The Record (Troy, NY)

Pens lead goalie youth movement

- By Will Graves

PITTSBURGH » Jim Rutherford knows what it’s like to be a young goaltender trying to find his way in the NHL. Rutherford went through it with the Detroit Red Wings in the early 1970s, thrust into action at 21 years old with a franchise in the middle of a bumpy transition.

Yet that’s where the comparison­s end between Pittsburgh’s general manager and the two young menwho will play a major role in determinin­g whether the Penguins can become the first team in more than 30 years to win three straight Stanley Cup championsh­ips.

Matt Murray and Tristan Jarry, both 23, have everything Rutherford didn’t when he broke into the league more than four decades ago, from a true position coach to copious amounts of technology at their fingertips to the kind of advanced training techniques ( both mental and physical) that Rutherford believes has the NHL’s youngest goalie tandem in position to play a vital role in Pittsburgh’s pursuit of history.

The dark ages of the ‘70s — when goaltender­s were typically left to sort things out on their own — this is not.

“You didn’t really think about it ( back then),” Rutherford said. “You let in bad goals or have bad games, you were kind of on your own and you had to work your way through that. Now these guys have a lot more things to help (them).”

Beginning with Mike Buckley, who began working with Murray and Jarry when they were teenage prospects and has meticulous­ly overseen their rise from draft picks to NHL

starters. Buckley spent four years as the franchise’s goaltendin­g developmen­t coordinato­r before replacing Mike Bales as goalie coach shortly after Murray backstoppe­d the Penguins to a second straight Cup last spring.

“You win two championsh­ips and make a change, it kind of seems a little odd,” Rutherford said. “But Buck has been the guy that’s developed both these guys right from the start, so it just made sense that he would move in.”

Other youngsters are shoulderin­g the burden, too, including 24-year- old Connor Hellebuyck in Winnipeg (16 wins, 2.44 goalsagain­st average), 23-yearold Andrei Vasilevski­y in Tampa Bay (leads league in wins) and 24-year- old John Gibson in Anaheim (an AllStar last season).

But it’s Pittsburgh at the forefront of a goalie youth movement that runs counter to how things usually

work in the NHL. While it’s not unusual for a team to invest in a young goaltender, there’s typically a proven backup at the ready just in case things go awry, one of the reasons the average age of an NHL goalie is 29.

That initially was the plan this season for the Penguins.

Pittsburgh brought in Antti Niemi to play behind Murray after trading MarcAndre Fleury to expansion Vegas in June. When Niemi stumbled through a handful of forgettabl­e starts and was released in October, Rutherford didn’t scour the waiver wire or the trade block. He called the team’s American Hockey League affiliate in Wilkes-Barre/ Scranton and told Jarry and 26-year-old Casey DeSmith to pack their bags.

“It’s one of the things that they have a timeline and they know when you’re ready and if they think you’re ready, they’ll bring you up to play,” said Jarry, who is 9- 5-2 with a respectabl­e 2.49 goalsagain­st average this season. “I think that’s one of the great things about Pittsburgh over the years, they saw when Matt was ready and what he could do and I think that was one of the stepping points in helping them win those Stanley Cups.”

All Murray did as a 21-year-old in the spring of 2016 was unseat the popular, occasional­ly erratic Fleury, taking over midway during Pittsburgh’s playoff run and leading the franchise to its fourth Cup. By last spring Murray was the entrenched starter, though Fleury filled in admirably during the first two rounds of the postseason while Murray recovered from an injury.

Yet it was Murray, and not Fleury, who was on the ice as the Penguins surged past Nashville in the 2017 Cup Final. It was Murray, not the now 33-year- old Fleury, whom Pittsburgh chose to keep last summer. And it was Jarry the Penguins stuck with when another injury recently shelved Murray for a couple of weeks.

The Penguins say their young goaltender­s have considerab­le mental toughness, a must when playing on a team with so much offensive firepower in superstars Evgeni Malkin and Sidney Crosby that playing responsibl­y in front of its own net occasional­ly gets lost in the wash.

“It’s not always about technique and having your stick in the perfect position all the time,” Buckley said. “Sometimes it’s about putting them in a position where they have to compete and battle and stay clear mentally and stay confident and put them under duress, very much like a Navy SEAL undergoes training.”

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Oct. 7photo, Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Matt Murray (30) makes a save in the third period against the Nashville Predators during an NHL hockey game, in Pittsburgh.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Oct. 7photo, Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Matt Murray (30) makes a save in the third period against the Nashville Predators during an NHL hockey game, in Pittsburgh.

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