The Province

Stopping Pens’ three-peat daunting

Opponents figure mixture of skill, physical game only way to have a chance to beat them

- STEPHEN WHYNO

Each time Seth Jones felt like the Columbus Blue Jackets were dominating, the Pittsburgh Penguins went down the ice and scored.

T.J. Oshie knows the feeling because the Penguins did it to the Washington Capitals often during playoff series the past two years.

“It kind of deflates what we’re doing and it’s hard to trust your game after that,” Oshie said.

Opportunis­tic, well-coached and talented, Pittsburgh has won eight consecutiv­e playoff series to become the NHL’s only back-toback Stanley Cup champion of the salary-cap era and the first since the Detroit Red Wings in 1997 and ’98.

Now everyone’s trying to figure out how to stop the march of Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and the Penguins as they go for the three-peat. “It’s not one thing,” Jones said. “There’s not a Crosby stopper. There’s not a Malkin stopper. You can’t put a stop on them. You just have to contain them.” No one has contained them so far. The Pens mowed through the New York Rangers, the Capitals, the Tampa Bay Lightning and the San Jose Sharks to win the Cup in 2016 and then the Blue Jackets, the Caps, the Ottawa Senators and the Nashville Predators in 2017, and only three of those series needed seven games.

Patrick Kane acknowledg­ed that while he and the Chicago Blackhawks used to be the standard after winning the Cup in 2010, ’13 and ’15, the Penguins have surpassed them. While the Los Angeles Kings rivalled the Blackhawks during their heyday, the Penguins have shown to be unbeatable when it matters most.

“It seems like they’re on the brink sometimes, and they find their way out of it,” Kane said. “Just watching games, it’s almost like you have that feeling that they’re going to win, especially in the playoffs.

“Whether that’s the coaching staff or the players or just that organizati­on, it seems like they have something pretty special going right now.”

If there are cracks in Pittsburgh’s armour, they came this off-season with the losses of goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury, defenceman Trevor Daley and forwards Nick Bonino, Chris Kunitz and Matt Cullen. But Crosby, Malkin, goalie Matt Murray, winger Phil Kessel, top defenceman Kris Letang and coach Mike Sullivan remain, which explains why the Pens are favoured to win again and make it three in a row for the first time since the early 1980s New York Islanders dynasty.

“When you get Sid, Geno, Letang on the team, you always have a chance,” said Fleury, who went to the Vegas Golden Knights in the expansion draft. “That’s how I felt every time. I think they’ll be dangerous again.”

Usually the grind of playing over 100 games in a season wears on a team. Ryan Getzlaf, whose Anaheim Ducks won the Cup in 2007 and lost in the first round the next year, said a team needs luck and a group that’s able to sustain a high level of game through fatigue the entire next year.

Now that the Penguins have sustained to win twice, no one’s betting against them doing it again.

“They’re a good team, and they’re going to continue to be a good team,” Philadelph­ia Flyers defenceman Shayne Gostisbehe­re said.

“They’re the heavyweigh­t champs right now, and you’ve just got to knock them off.”

Easier said than done. Now maybe Murray will struggle with a heavier workload or the depth that Fleury said paved the way to the championsh­ips will wear thin. But if there’s a blueprint to attacking the Penguins, it might be putting pressure on their blue-line.

“You have to play a physical style, but also you have to play a skill style, as well,” Jones said. “You got to get to them, you got to get to the defencemen, I think and that’s something that teams may focus on.”

The Penguins won last spring with a no-name defence while being outshot 794-718, yet they found ways to win. Oshie said any potential Pittsburgh-killer must be more resilient.

Predators defenceman Roman Josi knows there’s a mental aspect to facing a team with so much success.

“Once you win a lot of series, you start to believe more and more and the confidence grows,” Josi said.

“As an opponent you’ve got to get in there and believe that you can beat them. They’re a great team. But you got to have that belief.”

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Evgeni Malkin, left, and Sidney Crosby will return this season to try to make it three in a row for the first time since the New York Islanders of the early 1980s.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Evgeni Malkin, left, and Sidney Crosby will return this season to try to make it three in a row for the first time since the New York Islanders of the early 1980s.

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