The Province

Penguins built for three-peat future

Stanley Cup champions overcame the disaster of a damaged defence to outlast all other teams

- Michael Traikos mtraikos@postmedia.com twitter.com/Michael_Traikos

It was a half-hour after the Pittsburgh Penguins had won their second consecutiv­e Stanley Cup and the general manager of the team — the man who hired the head coach, who last year brought in Phil Kessel and this year traded for Ron Hainsey, while refusing to trade Marc-Andre Fleury — couldn’t stop smiling.

They told Jim Rutherford this couldn’t be done. “People said at the start of the year and all through the year that it’s hard to repeat,” said Rutherford. “But we always said, ‘nobody said that you can’t.’ And our guys were determined. ”

The team was without injured Kris Letang for the entire playoffs, had a threadbare defence, and seemed to be running on fumes after having played more hockey than any other team in the last 24 months.

“I think this one was harder than last year,” said Rutherford. “Yeah, especially with the pressure on us and with how many guys we had playing hurt. It was certainly more stressful for me this time around. .”

Here are five reasons why the Penguins could pull off the rare 3-peat:

Sid and Geno

From Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr playing together, and then Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin.

If it wasn’t enough that the Penguins had the best player in the world, they have another who some might consider to be the second best. Certainly, that is the way it looked in the playoffs.

Malkin led the playoffs with 28 points, while Crosby, who won his second straight Conn Smythe Trophy, was second with 27 points.

Kris Letang

Somehow, someway, the Penguins won a Stanley Cup without a No. 1 defenceman. The way that they spread out the minutes was reminiscen­t of the 2006 Carolina Hurricanes, a team that had Rutherford as the GM.

“When Letang went out I said to our guys, ‘Don’t worry. We can do this,’ ” said Rutherford. ”

Jake Guentzel

No one knew much about the curly-haired rookie when the playoffs started. But after he led the post-season with 13 goals, including five game-winners, Guentzel was in the running as Pittsburgh’s MVP. the question now is whether it was a flash-in-the-pan performanc­e or the start of something special?

Money is no matter

Nothing splits up a potential dynasty more than the salary cap. But the Penguins are in decent shape.

If the Penguins trade or lose goalie Marc-Andre Fleury to the expansion draft, they would have an additional $5.75 million to play with.

But they should still have plenty of money left to sign a second-pairing defenceman.

Matt Murray

It’s hard to imagine that the Penguins would have won the Cup — or even advanced past the first round — had Rutherford traded Fleury at the deadline. But while Fleury stepped in while Matt Murray was recovering from an injury, it was once again Murray who pushed a team that was routinely outshot and out-chanced over the hump.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The Pittsburgh Penguins could be posing for this kind of photo for years to come with a solid core projected to play together for at least the next few years.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES The Pittsburgh Penguins could be posing for this kind of photo for years to come with a solid core projected to play together for at least the next few years.
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