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Penguins Update: The Day Our Dynasty Died

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ByRick Buker

Oct 29, 2020

February 23, 2018. While not necessarily a day that will live in infamy among black-and-gold faithful, maybe it should. By my unofficial reckoning, it’s the day the Penguins’ would-be dynasty died.

On that eventful day general manager Jim Rutherford grabbed for the “brass ring” (pun intended). Hoping to bolster his team for a shot at a third consecutive Cup, he dealt defenseman Ian Cole and goalie prospect Filip Gustavsson to Ottawa for center Derick Brassard. Our first-round pick in the 2018 Entry Draft also went north of the border along with our third-round pick in 2019.

As part of the deal, slugger Ryan Reaves was shipped to Vegas along with our fourth-round pick in 2018 in exchange for a bag of pucks disguised as Tobias Lindberg and an agreement that called for the Golden Knights to eat 40 percent of Brassard’s $5 million cap hit.

Intended to fill the gap on the third line created by the offseason defection of center Nick Bonino, the move was lauded as a masterpiece stroke. One that would greatly enhance our chances of pulling off a magical a three-peat.

Instead, it marked the beginning of the end for our two-time defending champs.

But first, step into the WABAC machine with me if you will. Following our second-straight Cup win in 2017, the Pens bled off a passel of key performers, including veterans Bonino, Matt Cullen, Ron Hainsey and Chris Kunitz. JR also “bribed” Vegas into taking franchise icon Marc-Andre Fleury off our hands in the expansion draft for a second-round pick. Smiling like a Cheshire cat, then-Vegas GM George McPhee revealed he’d planned to pick “Flower” all along.

Indeed, following two mostly brilliant seasons of wheeling and dealing, Rutherford seemed asleep at the switch. Aside from acquiring Reaves, the capo dei capi of NHL heavyweights, most of his moves were uninspired to say the least (Matt Hunwick, Antti Niemi). We opened the campaign with journeyman Greg McKegg as our third-line center.

Needless to say, the Pens slogged out of the starting gate. Following an uninspired 4-1 defeat at the hands of Detroit on New Year’s Eve our record was an unsightly 19-18-3.

Then someone flipped an invisible switch. Starting with a 5-1 rout of the Flyers on January 2, the Penguins went on a tear befitting back-to-back champions. Over the next six weeks they went a torrid 16-4-1. During the incendiary 21-game stretch they outscored the opposition by the whopping margin of 84-52. Total domination.

Rutherford hadn’t been idle, either. In-season acquisitions Riley Sheahan and Jamie Oleksiak were performing well…the former at third-line center and the latter on the third defense pairing with Cole. As if to sound a warning beacon, Sheahan scored two goals in the game immediately preceding the Brassard trade. Rescued from coach Mike Sullivan’s doghouse on January 25, a resurgent Cole had registered a goal and six points in 11 games to go with a sparkling plus-12. Oleksiak was nearly as effective over that span (plus-8). Not coincidentally, the Pens won nine of those games.

Then Rutherford rolled the dice on Brassard. While the logic was sound…JR wanted to improve his depth down the middle while creating a strong third line…it was a clear-cut case of fixing what wasn’t broke. Balance and chemistry disrupted, the Pens promptly lost three of four and never really recovered.

Playing through a lower-body injury, Brassard drew scant resemblance to the player who’d tortured the Penguins earlier in his career while earning the nickname “Big Game Brass.” Nor did he display much chemistry with new linemates Carl Hagelin and Phil Kessel.

There was another cost as well…one that would come back to haunt us. Prior to the trade, the Pens possessed just the right blend of skill and muscle. Although played sparingly by Sullivan, Reaves had embraced his policing chores with passion and fervor, not to mention a touch of humor, while liquidating the few opponents who tried to take liberties.

Cole, too, had been an underrated cog in the team’s success. At first Sullivan tried to replace him with Hunwick…with disastrous results…before turning to depth defender Chad Ruhwedel.

Oleksiak’s game suffered as well. He was a minus-5 in the four games he was paired with Hunwick. Sans Reaves, Jamie was forced to assume more of an enforcer’s role.

The flashpoint occurred in Game Three of the second-round series with Washington. Having split the first two games, the blood rivals were deadlocked at 2-2 midway through the second period. Then Capitals marauder Tom Wilson destroyed black-and-gold rookie Zach Aston-Reese in front of the Caps’ bench in a violent, high-speed collision. It was like watching a train-wreck unfold before your eyes.

The Pens were clearly rattled. Emboldened by the hit, the Capitals won the game and seized control of the series.

While we’ll never know for sure, I maintain the Pens would’ve reacted differently with Reaves on the bench. I believe his presence would’ve had a steadying effect on our guys, much like a tough older brother walking the halls with you on the first day of school. Cole likewise would’ve come in handy against a physical Washington forecheck.

Would the Pens have won the series with Reaves and Cole in the lineup? It’s impossible to say. Going to the Final two years in a row undoubtedly took a toll. Perhaps we would’ve run out of gas anyway. But I think we would’ve stood a better chance.

As for Brassard? He tallied a lone assist over the six-game set with the Caps while seeing his ice time dwindle. By the end of the series he was centering the fourth line.

The Brassard era came to a close, not with a bang but with a whimper, the following February when he and Sheahan were dealt to Florida for Nick Bjugstad and Jared McCann. His black-and-gold career was singularly uninspiring…12 goals and 23 points in 54 regular-season games, to go with a minus-5. In fairness to Brassard, the Pens were 31-16-7 with him in the lineup and 8-8-1 in games he sat out.

Perhaps expectations were set too high. But Brassard never had anywhere near the impact that was anticipated. Nor did he embrace the third-line role he was acquired to fill.

Worse, his arrival begat our rather dramatic fade from contender to pretender.

5 thoughts on “Penguins Update: The Day Our Dynasty Died”
  1. Once again you cherry pick data to so that you can whine about something. You ignore that fact that Gustavsson was horrible in the AHL last year and has already seen ECHL time. Desmith is a half point better than that? Citing Dobber Prospects on him is idiotic. He’s not a prospect. DeSmith is a prove NHL backup with a good track record. You are never one to let reality get in the way of good rant.

    Oh yeah, you also failed to mention that Dobber rating of Blomqvist as 7.5. This is meaningless, of course, like all such blather. What makes Dobber an authority on anything?

  2. Spot on. GMJR keeps hitting his fingers instead of the nail. I’m perplexed and still angry about Ian Cole…what a warrior. Ian was near the top of the league in hits and blocked shots to go with a good plus/minus. He is fun to watch, that’s the meaningful stat. But what the heck, I’m not telling you anything eye-opening.

    1. Hey ModestoGiannotti,

      In a way, your comment to a previous article about the Brassard trade sparked and inspired this article. So you get a big assist.

      For the life of me, I don’t know what Sullivan didn’t like about Cole (or Reaves or Oleksiak or Gudbranson…hmmm…sense a pattern here). Ian was just really solid…you summed it up best…a warrior. I’m going from memory, but I believe he played throughout the 2017 Cup run with a broken hand (or fingers) and a broken rib. Yet he didn’t miss a beat.

      As an organization, the Pens have a well-documented (and exasperating) history of divesting themselves of much-needed toughness to add that last, little morsel of skill. Hence we had Dominik Simon skating in place of Reaves. For the record, Simon scored 15 goals over the past two seasons…Reaves 17.

      Who would I rather have? Gee, that’s a tough one …

      It’s been my personal lament for years. The Pens (Sullivan in particular) don’t seem to grasp that it takes a blend of players with different attributes to win a Cup. Although our Cup teams weren’t overly tough, we had lots of character guys like Cole and Bonino and Cullen and Kunitz and Hainsey and Eric Fehr. You just don’t win without that kind of player.

      How quickly our braintrust seems to forget…

      Rick

      1. Speaking of Cole,

        Let’s not forget the playoff game where he played the entire PK. All the other players both for the PK and PP switched out, but Cole stood his ground.

        And now, when following the dominos of that trade only McCann is left. If McCann doesn’t move back to Wing and turn it around, that may just be the most devastating trade in Penguins history!

  3. Hey Rick,

    Great stuff once again!!

    I think the engines actually started to sputter during the last Cup run, but that infamous date sent it crashing to the ground. I, too, think the team before the trade, would have made a serious run at the Cup. If nothing else, the Pens with Cole and Reaves would have kept Wash from breaking their choke streak.

    I am not going to rehash my whole argument from years past but I never was in favor of the Brassard trade. The only player from Ott what I would have paid that much for would have been JG Pageau. – and I vehemently wrote that back then.

    But let me add this little note for you – the serendipity of your article is very twilight zone, I was just looking on Dobberprospects;

    Emil Larmi Rank 5.0
    Alex D’Ori 4.0

    interestingly enough they rate Filip Gustavsson as 6.5
    and if you look Gustavsson has been loaned to Södertälje SK of the HockeyAllsvenskan league and has posted 2.23 GAA with a 0.923 Sv% in 8 GP.
    Not sure if that means he is turning the corner and getting his mojo back or if he is more at home in Europe but looking at our Pens, he certainly looked at as better than what we have in the system.

    Even Casey DeSmith is only rated slightly better at 7.0 (only 1/2 a point higher).

    Boy what a price JR paid or threw away!

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