In their last three games – all losses – against the Florida Panthers, Tampa Bay Lightning, and Buffalo Sabres, the Pittsburgh Penguins have been outscored, 17-7.
Even though they’re not yet mathematically eliminated, this has, effectively, ended their season and any hopes of a playoff run.
And now, the organization turns to the future.
On Friday, the Penguins recalled top forward prospects Rutger McGroarty and Ville Koivunen from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) – Pittsburgh’s AHL affiliate – to the NHL club, using up their final two call-ups of the season.
McGroarty – who turns 21 on Sunday, when the Penguins take on the Ottawa Senators at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh – has 14 goals and 39 points in 60 AHL games this season, including eight goals and 18 points in his last 19 games. The developmental process was there for him all along this season, and the production finally started to catch up in the latter half of the season.
Koivunen – the 21-year-old Finnish forward who came over last spring as part of the Jake Guentzel trade – has registered 21 goals and 55 points in 62 AHL games this season, leading all rookies in scoring and sitting at sixth in overall AHL scoring. He also leads WBS in scoring this season. This is all quite impressive for a player’s first season in North American professional hockey.
If folks haven’t been paying attention, WBS is on quite the run this season. With one of the youngest rosters they have had in quite some time, the team clinched a Calder Cup playoff berth with a thrilling 4-3 overtime win over the Hartford Wolf Pack on Wednesday.
WBS Penguins Clinch Playoff Berth With Thrilling 4-3 Overtime Win Over HartfordHeading into a massively important game against the Hartford Wolf Pack, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins had led the season series 5-0 and had outscored Hartford, 24-5.
What WBS is doing this season is special. They have scored more goals than anyone in the AHL other than the Colorado Eagles and the San Jose Barracuda. They are tied for sixth in the league in terms of points percentage at .645. And they are 5-2-3 so far this season against the Hershey Bears, the reigning Calder Cup champs who are currently atop the division.
After the trade deadline, Penguins POHO and GM Kyle Dubas stressed the importance of the organization’s prospects building a winning culture and playing meaningful games together. And with the certainty of the Calder Cup playoffs a lock, that is still going to happen.
In other words, there is absolutely no hurt in calling up McGroarty and Koivunen to close out the regular season with the NHL club – and it was absolutely the right call.
Beyond the fact that the timeline adds up – Pittsburgh’s regular season ends on Apr. 17 against the Washington Capitals and WBS’s ends on Apr. 19 against the Cleveland Monsters, making it fair to assume both players will remain in the NHL through the end of the season – there is something to be said about the decision to reward two young prospects for their performance.
‘We’ll Begin To Shift To The Execution’: With Assets Collected, Dubas Eyes The Next Phase For Penguins HockeyPittsburgh Penguins President of Hockey Operations and General Manager Kyle Dubas knew that the decision to shift to the future a year ago with the Jake Guentzel trade to Carolina wasn’t going to be a popular one.
WBS will have a good shot at a long playoff run regardless, and both players will be back in time for that run. So this decision doesn’t harm that mentality of the young players “winning together” that Dubas and the organziation values. But what it does do is signal to the young players that they will, in fact, be rewarded when they’ve earned it.
This isn’t a small thing for an organization attempting a rebuild on-the-fly, especially with so many prospects on the verge of being NHL-ready. With several pending free agents on the NHL roster – unrestricted and restricted – it’s reasonable to assume that some of these prospects will be vying for full-time spots on the NHL roster next season.
When factoring in guys like McGroarty and Koivunen, the Penguins will have a good mix of higher-end veteran talent, youth potential, and rostered placeholders to give youth a good amount of runway to learn and develop at the NHL level. Allowing these two players to remain on the roster for the final eight games of the regular season for the NHL club will give management – and fans – a bit of a preview of what to expect in 2025-26.
Of course, it would have been nice to see prospects like Owen Pickering, Avery Hayes, Vasily Ponomarev, and perhaps even Harrison Brunicke – who was re-assigned to WBS Friday after the conclusion of his junior season with the Kamloops Blazers – get a late-season NHL opportunity as well.
But, unfortunately, the Penguins had just two of their four post-deadline recalls remaining, and they prioritized those final two slots for two players who not only earned the opportunity but also figure to be a large part of the organization’s rebuild plan moving forward.
Confidence is crucial for young players. It’s important for them to feel like their hard work is being noticed and, again, getting rewarded. That is exactly what has happened here, and McGroarty and Koivunen will be better for it when they attempt to become full-time NHLers next season.
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