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Dubas: Penguins’ Revamp Ready to Enter Next Phase

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CRANBERRY — The process has not been particularly quick or painless for the Pittsburgh Penguins, but president of hockey operations/general manager Kyle Dubas believes it is proceeding as planned.



And, more to the point, has reached a point when the focus can shift, at least somewhat, to adding players, not just assets like draft choices and salary-cap space.

“We spent the last 12 months, almost exactly, accruing assets and accruing flexibility and cap space,” he said after the NHL trade deadline passed Friday. “Now, we begin to shift to the execution of that (plan). That will be drafting players using some (acquired choices) … I don’t know that it’s feasible to expect that we can use all of those draft picks … and then expect all of them, in sequence, to become part of the club.

“We’ll have those assets available for trade. We’ll have cap space available in free agency. We’ll shift here, a little bit, from asset-collection — continue down that path, but also looking to how we can use the assets we’ve acquired. … It’s going to require patience. It may not be as quick as some like, but that’s what we intend to do. Our goals, as I’ve stated here a number of times, is to return the team to contention as early as possible.”

He was quick to add, however, that burning through all of the assets they’ve acquired during the upcoming offseason is not part of the plan.

Dubas made a series of relatively minor moves as the deadline approached — parting with Anthony Beauvillier, Cody Glass, Jonathan Gruden and Luke Schenn and a fifth-round draft choice in return for defenseman Conor Timmins, forward Connor Dewar and a number of draft choices — but did not part with two assets who had been expected to generate considerable attention around the league.

They would be winger Rickard Rakell and defenseman Matt Grzelcyk, the latter of whom will be an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Dubas called Rakell, who has two years remaining on a contract that carries a salary-cap hit of $5 million, “a big part of our program.”

He added that, “there was lots of interest in Rickard Rakell” leading up to the deadline but, “we just decided, based on where we are at and his value to us, the term remaining on his contract, the way he’s played and the player that he is, it was in the best interest of the team to have him remain.”

Rakell has a team-leading 29 goals and 24 assists in 63 games going into the Penguins’ game in as Vegas Friday night.

“We’re happy to have him,” Dubas said. “He’s a big part of what we do and he really wants to be here.”

He said “there was interest, teams kicking tires” on Grzelcyk, who is working on a one-year with a cap hit of $2.75 million, but there obviously wasn’t a proposal that moved the Penguins to part with him.

Grzelcyk enters the Golden Knights game with one goal and 29 assists in 64 games this season.

“When we brought him in (as a free agent from Boston), we pledged that we’d give him the opportunity to get things back rolling, and he’s taken advantage of that,” Dubas said.

Dubas said he did not ask any of the five players with active no-movement clauses — Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang, Erik Karlsson and Bryan Rust — to waive those, and that he did not receive offers attractive enough for any of the half-dozen players with modified no-trade clauses that he felt compelled to ask them to waive that provision in their contracts.

Of the guys with no-movement clauses, Karlsson was the most frequent subject of pre-deadline speculation, but while Dubas alluded to his inconsistent play and frequent defensive lapses, he said Karlsson “is not a player we would just look to move along” because of the pluses in his game.

“He’s such a talented player,” Dubas said. “I know that, night-in and night-out, like our team is this year, he can be a little up and down. But his skating continues to be among the best in the league. Obviously, offensively and puck movement continues to be at the level … we have to keep pushing him. I think he can be a part of helping our team continue to move along.”

Even as it prepares for the next step in its development.

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Uros
Uros
11 days ago

Great statements. Everything on point and in a way every true fan would like it. Talking the talk part is done, let’s see how walking the walk goes.

Eri
Eri
11 days ago
Reply to  Uros

What he said about Rakell, sounds an awful lot like how he praised Schenn. Makes me think he’ll trade him in the summer, given the appropriate return. They have work to do at the Draft and in Free Agency – finding finishers, figuring out the D, goalie log jammer – but the rising cap and their available space should allow next season to be a significant improvement over this one. Also if 2 or 3 of the AHLers/prospects crack the NHL (Koivunen, McGroarty and Brunicke) that’ll go a long way to hasten the rebuild/retool. Here’s to 2025-26 being a good… Read more »

Uros
Uros
11 days ago
Reply to  Eri

I don’t see it that way for Rakell, but agree with everything else you’ve written. If he really wants to improve this team he can’t do better than Rakell at $5m. No way, no how. If he’s lying about everything and wants to go for dead last instead of last in the East, that would be beyond my comprehension. Why would he? He tried a quick fix, failed miserably, now he’s trying a different approach. There’s no need to chase the lottery with all the accumulated picks and a pretty high one coming after this season. And anyway, teams give… Read more »

Marco
Marco
11 days ago
Reply to  Uros

IMO keeping Rakell,when it sounds like the return for him would have been significant, is a big miss. Who is the we in “we just decided”. That may be the problem, particularly if it includes Sullivan.

Joseph Iwasevic
Joseph Iwasevic
11 days ago

Well at least the top line will be fun to watch…….BUT

Zach
Zach
11 days ago

Better 2, 3, 4 years of bad hockey than 10. Unless we started acquiring future assets, thats what you were looking at post-core. Makes no sense to stay pat the past 2 years or God forbid continuing burning future assets just to field a borderline wild card team with no shot at contending…

Last edited 11 days ago by Zach Brust
Alain
Alain
11 days ago

Still no talk about Mike Sullivan? This team is not responding to him.

Robert Shoemaker
Robert Shoemaker
11 days ago
Reply to  Alain

This team is not a good team. The penguins have 3 players who can score regularly and they are all on 1 line. It is easy for other teams to stack their defense and keep them from scoring. The “defense” doesn’t seem to be interested in playing that position. Ryan Shea and Matt Grzelcyk would be 3rd pair defenders or the extra defender on winning teams but are top 4 defenders in Pittsburgh. Their average B level goaltenders are left hanging out to dry (this is what caused Ned’s tantrum). My point is this. What coach in the entire world… Read more »

Last edited 11 days ago by Robert Shoemaker
Marco
Marco
11 days ago

The polisher is the one who is responsible for having picked the turds. The polisher is the one responsible for polishing the rocks and has failed with the rocks. Funny how “turds” are turning into rocks with other teams. Without the right polisher the rocks don’t shine.

Robert Shoemaker
Robert Shoemaker
10 days ago
Reply to  Marco

Okay, i stand corrected. A new coach would definitely make THIS team a Stanley Cup winner next season! Woo fire Sully! 🙄

Marco
Marco
10 days ago

What coach, having made this team what it is, would still be coaching except in Pittsburgh?

Robert Shoemaker
Robert Shoemaker
10 days ago
Reply to  Marco

Bottom line. Changing the coach would not make any difference with the players currently on the team. Period. Get over it. Sullivan is signed to a pretty expensive contract, which they have to pay him. Would you throw away all that money as an owner and pay another coach on top of that?

Mark Fields
Mark Fields
11 days ago

I can’t stand disengenous people. This guy pushes a short turn around to contention. But if you track his decisions and roster moves and his words. He is rebuilding. Not retooling. This team won’t be in contention during SIDS last couple of years. Theee draft picks won’t be playoff ready for 5 years at least. The free agent class doesn’t have a ton to choose from. And in his career where taken is being brought in he’s won one trade. That includes his time in Toronto. This team is now irrelevant . And will be for a number of years… Read more »

Sirdc
Sirdc
11 days ago
Reply to  Mark Fields

Actually, he tried retooling, it didn’t work. He made some bad signings, yes but I think he’s done a pretty good job making trades. He walked into one of the worst roster situations in the league. U don’t turn that around in a yr.

Pete
Pete
11 days ago

Swing and a miss!

Espo33
Espo33
11 days ago

Another good thing about the ton of draft picks we have is we might have to attach a few to players like Graves or Jarry to get them off the team. So that is a good thing.

Jerry Chieffalo
Jerry Chieffalo
11 days ago
Reply to  Espo33

I’m sure that is part of the long range plan. Hopefully in the short term.

King Penguin
King Penguin
11 days ago

Would have liked to shed more salary before the deadline. Trade Jarry and Karlsson at half retention and that leaves approximatelyt $12M in salary cap room, according to Spotrac. That’s about enough to sign Marner or Bennett and Vilardi, for example. The latter gives them two good lines, and the bottom six figures to be better. And maybe one of the kids has a break-out season. Even then, defense and goaltender remain problem areas. Duby is gonna have to make some shrewd trades for this team to make a quantum leap.

Last edited 11 days ago by King Penguin
Mario 4Ever
Mario 4Ever
11 days ago

Good piece, but I can’t see how this is on track or progressing. Big picture wise nothing really happened. Team is one of the worst in the league and only getting older. Where is the path to the new era?

Michael Tompkins
Michael Tompkins
11 days ago

A serious run at getting #1 pick Mckenna next year has to be in the cards. Pens are well positioned to do it. That means loosing frequently. The art for KD will be to make the team compelling to watch, despite the losses.

Marco
Marco
10 days ago

Tired of seeing these 2nd, 3rd, 5th round picks accumulate. For players that will truly be probable difference makers the Pens need first round picks. If Dubas is unwilling to give up some pieces to make the move for that potential talent there won’t be a chance at a strong rebuild or fast turnaround.

Last edited 10 days ago by Marco

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