Be forewarned…this is going to be a bit of an unusual post. More a ramble than an article. It actually started as a reply to our long-team reader and respected commenter Mike. But I wanted it to have more legs because I think it speaks to one of the Penguins’ most pressing dilemmas. One that lies just beneath the surface. Here goes…
I think Mike hit on a key issue, one that Mark Madden also addressed in his article on the Tribune Review titled, “Penguins mangled defense needs a shakeup, but can management pull it off?” Namely, that GM Ron Hextall and coach Mike Sullivan aren’t on the same page in terms of personnel and scheme.
I’ve touched on this before, but Sullivan’s very much a one-trick pony who only knows (or wants to play) one style. An aggressive, forechecking, speed-based game. On our toes, not our heels.
I get it…to an extent. It’s the style he knows best…the one that won him (and us) two Stanley Cups.
On the opposite side of the teeter-totter, Hextall’s trying to bring in a little more size and physicality. All of his significant additions…Jeff Carter, Rickard Rakell, Jeff Petry and Jan Rutta are bigger, albeit slower players.
And therein lies the rub. Sullivan won’t compromise or adjust his preferred style to fit the talent on hand. He didn’t do it back in 2018-19, when former GM Jim Rutherford brought in bigger players like Nick Bjugstad, Erik Gudbranson and Jack Johnson in order to encourage more of a hybrid style. And he’s not doing it now. A glance at our nightly shot totals, for and against, speak to that.
It’s as if our coach and GM are perched in the same canoe, but paddling in opposite directions. Almost as if they’re in competition with each other. As a result, the canoe’s going ‘round and ‘round in circles.
Along those lines, I read on another site that we don’t seem to have an identity. I agree 100 percent.
We’re not a fast team any more. Nor, aside from our top two lines and maybe a couple of defensemen, are we particularly skilled.
We aren’t especially big or physical or hard to play against. We’re just kind of there…an odd conglomeration of competing visions and preferences.
Jesus stated in the Holy Bible, “A house divided against itself will not stand.” Truer words were never spoken.
He also warned against serving two masters. “Either you will hate the one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other.”
I can picture Sullivan cringing in private when president of hockey operations Brian Burke made his “long-pants hockey” statement a couple years ago. I’m also reminded of Sully’s rather defensive and unsolicited assertion in the wake of our first-round loss to the Islanders in ’21.
“We didn’t lose because we weren’t big enough.”
Until our brass and coaching staff come into agreement and develop a clear vision of how this team should be constructed and how we should play, our downward spiral will likely continue.
This 7-2 loss tonight should be a WAKE UP CALL to all !! That is how far we have fallen !
SELL,SELL,SELL.!!! Even ask the players with NMC…
Hi Rick,
To answer your rhetorical question… “Are they on the same page ?”…Heck these two are not even reading from the same Book !!!
I echo Pens4Ever great comments above.
If i may use your excellent canoe analogy , one paddles one way while the other is paddling in the opposite direction but BOTH don’t see the big hole in the middle of the Canoe and we are actually sinking fast. If somebody does not act fast we will all be under water…
Great rant Rick… keep it up.
Cheers’
Jim
Hole in the canoe…lol.
I’m laughing but it’s true. Keep those comments coming, my friend. Always good to hear from you and read what you have to say. You were among the first to express your concerns about the team. Concerns that are proving to be well-founded.
Rick
Absolutely and I love the canoe analogy!!
I have thought this since Ron was hired. Hextall came from teams that had some more size and grit, Sullivan’s “just play” doesn’t really go with how Ron played !
I believe that is why we don’t hear any trade rumors leading up to this year’s deadline because Ron and Burke want a different roster, Mike plays a speed system.
While most teams that are real contenders play and have both players. Sullivan doesn’t play or trust
young players eg. Drew O’Connor, I have really liked his game in the last few losses.
Maybe HCMS watches old video of his back to back Cups and thinks we can still play that way, it’s obvious we can’t.
So the question is, if the Penguins don’t make it, does the new owners clean house? Who goes?
The major problem is the “core” is locked in for a few more plus Rust. That makes it tough to start over or rebuild.
If Sullivan continues to be the head coach into next year and/or beyond, the franchise will be stagnant….like a canoe going in circles.
Hey Pens4ever,
Glad you liked the canoe analogy. Very astute comment about real contenders having all types of players. Of the recent Stanley Cup champions, Colorado most closely matched our back-to-back champs in terms of speed and style. But the Avs also employed several sizeable players among their core group, including Erik Johnson, Gabriel Landeskog, Josh Manson, Mikko Rantanen and Valeri Nichushkin.
Other teams/coaches seem to be able to utilize players with different attributes, but for some reason it doesn’t seem to work as well for the Pens and Sullivan.
Rick