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Penguins Ready to Shift from Asset Collection to Execution | Pittsburgh Penguins
Over the last year, Penguins President of Hockey Operations and GM Kyle Dubas and his staff have accrued assets, flexibility and cap space as they work to return the Penguins to contention as soon as possible.
This week alone, which culminated with the NHL trade deadline on Friday, Pittsburgh collected a number of draft picks after the moves they made – which were:
- Acquiring a 2028 fifth-round draft pick from San Jose for defenseman Vincent Desharnais
- Acquiring defenseman Luke Schenn and forward Tommy Novak from the Nashville Predators in exchange for Michael Bunting and a 2026 fourth-round draft pick…
- And then later flipping Schenn to Winnipeg for a 2026 second-round draft pick and a 2027 fourth-round draft pick
- Acquiring a 2025 second-round draft pick from Washington in exchange for forward Anthony Beauvillier
- Acquiring Chase Stillman, Max Graham and a 2027 third-round draft pick from the New Jersey Devils in exchange for forwards Cody Glass and Jonathan Gruden
- Finally, acquiring defenseman Conor Timmins and forward Connor Dewar from the Toronto Maple Leafs in exchange for a 2025 fifth-round draft pick.
At this point, no team has more draft picks or selections in the first three rounds over the next three NHL Drafts than Pittsburgh. “Triples of the third (round) of (2025), triples of the second (round) in (2026) and triples again of the third (round) of (2027). Triples is best,” Dubas said with a smile.
Now, the Penguins will start executing on the haul they’ve collected, guided by this main question: what’s in the best interest of the team? For example, it won’t be feasible for the Penguins to use every single draft pick and expect all of those players to become part of the club sooner rather than later. Instead, they’ll make picks available for trade.
“If there are opportunities to use the excess capital that we’ve accumulated, whether it’s cap space or draft picks or to add players to the program to help propel it ahead, we won’t hesitate to do that,” said Dubas, who understands that being sellers at the trade deadline is not what fans are used to in Pittsburgh, and said this can’t be the norm every year.
“I think I’ve always come in and said there is no ambition on my end to have this take any longer than it needs to take, both for the city and for the people who have put in a lot. That’s not just players, but staff that has been around for a long time. There is a certain level, and when the level drops off, you don’t want the standards and the core ideology to erode. That’s what we worked towards each day.”
The goal, said Dubas, is to try and build a group around the core players – starting with Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Kris Letang, with Erik Karlsson, Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell included in that mix – and give them one or two more chances to win while they’re still on their current contracts, which have varying timelines.
That being said, Dubas made a point to emphasize that they won’t necessarily turn around and spend all of their assets this summer, saying that some patience is still required, and that expectations must be tempered.
“We’re going to survey the landscape as urgently as we can each day to find moves that can best help propel the team ahead,” Dubas said. “If there aren’t moves available, we will execute on these picks with our personnel staff – with (director of professional personnel) Andy Saucier and (vice president of player personnel) Wes Clark – to make sure we’re bringing the best young talent that we can.
“How it lines up with the older players, all I can give is my pledge that we are going through everything we can to attempt to have them all have one last chance, or multiple, depending on how long they play. I’m not going to start to doubt with these guys.”
In the meantime, Dubas said the message to Pittsburgh’s roster moving forward through the rest of the season is that they expect the standards to be upheld, and they expect the players to come in, play hard and be at their best every single day.
“There’s a massive amount of opportunities for these guys who are on short-term deals or that have aspirations to remain in the league,” Dubas said. “For the guys who have been up and down in the minors or here, for the new players coming in (like) Connor Dewar and Conor Timmins, Tommy Novak – it’s a great opportunity to assert themselves for where they want to be next season. They’re all under team control. We have huge expectations in Wilkes-Barre for what they’re going to do the rest of the year, as well.
“I know it’s not typical and we won’t allow it to become typical, but I do think this remaining five or six weeks is a great opportunity for the organization and the players within to show us that they are a part of bringing us back into contention.”
Dubas also went into specifics on a few players, starting with the ones whose names came up the most in trade rumors. Here’s what he had to say about those guys…
RICKARD RAKELL: “He is a big part of our program. … Everyone has seen this year – he’s got a long history of the type of player that he is – but we see him every day, the type of person he his as well. When you have players that perform that way on a game-in, game-out basis that show the ability to respond when things don’t go well then can propel themselves back into being near the top of the league and perform at that level, it’s not something that you – especially when you have them signed and they want to be a part of the community, they want to be part of the program, they know the path that we’re on and they want to be a part of helping to bring the team back to being in contention – I would say that you don’t just push that out the door because that may be what’s wanted. You have to do what’s right for the Pittsburgh Penguins. And for us, having Rickard Rakell as part of the Pittsburgh Penguins was definitely the right thing to do as we measured it up against everything. We’re happy to have him, he’s a big part of what we do and I know he really wants to be here.”
MATT GRZELCYK: “There was interest, teams kicking tires, but in the end, we got through the deadline and he remains a member of our team. We expect him to continue to have a strong season and when we brought him in, I pledged that we would give him the opportunity to get things back rolling. He’s taken advantage of that. We’ll continue to push him to do so here through the last stretch of the year.”
ERIK KARLSSON: “He came in the same summer I did. The team is coming out of missing the playoffs. The attempt was to bring him in and the things we did in the summer of ’23 to try to get a run, that was the strategy. Try to give it one jolt to try to propel it back in. It didn’t work. So, Erik, to me, it’s really from a team perspective, not having to do with Erik. The team is not in the contending space that it was in for the decades prior, frankly. So, with him, he’s such a talented player. I know, night in and night out, like our team has, it can be a little up and down. But the skating continues to be some of the best in the league. Obviously, offensively and puck movement continues to be at that level. We have to keep pushing him. I think he can be a part of helping our team continue to move along. So, I don’t sense with his skating or his talent and ability that there’s going to be any real dropoff. There was no discussion, there was nothing taken to him about waiving his no-move. And he’s not a player that we would look to just move along. He’s a hugely valuable player in the league. I think we’ll be here and we’ll be in the marketplace come summer or next year, depending on where we’re at.”
Watch Dubas’ full media availability below…
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Steelers re-sign veteran running back
The Pittsburgh Steelers are re-signing veteran running back Trey Sermon, the team announced today. Sermon has had multiple on-and-off stints with the Steelers since signing with the team rookie mini-camp. He’s appeared in three games for the Steelers in 2025.
Sermon was drafted in the third round of the 2021 NFL Draft by the San Francisco 49ers. In 46 career games, Sermon has 505 yards on 134 carries and three touchdowns with the 49ers, Philadelphia Eagles, Indianapolis Colts, and Steelers.
The Steelers have the chance to put the Baltimore Ravens on the ropes this Sunday. If they defeat the Detroit Lions, the Ravens would have to defeat one of the New England Patriots or Green Bay Packers for the Week 18 matchup between the Steelers and Ravens to have any stakes. The Steelers can also clinch the division before Week 18 if they win their next two games and the Ravens go 1-1 or 0-2.
Be sure to bookmark Behind the Steel Curtain for all the latest news, breakdowns, and more!
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Steelers passed the eye test for the first time in a while in a dominant win over Miami
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Steelers don’t play a particularly aesthetically pleasing brand of football. It’s been that way for a while.
The offense can lack explosion for long stretches. The defense can get pushed around with alarming ease against quality opponents. The coaching decisions sometimes randomly flip-flop between aggressive and overly cautious.
The Steelers almost need a specific set of circumstances to succeed. They need to run the ball. They need to take it away. They need to avoid mistakes. It’s a formula as old as the game itself, and at times in recent years, it has felt more stale than steady.
Yet occasionally, there are stretches when Pittsburgh finds a way to thread the needle well enough that what is old feels new again.
One of those stretches arrived late in the first half of what became a 28-15 dismantling of Miami on Monday night that kept the Steelers (8-6) one game ahead of Baltimore for the top spot in the AFC North.
Four offensive drives, all of them at least 60 yards in length, produced touchdowns that turned a 3-0 deficit into a 25-point lead, their biggest advantage at any point in a game since 2020.
While 42-year-old Aaron Rodgers was channeling his prime at wintry Acrisure Stadium by completing 23 of 27 passes for 224 yards and two scores, a defense playing without superstar outside linebacker T.J. Watt overwhelmed Dolphins quarterback Tua Tagovailoa during a third quarter in which Miami ran six plays and lost 20 yards in the process.
Though the Dolphins managed a pair of meaningless touchdowns late to make the final score more respectable, the outcome was never in doubt in the second half and offered tangible proof that Pittsburgh’s hope of playing its best football in December wasn’t just an empty promise.
Stringing together performances like the one the Steelers enjoyed on Monday night has been a challenge — and what has made the Steelers so confounding for much of the last decade.
Yet for the first time in a while, Pittsburgh looked like a first-place team capable of doing more than squeaking into the playoffs before meekly exiting. As rocky as it was during a 2-5 stretch in which their comfortable AFC North lead vanished, they’ll take it.
“We hold ourselves to a higher standard here,” longtime defensive captain Cam Heyward said. “You know, when you play for a team like this that’s had a lot of success, and, you know, we’re not responsible for that, those guys before (did that). We are trying to grasp what they did. The expectations are high, and we like it that way.”
What’s working
Finding experienced players looking for an opportunity midseason and having them make an impact.
The list of what Rodgers described as “cast-offs” includes wide receivers Marquez Valdes-Scantling and Adam Thielen and cornerback Asante Samuel Jr., all of whom made plays that contributed to perhaps Pittsburgh’s most complete performance since beating Minnesota in Ireland at the end of September.
Valdes-Scantling caught his first touchdown pass from Rodgers since 2021 when they were both in Green Bay. Samuel collected his first pick since 2023 and Thielen had his first reception and added a perfect kick-out block that opened up a lane for a Jonnu Smith touchdown run.
What needs help
The weather wasn’t conducive to a hot start and it took the offense a while to get going. While Pittsburgh did eventually score touchdowns on four straight possessions for the first time since 2018, the Steelers have been slow to warm up for most of the season, something they’ll likely need to avoid on Sunday in Detroit if they want to keep pace with the Lions.
Stock up
Tight ends Jonnu Smith and Pat Freiermuth had virtually disappeared from the offense entirely in recent weeks as Darnell Washington took on an increasingly larger role in the passing game.
That changed against Miami. Smith had three touches for 26 yards, including the second rushing touchdown of his nine-year career on a cleverly designed pitch early in the fourth quarter that put the game out of reach.
Freiermuth had more yards receiving (45) than he had in the previous four games combined, nimbly adjusting his routes against Miami’s zone.
Stock down
The “Fire Tomlin!” chants that popped up in the waning stages of a blowout loss at home to Buffalo on Nov. 30. Winning two straight and looking pretty good in the process will do that.
For all of the vitriol aimed at the NFL’s longest-tenured head coach by a portion of the fan base, the Steelers are where they have always been during Tomlin’s 19-year run: in the mix as Christmas approaches.
Even Ben Roethlisberger, who suggested recently it might be time for the team to “clean house,” said on Monday night before being inducted into the club’s Hall of Honor that he’d be fine if Tomlin coached in Pittsburgh for 10 more years.
Injuries
Watt’s status remains uncertain as he recovers from surgery to repair a partially collapsed lung suffered following a dry-needling treatment last week. … Veteran LG Isaac Seumalo sustained a triceps injury in the second half against Miami. … OLB Nick Herbig left late with a hamstring injury. It’s unclear whether it’s an aggravation of the hamstring injury that forced him to miss the season opener. … LT Andrus Peat remains in the concussion protocol. … CB James Pierre could return from a calf injury that forced him to sit out on Monday night.
Key number
23 — Consecutive home wins on Monday night for the Steelers.
Next steps
Try to keep it going in Detroit, no easy task against an explosive Lions team that will be playing with its season on the line.
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AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl
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