point producer and a four-time 30-plus goal scorer, Malkin has been named team MVP on three occasions (’08, ’09, ’12); earned a spot on the NHL’s First-Team All-Star squad three times (’08, ’09, ’12); and has been named to four NHL All-Star Games (’08, ’09, ’11, ’12).

The bad news is that, as the highest-paid player on the team, people will be even quicker to criticize him and blame him for everything than they are now.

The good news? Evgeni Malkin will be a Pittsburgh Penguin for a long time.

We'll take it.

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Keep Calm and Shero On. Why the Bylsma extension makes unlimited sense.

Posted by TPB Staff on .

Look, it was sink or swim. The Pens were going to either fire Dan Bylsma,or extend him.  They extended him, and it makes unlimited sense.

Stability

Think back to the end of the Craig Patrick era. There was no system, coaches were in and out, and basically the Penguins were like a college kid who kept overdrafting their bank account.

In the Eastern Conference Finals in 2001, the Pens got smoked in five games by the Devils. The feeling at the time was that the organization had no direction. And that feeling was right. The Penguins fell into 5 years of hell until Ray Shero transformed the organization into a powerhouse. It didn't hurt he had Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin, but it also didn't hurt he had a structure. The minor leagues play the same systems as the pros. There's one direction and one mind-set. Throw in some cash...boom.

Over the past 6 season, the Pens haven't finished below 5th in the Conference. For four of those seasons, Dan Bylsma has led the ship. When you have a good infrastructure, everything else can be fixed. We hate comparing the Penguins and Steelers, but in a town where so many jerk off to the Steelers' stability, how is the Penguins locking up their coach a bad idea?

If there is a reason to fire Bylsma and replace him with someone better, we have yet to see anyone come close to making a decent case. For example, look at this piece from LOLin Dunlap of The Fan. Premature, eh?

Again, let me point out that after premature exits in the playoffs against Montreal, Tampa Bay, Philadelphia and now Boston, it is still my secure conviction that Wednesday’s press conference should have been one in which Shero should have been relaying to the masses the Penguins were looking for a new coach

LOL.

He is not a bad coach

Bylsma is 201-92. That's a .671 winning percentage. You can't debate facts, jack. He manages Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin very well. If he didn',t he'd be gone. We asked Mike Colligan about head coaching, and he told us this about:

"Head coaching is the attitude, the big picture decision, managing player personalities."

Game.

He'll learn from years of mistakes

Dan Bylsma strikes us as a smart guy, a guy that hates to lose.The last two years have been embarrassing. Even the 3-1 blown series lead to the Lightning was rough.

But we personally feel that Bylsma will rise. If he can identify the issues and learn, the Penguins are set up to become a team that can get to the Cup every year. How many teams can say that? Maybe three or four? 

People will bitch and complain.

But in the end, this is the best move to make for the Penguins at this point. There is no need for the nuking of the entire franchise.

https://lh4.googleusercontent.com/-EFO1IF7bfPg/UbjWMEo_fdI/AAAAAAACOcE/lk-vDfLcvoU/s446/shero.png

 

 

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Dan Bylsma gets a Two-Year Contract Extension

Posted by Rick on .

Well, this will make one section of the fan base happy and another section really upset....

The Pittsburgh Penguins have given head coach Dan Bylsma a two-year contract extension through the 2015-16 season, it was announced today by Executive Vice President and General Manager Ray Shero. Bylsma had one year remaining on his current deal.

Penguins head coach Dan Bylsma The Penguins also extended the contracts of assistant coaches Tony Granato and Todd Reirden.

This idea was floated around a couple of days ago. At least the extension puts an end to the issue for now and prevents the coaching situation from being a distraction in the immediate future.

Like it or not, the current Pens' organization is built around certain people, certain philosophies, certain strategies and certain ideas. Dan Bylsma is a big part of that system. Getting rid of him as coach would have meant changing a major part of the Penguins' organization and possibly heading in a very different direction. Despite what happened in the playoffs, it doesn't look like the Pens are too keen on heading in a completely different direction right now.

If the team is going to keep him on as coach, it was a good idea to give him the extension so the issue isn't hanging over everyone's head for the next year. Of course, as Michel Therrien knows, a team can still fire a coach who is under contract if the situation gets bad enough...

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Four players in the Stanley Cup Finals and what could have been

Posted by TPB Staff on .

Anytime the Pens go down in the playoffs, it's hard to get invested in another roundof  the playoffs.
 
That shouldn't be an issue this year. There is major interest, in our opinion. How good are the Bruins? Will the Blackhawks expose Tuukka Rask?
 
But there are some pretty good storylines when it comes to the players themselves as they relate to the Penguins. In fact, five players in the Cup Finals have us more interested than we thought we'd be, especially when you consider about their connection to Penguins and what could have been.

4. Jonathan Toews

 
This is Toews' second Cup Finals. The captain of the Blackhawks has been as good as it gets.
 
It makes you wonder...
 
What if the Penguins would have taken Toews instead of Jordan Staal? There is no doubt Toews is a better player. 100 more points in 71 games. And he is close to a second Cup. Now, Jordan Staal is a hell of a hockey player, but all things being equal, where are the Penguins now with Jonathan Toews? On the flip side, what would the Pens' salary-cap situation be if they had Toews?
 

3. Brandon Saad

 
We asked Jesse Marshall if the Pens should have drafted Saad:
 
At the time I'd have said no. Hard to argue now.
Saad had a solid 27 points in 46 games in his first season. He hasn't been great in the playoffs, but he is seeing some good minutes.
 
The Penguins passed on Saad, a hometown kid, and drafted...Joe Morrow. Could have been Saad instead of Brenden Morrow in these playoffs.
 

2. Marian Hossa

 
Hey remember this? It was speculated that Hossa turned down a 7-year, $56-million deal with the Pens. Thus began the Marian Hossa storyline that resulted in the Pens defeating him the following year. What if Hossa stayed in Pittsburgh? Again, Pens would've been running into some salary issues.
 
Hossa has thrived in Chicago. He has probably has been the best player for the Hawks at points in their playoff run. Hossa on Crosby's wing, and this playing after every goal at CEC.
 

One of the great tragedies of our time.

And finally...

1. Ol' Double J

The #JagrWatch defeat still stings in some aspects, but none more than when you think about the Pens getting smoked by two Double J teams the past two years. Jagr is a shell of his former self, but his leadership is constantly on display. He is also completely insane, re: reports of him working out until midnight after games in the playoffs and shit. What if the Penguins would have offered Jagr $4 million? Could he have done better than TK? Could he have gotten the Penguins a goal somewhere in the Eastern Conference Finals?

 

 

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