The Pittsburgh Penguins have been busy this offseason as they continue their rebuild. They haven’t officially come out and used the word “rebuild” to describe where they are as an organization, but you don’t have to squint too hard to see it.
They made cheap, low-risk moves to start free agency in early July, just like last year. They brought in defensemen Parker Wotherspoon, Alexander Alexeyev, Phil Kemp, and Caleb Jones, plus forwards Anthony Mantha, Rafael Harvey-Pinard, and Justin Brazeau. The Penguins also opted to re-sign forwards Philip Tomasino and Connor Dewar to one-year contracts after neither received qualifying offers before free agency started.
Penguins general manager and president Kyle Dubas has been relatively active on the trade market as well, bringing in defensemen Matt Dumba and Connor Clifton. They are two players who badly needed a change of scenery since they didn’t have good seasons last year. If they can play a bit better, the Penguins will try to flip them at the trade deadline, given they only have one year left on their deals.
Dubas also acquired goaltender Arturs Silovs from the Vancouver Canucks after his dominant Calder Cup Playoff run with the Abbotsford Canucks. Silovs helped the baby Canucks win the Calder Cup, finishing the AHL playoffs with a 2.01 goals-against average and a .931 save percentage. His efforts led to him being named the MVP of the Calder Cup Playoffs. Right now, he’s the favorite to be Tristan Jarry’s backup heading into the season.
Despite numerous changes, fans are still waiting for a major blockbuster or two. Forwards Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell, and defenseman Erik Karlsson have been heavily mentioned in trade talks, but to this point, none of them have been traded. Some fans see that as a bad thing since the calendar is about to flip to August, but it’s not. There is still about a month and a half until the Penguins report to training camp, and as we have seen from Dubas over the last two offseasons, he’s not afraid of making big splashes in August.
Usually, August is the month when everyone in the hockey world goes on vacation to the beach or the cottage, but not Dubas. Last year, he surprised the entire hockey world when he acquired top prospect Rutger McGroarty from the Winnipeg Jets for Brayden Yager on August 22. The Penguins weren’t one of the reported teams in on him, but they put together the best offer and got the player they wanted. On August 6, 2023, Dubas traded for Erik Karlsson in one of the biggest trades of the summer.
He’s always looking to make deals, no matter what time of year it is. He holds all of the cards right now with Rust, Rakell, and Karlsson, and while some fans want Dubas to get these deals over with, it’s not that simple. Considering where the Penguins are in their rebuild, they have to get the proper return for these players. They remain good and impactful players, despite all three being over 30. This isn’t a situation where you take what you can get and sell for pennies on the dollar. That wouldn’t help the Penguins in terms of where they want to go as an organization.
There has also been some talk that by not trading these players, the Penguins would be “blocking their NHL-ready prospects” for this season. That is simply not true. McGroarty and Ville Koivunen are NHL-ready and will likely be in the lineup on October 7 against the New York Rangers, assuming they perform well during training camp and the preseason. They looked the part in their trial run at the end of the 2024-25 season. The Penguins also won’t block forward Filip Hallander from securing a spot since they just signed him to a two-year contract on April 29. They love what he did in the SHL these last two seasons.
As for Brunicke, if he does enough to earn a nine-game trial to start the 2025-26 season, the Penguins probably won’t hesitate to see what he can do at the NHL level. After those nine games, they’d have to decide whether to keep him up for the entire season or send him back to his junior team.
Everyone is waiting for a big trade because there haven’t been too many of them this summer yet. Many insiders predicted that a lot of action would happen at the draft and in the summer, but they didn’t anticipate that so many teams would retain players who were once on the market.
The Penguins are playing their cards close to the vest, but it still seems likely that at least one of Karlsson, Rakell, or Rust will get dealt before the season starts. It just might take longer and require more patience than some fans like.
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Featured Image Credit: Kelsey Surmacz - The Hockey News