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Sheary, Penguins Stand Tall

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ByRick Buker

Mar 14, 2016

The news on the medical front wasn’t good. In fact, it hardly could’ve been worse.

In the wake of the Penguins’ hard-fought 3-2 triumph over Columbus, the team announced on Saturday that superstar center Evgeni Malkin will miss six-to-eight weeks with an upper-body injury. One that likely will shelve him until the second-round of Stanley Cup playoffs.

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Left wing Scott Wilson, too, was held out of yesterday’s key Metropolitan Division matchup against the Rangers. He was injured Friday night, courtesy of a heavy Dalton Prout check.

Into the maelstrom stepped two rookies from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton—Conor Sheary and 21-year-old Dominik Simon (pronounced See-MONE). For one game, at least, the kids stood tall.

Displaying an abundance of speed, energy and plain old hockey sense, Sheary popped in two goals—his fourth and fifth of the campaign—to pace the Pens to a huge 5-3 win over the Rangers at Madison Square Garden.

His first goal was a thing of beauty. With the score tied 1-1 early in the second period, the undersized winger alertly peeled off the boards and scooted into the slot, arriving just in time to deflect Justin Schultz’ low, knuckling drive from the right point past Rangers goalie Henrik Lundqvist.

After the Rangers drew even at 2-2, Sheary struck again. Anticipating the play perfectly, the UMass-Amherst grad burst into open ice, gathered in a pretty backhand feed from Tom Kuhnhackl, and beat Lundqvist clean to the stick side on a breakaway at 15:55.

His heroics earned him the No. 1 Star of the game. And, some well-deserved praise from Pens coach Mike Sullivan.

“He’s a terrific kid,” Sullivan said. “You can see his offensive instincts. You can see his vision when he has the puck. And his effort is inspiring. I think it’s not just to the coaching staff. I think his effort is inspiring to his teammates as well.”

Simon was no slouch, either. Admittedly nervous skating in his first NHL contest, he displayed uncommon tenacity and an excellent stick. Midway through the third period the 5’11” 176-pounder won a puck battle along the boards against venerable Dan Boyle, setting the table for Matt Cullen’s game winner. Simon was awarded an assist on the play.

“His hockey IQ is off the charts,” Sullivan said of the Czech Republic native, who tallied 18 goals and 20 assists in 54 games with the Baby Pens this season. “I think his learning curve will be steep.”

Patric Hornqvist (power play) and Sidney Crosby (empty netter) also scored for the Pens, who ran their record to 29-0-0 when leading after two periods. Outdueling Lundqvist for the second time in ten days, Marc-Andre Fleury made 24 saves—18 during a lopsided opening period that saw the ice tilt heavily in favor of the New Yorkers.

“I thought Marc had some huge saves early in the game,” Sullivan noted. “He gave us a chance to win.”

The victory propelled the black and gold (36-24-8, 80 points) past Detroit and into the top Eastern Conference wild-card slot. The Penguins hold a one-point edge over the Red Wings with a game in hand. Arch-enemy Philadelphia trails the Pens by four points.

Kuhnhackl, Rust, and Wilson Sign Extensions

The Penguins extended the contracts of forwards Bryan Rust, Tom Kuhnhackl and Scott Wilson for two years beginning next season, GM Jim Rutherford announced today.

According to the team’s website, Rust’s contract carries an average annual value of $640,000. Kuhnhackl and Wilson will earn an average of $625,000 each.

By the Numbers (2015-16)
Player Age Team Lge GP G A PTS PIM +/-
Rust 23 Penguins NHL 33 3 5 8 4 0
    Baby Pens AHL 16 3 3 6 2 -5
Wilson 23 Penguins NHL 24 5 1 6 12 0
    Baby Pens AHL 34 22 14 36 19 4
Kuhnhackl 24 Penguins NHL 28 2 4 6 10 2
    Baby Pens AHL 23 7 8 15 18 10
2 thoughts on “Sheary, Penguins Stand Tall”
  1. Hey Rick! They played some hockey, eh? Kind of made Bonino look like a cigar store Indian. One thing that shone through for me was the passing. It was crisp and tape to tape most of the game. For me, their passing is always a telltale signal as to which team took the ice, the 100 percenters, or the I-wish-I-were-anywhere-but-here squad. I hope the latter stays in the locker room the rest of the season or they will be anywhere but here.

    1. Hey 55 on Point,

      Yeah…Bonino centering the second line? That one’s got me scratchin’ my head. Sullivan speaks of “Bones” in glowing terms. I sure as heck don’t see it…

      On a positive note, I couldn’t have been more impressed with Simon. He really handles the biscuit well…especially in tight quarters. Strong on the puck, too, for a smallish guy.

      And, of course, Sheary. Remarkably good along the wall, given his tiny frame. He’s got great instincts and speed. Works his tail off, too.

      I’ve always been a bigger-is-better guy. But I love this kid (in a hockey sense, of course).

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