Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

JARRY OR MURRAY? THE PENGUINS’ GOALIE QUESTION

It’s an excellent spot to be in, especially with focus on playoffs

- Joe Starkey

Goaltendin­g is 75 percent of your hockey team, unless you don’t have it. Then it’s 100 percent.” — Harry Neale, legendary broadcaste­r, retired coach. The Penguins have it, all right, in spades. They are the exception. As when they won Stanley Cup titles in 2016 and 2017, they have two No. 1 goalies. Both homegrown, which is even more unusual.

Lots of teams can’t find one dependable goalie. People lose jobs chasing the position. Ask Ray Shero about that. The New Jersey Devils just fired him. He couldn’t find a goalie. Ask the Philadelph­ia Flyers about chasing goalies (although they might finally have one in Carter Hart).

The Penguins face a different kind of problem, one most teams would welcome — a goalie “controvers­y” with no bad choice. They’ll need to pick from their two starters for the playoffs this year and for the seasons beyond. They might choose as early as this summer, when Tristan Jarry and Matt Murray can be restricted free agents.

In the meantime, the Penguins own an enormous competitiv­e advantage over most teams: They have a good goalie every night.

They probably can’t go wrong in tabbing their future guy, either, just like they couldn’t go wrong when they had to choose between Murray and Marc-Andre Fleury two years

ago, although there really wasn’t much of a choice. Murray was much younger and much cheaper and had just won two Stanley Cup titles (with a giant assist from Fleury in 2017). stuBnuntin­evgelynhif­atdhterPad­enedguMinu­srray and kept Fleury, they probably wouldn’t regret the decision, given how well Fleury has performed since he left.

In some places, a goalie controvers­y might split the locker room. Not here. Not NinoStiwdn­itehyMCirk­oesbSyu’lslirvoaon­ma.nd Jim Rutherford at the top of the organizati­onal depth chart.

Sullivan is a straight shooter with a deft touch for choosing the right guy at the right time. Rutherford is an old goalie himself, so he knows the psychology of the position. He also knows that developmen­t can take time, as in Jarry’s case.

It’s still fair to ask, by the way, if Jarry is the real deal. His NHL resume basically consists of two good months. He has seen his numbers dip in January (3-4 record, .907 save percentage) and has yet to experience the crucible of playoff hockey.

And yet, everything I see tells me Jarry remains a rising star. Everyone I talk to who knows the position tells me the same.

Speaking of which, and speaking of old goalies, I chatted Thursday with exPFeranng­kuiPniseKt­reanngWelr­oe.gBgoetthan­bdelieve Jarry has lasting power. They love his puckhandli­ng ability — “He reminds me of Tommy [Barrasso] in that respect,” Wregget said — his athleticis­m, his positionin­g and his demeanor. benTehfeit­ysaolfsaog­aopopdr,eoclida-tfeasthhei­oned goalie competitio­n.

“Murray is trying to prove himself, too,” Pietrangel­o said. “He has been through a lot, replacing Fleury, who was a legendary figure, almost as legendary as Frank Pietrangel­o [laughs]. No, he’s a tough kid. I think the competitio­n helps both of them, and you need two goalies in the playoffs.”

Jarry is a full year younger and will be cheaper, which could prove to be the difference in who’s playing goal for the Penguins next season and beyond. But there’s a ton of hockey to be played between now and then. We also don’t know what Murray will ask for in contract negotiatio­ns. Nothing less than what his comparable contempora­ries — John Gibson, Connor Hellebuyck, etc. — are making, I would imagine, and that is ymeoarre. than $6 million per

That’s about what Washington’s Braden Holtby makes, too, and his situation speaks to how volatile the goalie position can be. He finally broke through two years ago and won a Cup, seemingly setting himself up Bfourtotnh­eamt woarse bbeigfocro­enItlryaac­t. Samsonov, a first-round pick from 2015, arrived this season and became the Russian version of Jarry, with a .927 save percentage in 19 games (Samsonov hails from Evgeni Malkin’s hometown of Magnitogor­sk).

So the Capitals also have two good homegrown goalies, and big choices to make.

It’s not a bad place to be.

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