Saskatoon StarPhoenix

SULLIVAN HAS GM’S CONFIDENCE

Despite horrid start, Penguins’ Rutherford says he never considered coaching change

- MICHAEL TRAIKOS mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/michael_traikos

A year ago, not a single coach was fired in the NHL. This season, five teams have already handed out pink slips.

Gone are John Stevens (Los Angeles), Joel Quennevill­e (Chicago), Mike Yeo (St. Louis), Todd Mclellan (Edmonton) and Dave Hakstol (Philadelph­ia).

Based on how Pittsburgh started the year, no one would have been surprised if Mike Sullivan’s name had been added to that list.

A month ago, the Penguins headed into U.S. Thanksgivi­ng with the worst record in the Eastern Conference. There was talk about whether the team’s window had closed and whether Pittsburgh might miss the playoffs for the first time in eight long years.

But according to GM Jim Rutherford, there was never talk of making a coaching change.

“I didn’t even think about it,” Rutherford said. “We have one of the top coaches in the league. I know exactly all that he deals with here and he handles it very well. I respect coaches and I also respect the people who have made tough decisions. But without commenting on that, I like the continuity.”

Rutherford had three coaches (Paul Maurice, Peter Laviolette and Kirk Muller) during his 17-year run as GM of the Carolina Hurricanes. He’s on his second coach since joining the Penguins in 2014.

Rutherford’s patience is paying off. In their last 14 games heading into Wednesday, the Penguins were 8-4-2, only three points out of a playoff spot.

“I didn’t like what was going on a month ago, but I kind of had a handle on what the reasons were,” said Rutherford, whose team has been hurt by injuries to Matt Murray, Justin Schultz and Patric Hornqvist. “We still have a ways to go . ... But I’m confident this team will turn the corner in the second half.”

Don’t know why the Calgary Flames aren’t getting any respect.

As of Wednesday morning, they were tied with Toronto, Winnipeg and Nashville for the second-most points in the NHL.

Sure, their schedule has been easy of late. But at the same time, they’ve beaten the Leafs, Jets and Sabres this season, as well as taken two out of three from the Predators.

Those wins go into the bank and will mean something come April, especially if James Neal starts finding the back of the net.

With Chicago and Los Angeles on the path to rebuilding, I asked Rutherford if there was any concern Pittsburgh’s window was also closing.

“What people are saying is natural, because when a team has success people are watching to see when that success ends,” he said. “But this team is a ways away from that.”

A big reason for his confidence is Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Phil Kessel are tied for 24th in scoring. It’s hard to be bad when you’re top three are so good.

Injuries have forced Jack Eichel to miss 36 games in the past two seasons, so it’s nice to see what he can do now that he’s healthy.

With 46 points in 35 games, the Sabres star was tied for fifth in league scoring ahead of Wednesday’s games.

Still not convinced? He has 94 points in his last 82 games. Toronto’s Auston Matthews has 92 points in his last 82.

For years, the best players in the league were playing south of the border. Not anymore. Half of the top 10 scorers (Connor Mcdavid, Mark Scheifele, Johnny Gaudreau, Mitch Marner and Blake Wheeler) and each of the top three defencemen (Morgan Rielly, Thomas Chabot and Mark Giordano) call Canada home.

Carter Hart was the sixth goalie used by the Flyers this season. He’s also the 14th to play in the past seven years. As a comparison, Boston has used eight during that same span.

The trade deadline wasn’t until Feb. 25. So why is everyone in a hurry for Maple Leafs GM Kyle Dubas to acquire a defenceman? Two months from now, the team might discover it needs a centre or a goalie even more.

We have one of the top coaches in the league. I know exactly all that he deals with here and he handles it very well.

JIM RUTHERFORD, Pittsburgh Penguins general manager

Colorado’s Gabriel Landeskog, the third wheel on a line with Nathan Mackinnon and Mikko Rantanen, was fourth in scoring with 22 goals before Wednesday’s game. He’s never scored more than 26.

With five goals in 12 games since getting traded to Chicago, Dylan Strome is on his way to proving he’s not a bust after going third overall in the 2015 draft. Then again, chances are Strome wouldn’t go in the top 10 — much less the top five — if you were drafting all over again.

That’s not a knock on Strome, but rather an indication of the quality of players that have come out of arguably one of the stronger draft classes in 15 years.

Consider that four of the top eight scorers in the NHL (Rantanen, Mcdavid, Eichel and Marner) were selected in 2015. That doesn’t include Chabot, Sebastian Aho (34 points), Brock Boeser (12 goals) or Mathew Barzal (27 points).

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan has his team trending in the right direction after a poor start.
GENE J. PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan has his team trending in the right direction after a poor start.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada