Pregame
The Penguins get Blake Lizotte back from injury and give Arturs Silovs his turn in net, otherwise it’s same as it has been when in the Crosby-less times.
The visiting Buffalo Sabres bring this wagon into town.
First period
The first period is defined by four penalty calls; two on each team. The early two, first a Penguin power play then later a Sabre PP, are largely uneventful.
The last two feature a shorthanded goal by each team. The Pens get what might have been a kiss of death when Anthony Mantha attempted a low-percentage chance through the middle that got picked off. Later on, Ryan McLeod played the puck off the board and rocketed by Kris Letang. Even if Letang had abandoned his position and started backpedaling he was probably already cooked given how fast McLeod is and his propensity for taking advantage of shorthanded opportunities. McLeod makes easy work of his fifth SH goal of the season with a backhand deke. 1-0 Buffalo.
It looks like the situation might have gotten worse for Pittsburgh when they took a penalty, but a nice team effort first from Connor Clifton then from Ben Kindel gets the puck to Bryan Rust. Rust takes off, drives to the net and scores on a deke of his own while shorthanded 1-1 game.
Shots are 7-6 Buffalo after one, with the ever-rare two shorthanded goals in a period to set the score at 1-1.
Second period
Angry Geno shows up early in the second. After taking a crosscheck from Rasmus Dahlin, Malkin responds with his stick to use it to slash down on Dahlin’s head. Malkin drops his glove in anger but eases up seeing Dahlin is hurt. The refs review the call and toss Malkin from the game with a five-minute major and game misconduct for his actions.
The Pens stand strong for a while on the extended penalty kill, they finally score when a rebound comes to Josh Norris and he follows up with it. However, Josh Doan was in the blue paint and bumps into Silovs. Pittsburgh challenges the goal for goalie interference. The refs take a look but rule a slight shove by Letang contributed to the contact and allow the goal to stand.
That means a delay of game penalty for Pittsburgh, who face 1:28 of a 5v3. While that is going on, Buffalo takes a penalty. Then the refs put an arm up for another delayed call on Pittsburgh and the Sabres score to make it 3-1.
The Pens are way on their back foot now, Owen Power skates up from his defensive position to take a cross-ice pass and fires a puck through Silovs. 4-1 game, still 9:32 to go in the period.
The Pens get their best offensive zone shift of probably the whole game, and even that ends in disaster when Brock Malenstyn sends Parker Wotherspoon head-first into the boards. Wotherspoon slowly scrapes himself off the ice, Malenstyn only gets two minutes on the call. Egor Chinakhov sends a puck off the post.
Well, this one spiraled out of control in the second. Awful decision by Malkin and the team got put into a hole they kept falling deeper into against a quality opponent who had plenty of chances to take advantage.
Third period
The nastiness continues, the refs blow a play dead for offsides but Justin Brazeau weakly shoots it at the goalie anyways. Buffalo players gets in his face and Avery Hayes delivers a little shot to Tuch from behind, felling Tuch for a bit. The temps are getting warmer and playoff intensity is almost here!
Ben Kindel pins a Buffalo player’s stick to his body and clamps down, drawing the ire of the refs. The Pens kill this one off.
Pittsburgh draws a penalty and then pull the goalie with over 7 minutes to play to gain a 6v4 advantage. Gotta love it! Doesn’t pay off, finally with 3:07 remaining Buffalo gets their next shot on goal, a long-distance one that finds the target. 5-1.
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Some thoughts
- Malkin should expect to hear from the league office for his actions. The slow motion replay, as ever, loses some context and makes the play look even worse but there’s still no excuse to respond to a cross-check by hacking a guy in the head. That’s a suspendable action. Malkin was last suspended in 2022, technically he won’t be a “repeat offender” for disciplinary purposes since it’s been more than 18 months since his last suspension. In 2017, Radko Gudas received a 10-game suspension for slashing on arguably a more savage event during the course of play. Who knows how that might compare or apply to this situation but either way it’s likely going to be a multi-game absence for Malkin coming up.
- The one piece of good news is Dahlin returned to the game and apparently didn’t pick up an injury out of it. That’s going to be a positive factor in Malkin’s favor for whatever decision is made.
- Dan Muse still hasn’t won a goalie interference challenge this season, but I can’t blame him too much for this challenge (unlike some in the past). This was a good opportunity to have the refs take a look at the play, we’ve seen goals across the league taken away for less. It backfired, but given the situation to potentially bring the score back to 1-1, can’t knock the decision making this time around. And that said, all in all, Letang did push Doan which may/may not have been the deciding factor, sometimes gotta chance that it’ll go your way.
- Wotherspoon is a tough customer and fortunately was able to keep playing on. He took a nasty lick, if we’re going to review penalties that certainly could have warranted an extra look. Kinda crazy this is a league where you can nearly paralyze a guy and receive the same punishment as flipping the puck out of play in the defensive zone or send an extra player out there too soon.
- Wotherspoon did come back after that hit, but only skated three shifts for 3:06 icetime in the third period. It’ll be worth watching what happens with him moving forward, the Pens really can’t afford to lose him for an extended amount of time.
- Teams are scoring so much at 6v5 this season in late-game situations when pulling the goalie, why not pull the goalie with all the time in the world left while down three goals and on the power play? Gotta get creative and try new things, there’s some statistical school of thoughts that say NHL teams should be much more aggressive at pulling their goalie. Nothing ventured, nothing gained and let’s be honest down that many goals with time starting to go away it’s a good time for a drastic decision.
Well, that was forgettable. The Pens move on for two more home games this weekend, starting on Saturday.