Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (2-2-0, 4 points, 4th place Metropolitan Division) @ Los Angeles Kings (1-2-1, 3 points, 5th place Pacific Division)
Pittsburg, PA
Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ LA Kings 10/16/25
How to Watch: Locally broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh and Fanduel Sports Network, streaming on ESPN+
Pens’ Path Ahead: This seems like the first time in forever the Pens go out west to either California or the upper Canadian swing and don’t have to play a back-to-back while on the trip. Pittsburgh finishes their Cali journey up in San Jose on Saturday night, before heading home to play Vancouver at PPG Paints on Tuesday. Then the Pens are right back to a warm venue a week from tonight down in Sunrise, Florida to play the Panthers. Kinda a bummer for them that they’re using up all these warm weather locales before winter has even got a chance to hit.
Opponent Track: Challenging start for the Kings, they opened up at home losing 4-1 to Colorado last Tuesday and them embarked on a 1-1-1 road trip with stops in Vegas (shootout win), Winnipeg (3-2 regulation loss) and Minnesota (shootout loss). It’s probably worth noting that so many of those games were very close and they’ve now had two days off since their last game. LA stays at home after tonight for a Saturday night visit from Carolina.
Season Series: The Kings come to Pittsburgh in a few weeks on Sunday November 9th to wrap up the season series early. Last year the Pens went 2-0-0 against LA (with an OT game to make it a 0-1-1 record for the Kings).
Hidden Stat: Los Angeles has been short-handed an NHL high 22 times this young season in just four games and at 68.2%, their seven goals allowed on the PK ranks tied for the most in the league as of Wednesday.
Getting to know the Kings
Andrei Kuzmenko – Anze Kopitar? – Adrian Kempe
Kevin Fiala – Qunton Byfield – Joel Armia
Warren Foegele – Philip Danault – Trevor Moore
Jeff Malott – Alex Turcotte – Alex Laferriere
Brian Dumoulin / Drew Doughty
Joel Edmundson / Brandt Clarke
Mikey Anderson / Cody Ceci
Goalies: Anton Forsberg and Pheonix Copley
Scratches: Samuel Helenius, Jacob Moverare, Darcy Kuemper (injured)
IR: Corey Perry, Kyle Burroughs
—Kopitar sounds like a true ‘game time decision’ after missing practice yesterday with an undisclosed injury. The Kings didn’t alter the rest of the lines, it sounds like they’re hopeful but uncertain that he will be able to play.
—There is less optimism around Kuemper, who it’s looking like won’t be available to play today with an injury. That puts Forsberg in-line to start tonight, the Kings just re-acquired Copley from Tampa via a trade yesterday (who LA recently lost to the waiver wire to TB) as Copley continues to bounce around to a team in need of a backup goalie.
—It’s an “old guys rule” theme today for Pittsburgh sports on a night where ancient QB’s Aaron Rodgers and Joe Flacco are going to duel it out. The Kings/Pens have plenty of their own elder statesmen between Kopitar, Perry, Doughty, Kuemper, Crosby, Malkin, Letang and Karlsson all being 35+ years old with several pushing 40, though Perry won’t be joining in tonight.
—The Kings and Pens are also similar that if you only look at their top two forward lines they look pretty impressive. Then you get to the lower halves and defensive part of the lineup…
- Kempe is in a contract year and has been a major problem for the Penguins (10 goals and 15 points in 14 career games). He’s certainly the player to circle on the board in the lockerroom as the one to watch. Kempe is always dangerous and usually is going to get his against Pittsburgh.
- Kopitar, a 2005 draft pick, has announced his retirement at the end of this season. He’s getting to that age, but his play hasn’t dropped off much at all lately (scoring 74, 70 and 67 points in the last three seasons). He’s off to a good start in what will be the final year of his decorated career, always a little bitter to see the curtain come down on such a great player, and unfortunate to see that he might not be able to play against the Pens tonight.
- Last season, Darcy Kuemper returned to LA as a hero after two rocky seasons in Washington. Kuemper was a Vezina finalist, posting a 31-11-7 record with a 2.02 GAA and .922 save%. Obviously it’s very early, but his start is about as far from Vezina-worthy as possible behind a Kings team that also needs to make a lot of improvements to help support their goalie defensively. And now he’s hurt, which makes the short-term look even worse with a Forsberg-Copley tandem for the near future.
- Getting a top-5 pick is great in theory and often in execution, but 2019 fifth overall Alex Turcotte hasn’t found his footing in the NHL (30 points in 104 career games). The Kings were able to get big wins with top draft picks of Quinton Byfield and the blossoming Brandt Clarke from their fairly quick post-Cup rebuild that took place from 2018-21 but it’s worth wondering in the big picture if they stocked up on enough elite talent to be a true contender. Tangential, but that can be the danger with a high pick to end up unknowingly pass on Moritz Seider, Dylan Cozens, Matt Boldy types and select a player who isn’t worthy of the draft spot. The Kings have had enough other material to not have that pick emerge as a damaging miss, but in the long run it represents a big lost opportunity and shows a potential trouble/pressure of needing to nail such important picks.
The Kings’ biggest off-season moves were to sign Brian Dumoulin and Cody Ceci, who signed for three and four years respectively at $4.0m and $4.5m cap hits. The moves were immediately panned as unwise and clowned all over social media, and in the early going of the season that has come to pass in a major way. Dumoulin/Ceci as a pair were outshot 28-13, outscored 5-0 and had to be split apart. Figuring out how to utilize these two former Penguins is going to be a tall task and a potentially lingering issue for LA for the foreseeable future, it brings no joy to show that in a very brief sample that Dumoulin has dragged Doughty down to a 38 xGF%. They had no choice but to eliminate a disaster Dumoulin/Ceci pair, but now the trade off means those players split up could negatively effect even more of the team on separate pairings.
It hurts more since the team lost Vladislav Gavrikov, who signed with NYR for a $7.0 million cap hit. In theory, replacing the one player in the aggregate with multiple ones may pay off in some disciplines but the issue was the age and ability of what the Kings went out and got at this point of the careers of Ceci and Dumoulin.
Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust
Anthony Mantha – Evgeni Malkin – Justin Brazeau
Tommy Novak – Ben Kindel – Philip Tomasino
Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Filip Hallander
Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson
Matthew Dumba / Connor Clifton
Goalies: Arturs Silovs, Tristan Jarry
Potential Scratches: Noel Acciari, Caleb Jones, Harrison Brunicke
IR: Kevin Hayes (upper body, week-to-week), Jack St. Ivany (week-to-week, lower body), Rutger McGroarty (indefinite, upper body), Joel Blomqvist (week-to-week, lower body)
- The Penguins had an off day yesterday, without any practice inputs we’ll keep the lines in tact from what was used last game – fully knowing that the lineup subject to change and almost certainly will be tweaked will being as Dan Muse has rotated through players with some frequency early on. To that end, I would imagine the Kings are not seen to have the skating/speed that Anaheim did, which might draw Acciari back into the lineup, and there certainly are no shortage of forwards from the lower lines that could be scratched for the night to make way for that.
- Defensively, you’d probably think they’re not going to keep Brunicke watching and not playing for a continuous amount of time, complicated by the point that the most obvious player to take out of the last lineup (Dumba) is also the most experienced/accomplished right-shot defender playing on the left side. The Pens did try a Letang/Brunicke pair in practice earlier in the week, that could be something they circle back to, though with Kris Letang struggling on his own it might not be the time to pair him with a rookie who can be a question mark positionally/defensively on his own.
- Muse has rotated the goalies evenly so far going Silovs-Jarry-Silovs-Jarry, is there any reason to expect that not to continue? If it holds, that would put Silovs back in the net tonight and give him a chance to play a team other than the Rangers for the first time this season. Jarry wasn’t necessarily the team’s biggest problem on Tuesday but an 18 save on 22 shot performance in a loss doesn’t exactly scream “I’m taking the ball and running with it”, either.
The Penguins only have seven 5v5 goals through the four games that they’ve played. Just imagine where the team would be without Justin Brazeau’s three 5v5 goals! (Who would have imagined that would be a sentence with all those words touching even 10 days ago?)
On the bright side, at least the Pens are creating chances and getting good looks but they need to start finishing. Unfortunately that last statement is an all too common in this post-playoff era of the Penguins. It would be one thing if they weren’t good enough to generate chances, but failing to be able to convert into goals has been a cruel twist of fate for a team that as recently as 2021 scored 201 5v5 goals on 168 xGF, held strong in 2021-22 with 180 goals vs 178 xGF in the last year they made the playoffs. Since then, it’s been over a cliff:
- 168 goals vs 202 xGF in 2022-23
- 179 goals vs 186 xGF in 2023-24
- 157 goals vs 178 xGF in 2024-25
Show me a team that develops a consistent trend of failing to convert on their chances and I’ll show you a bad team. In a related note, there are disturbing signs that song is starting all over again already with the Pens netting 7 goals against their 10 xGF in the early going of 2025-26.
It doesn’t help that Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin have a goose egg in 5v5 goals, though Malkin has three 5v5 assists and Crosby has two. Bryan Rust has only played two of the games and been held without a goal. Rickard Rakell’s only ES goal came off a deflection last game, he’s yet to score a goal from a shot he’s generated himself. Despite the playmaking inputs (which do count for something), any instance where those four star players combine for only a single goal over a four-game stretch means the chances are the Pittsburgh offense isn’t in a good place in that time. And it’s hasn’t been with only 2.16 goals/60. Those four combined for 69 5v5 goals last season, sooner or later they will start filling the net with more frequency based on the chances they are generating but for now it’s a sore spot that they have run cold. (In fact, one could see signals that the turnaround is already showing signs of taking place: Crosby was on the ice for absolutely zero 5v5 goals for in the first three games of the season, but then assisted on two 5v5 goals last game against Anaheim).
To compound the matter, the third and fourth lines put together only have one 5v5 goal, via rookie Ben Kindel. Those lines aren’t expected to produce in spades, but one goal in 24-combined man games from the bottom six is an uninspiring contribution in totality.
The defense has matched that meager output with one goal through their own 24-combined man games, via rookie Harrison Brunicke. That’s to be expected, last year the Pens only received 21 5v5 goals from all their defensemen all season. Blueliners aren’t counted on to produce 5v5 goals themselves, and at least Ryan Shea was sending in deflectable point shots to boost the forwards.
So you can cut the defense a break here, but the outlook has to be less charitable for the forwards. The helpers aren’t helping out much. That of course doesn’t apply to the one-man wrecking crew known as Brazeau, and to a lesser degree of Anthony Mantha who was able to chip in his first 5v5 goal last game, which is more than all the rest of the forwards not named Kindel or Rakell can say.
The good news is that you would think tonight could be a chance to start getting right. The Kings have been a hot mess defensively this season in terms of breakdowns and conceding goals against, 16 in the four games. As mentioned in the hidden stat, a lot of that bleeding has come on their penalty kill but the circumstance should be right for Pittsburgh. The Pens will likely see 32-year old backup Forsberg in net, who has a career GAA north of 3 (3.05 to be exact) and a losing record of 75-81-14. This Pittsburgh team is going to have to pick its spots and exploit the teams where they can, tonight ought to be a pretty good opportunity for the offense to come to life.
Focus on: the penalty kill
The Pens’ penalty kill has perhaps been their biggest culprit in their last two games, which not so coincidentally doubles as both of their losses in the season. It’s certainly one of the most visible and glaring issues the team has right now, given the late penalty and almost immediate goal against with 1:27 to go that turned getting at least a point in overtime into a stone cold regulation loss. The Pittsburgh PK is only 6 for the last 10, giving up a pair of goals while shorthanded in each of their losses. An underlying issue can be readily seen by the team stress-testing their penalty kill with 10 opponent power plays in two games, which creates a tough spot to be at in the first place.
LA’s power play has scored a modest three power play goals in their four games, on 13 attempts on the season (23.1%). Kopitar has factored into all three PPG the Kings have this year with assists, and he figures to be at less than 100% today — if he is even able to play at all while dealing with his injury.
The Penguins may not win this game even with a great night on the PK, but if they get rung up for a PPG against (or two..or three..) the odds of losing sky rocket. That will be a focus to watch and see tonight; first if Pittsburgh can effectively stay out of the penalty box more than they have been in recent games, and second to limit the damage and steady their ship in that regard when they are shorthanded.
Pittsburg, PA
Prince of Pittsburgh: Cole Young delivers go-ahead homer in 3-2 Mariners win
There’s a running joke in one of my group chats that Cole Young looks like a Disney prince who decided to play baseball instead (show me the lie). In tonight’s series opener against the Pirates, Young Prince Cole had a game fit for a golden era Disney film. Making his first-ever appearance as a big-leaguer in PNC Park, where the Pittsburgh-born Young grew up attending games, and in front of a host of friends, family, and former coaches – including his coach at North Allegheny High, Andrew Heck – Young had a go-ahead homer that would be the game-winner for the Mariners in a narrow 3-2 victory over the Pirates.
The Mariners scored all their runs via the longball tonight, even though only two made it over the fence: they made 11 outs in the air, along with a pair of hard-hit lineouts, but the balls consistently died at the warning track. Meanwhile, the Pirates managed to scrape out a lead on George Kirby, first going up 1-0 in the second on a combination of an Endy Rodríguez double and a Marcell Ozuna RBI single, both hits coming on four-seamers that caught too much plate.
Pittsburgh would add on another run in the bottom of the third, although this wasn’t as much Kirby’s fault. Brandon Lowe singled on a curveball that was well-located, and then would come around to score on a weakly-hit ball off the bat of Nick Gonzales that J.P. Crawford couldn’t field cleanly. Today was the first day Crawford has looked shaky at third after being impressive in his first few turns at the position, but he was far from the only one performing some shaky defense, as even the normally sure-handed Colt Emerson threw one away, and Josh Naylor struggled to corral some of those wilder throws.
To his credit, Kirby was able to navigate around those hiccups and also some self-inflicted traffic. He and Cal Raleigh made a good adjustment after the first couple of innings, realizing the Pirates were keyed in on his fastball, and Kirby found the command over his sweeper, which had been somewhat all over the place in the early innings. Kirby leaned heavily on the sweeper over the rest of his outing, throwing it 46% of the time – normally he uses the pitch under 30% of the time, while halving the use of his fastball. All five of his strikeouts today came on the sweeper.
“It seemed like they had a pretty good gameplan of swinging first pitch, and I don’t blame ‘em,” said Kirby. “But I feel like I settled in pretty good once I got that slider working.”
The Mariners offense has been stingy with giving Kirby run support, but Cal Raleigh came through with his first homer after coming back from his stint on the IL, punishing a mistake slider Pirates starter Mitch Keller hung on the plate and finally getting a ball over the fence at PNC Park, a 393-footer to right center.
The Mariners would do just enough to get past the Pirates in the seventh inning, spurred on by the hometown kid, Cole Young. Luke Raley led off with a hustle double, lacing a sinker into center and running hard enough to beat Jake Mangum’s throw in. He needn’t have hustled quite so hard, though. With Young due up, 0-for-2 on the day so far with a pair of groundouts (including an inning-ending GIDP), the Pirates elected to leave in the righty Keller instead of going to the bullpen. Keller made a mistake pitch, leaving a sweeper right in Young’s lefty loop zone, and Young – who said he was just trying to hit a single into right to score the run – instead hit play on a highlight reel that will be replayed at every family gathering to come for years, crushing a go-ahead home run that went right past the section of his family and friends.
“I knew I got it good, so it had a chance,” said Young postgame. “t’s really special. I got my whole family, all my friends in the stands…It was a super surreal moment. It was great. I just kind of blacked out a little bit.”
“Just glad I got the job done,” he added, because once the son of a blue-collar rust belt city like Pittsburgh, always the lunchpail-toter.
The Mariners couldn’t add on after that despite some more traffic on the bases, leaving the back end of the bullpen just one measly run to work with. José A. Ferrer was terrific, putting down his assigned hitters in the seventh 1-2-3, Eduard Bazardo had to work a little harder, but was able to work around a single from lefty Ryan O’Hearn and a semi-intentional walk to Marcell Ozuna to keep the score intact. He might not have had a clean inning, but he did pick up a Pitching Ninja highlight:
Armed with that same one-run lead, Andrés Muñoz had the ninth and looked maybe the best he has all season: his fastball was up a full two ticks, averaging 100.7 and touching 102. He struck out the side, including Spencer Horwitz, who walks more than he strikes out, and ended his night on a filthy bit of sequencing to Brandon Lowe where he went down with a slider for a foul followed by high heat.
But tonight belongs to the Prince of Pittsburgh, Cole Young. In a season that’s been plagued by injuries, Young has been the Mariners’ iron man, playing every day. He’s been the steady lighthouse in an infield that’s been beset by injuries and mistakes both rookie and veteran, even flexing back to shortstop when needed despite the difficulties he experienced making the full-time shift to second base last year. Because of his availability and steady hand at the keystone, he’s essentially been unbenchable, meaning that as teams load up on lefties to serve the Mariners a bottomless buffet of southpaws, Young hasn’t been granted the day off, even as he’s gone through fallow periods with the bat.
Tonight, in front of friends and family and the high school baseball coaches who helped shape the player he is today, Young was rewarded with a fairy-tale moment. His high school coach even got the home run ball. Heck offered to give it back to Cole, but Cole told him to keep it, because what matters even more than the happily ever after are the people who helped you get there in the first place.
Pittsburg, PA
Will Howard, Drew Allar Huge Winners of Steelers QB News
The Pittsburgh Steelers’ pair of young quarterbacks received some refreshing news regarding Brendan Sorsby.
With the NFL opting not to hold a supplemental draft this summer and thus ensuring Sorsby’s only other opportunity to enter the league is by declaring for the 2027 NFL Draft, both Will Howard and Drew Allar won’t face any competition from another up-and-coming signal caller this summer.
While next year’s draft is still the target for the Steelers when it comes to finding a franchise quarterback, having to kick the can down the road in this instance means Howard and Allar now have additional time to prove themselves and aren’t at risk of losing their respective roles in 2026.
How Howard Benefits
Unless Pittsburgh was willing, or planning, to carry four quarterbacks had it landed Sorsby in the supplemental draft before it was nixed, Howard was all but certain to part ways with the organization.
Perhaps he would’ve latched back onto the practice squad if he were cut and subsequently cleared waivers, but the 24-year-old would’ve otherwise become a complete afterthought behind Sorsby and Allar.
The outlook on Howard ever becoming a long-term starter for the Steelers is grim at best. Because Sorsby won’t be on the roster this season, however, his battle with Mason Rudolph for the backup job behind Aaron Rodgers won’t be rendered obsolete.
It’s possible Howard could win it over Rudolph and show enough leading into the 2027 campaign that he could earn the starting role to open the year before Allar or a rookie takes over.
That feels like it’s looking too far ahead, though. In the present, the fact that Sorsby isn’t on the team means Howard’s odds of cracking the 53-man roster remain rather high.
Allar Is In a Good Spot
Assuming trading Allar was never on the table regardless of their potential plans if they had brought Sorsby in, the Penn State product was always going to be on the Steelers’ roster in 2026.
The third-round rookie would’ve had far more of a convoluted path to any sort of meaningful role with the team had Sorsby shared the quarterback room with him, though.
Their strengths are incredibly similar, though Sorsby has a significant leg-up over Allar in terms of his mobility, which could’ve ultimately been the difference down the line in any position battle between the two.
It’s still too early to champion Allar, and it’s likely that a first-round quarterback in the 2027 draft would usurp him if that’s the direction Pittsburgh ends up going in.
Nevertheless, with less pressure and more focus from the coaching staff on helping him develop than there would’ve been if Sorsby were in town, Allar doesn’t have to worry about competing with another signal caller when he isn’t really ready to do so.
Make sure to bookmark Steelers On SI, and find our podcast All Steelers Talk on YouTube or anywhere you listen!
Follow
Pittsburg, PA
Pittsburgh among best U.S. cities in 2026 rankings. Here’s why
Pittsburgh ranks among the top 25 best places to live, work and visit in the U.S., according to a new report.
The 2026 “America’s Best Cities” report from Resonance, an international business consulting company, ranks the top 100 U.S. metro areas overall based on factors such as economic data, quality of living and public perception. Pittsburgh scored in the top quarter of cities nationwide.
Here’s a breakdown of how Pittsburgh ranks.
Pittsburgh ranks among top U.S. cities
Overall, Pittsburgh scored at No. 25 among U.S. cities.
Top-scoring cities almost all “made the visitor and resident experience a strategic priority,” according to the report. Rankings were also further broken down based on each key scoring components.
Pittsburgh has put a focus on its cultural amenities and food scene, as well as in revitalizing its neighborhoods, the report noted. While other similarly sized cities in the ranking have fallen, Pittsburgh climbed by five spots in 2026.
Pittsburgh among best cities for livability
Pittsburgh scored at No. 24 among U.S. cities for its livability.
The report’s livability scores were ranked in accordance to the quality of daily life in a city based on factors such as walkability, transit access, air quality, climate risk, green space, housing costs relative to income, broadband connectivity, healthcare access and life expectancy, as well as if the location is somewhere people would want to live.
Pittsburgh ranks in top 30 cities for lovability, prosperity
Pittsburgh ranked among the top 30 U.S. cities for both its lovability and its prosperity, scoring at No. 26 for lovability and No. 28 for prosperity.
Lovability was scored based on factors like the quality and quantity of venues such as restaurants, arts and entertainment sites, museums, outdoor experiences and nightlife. Digital data such as search trends, social media activity and other user-generated content was also considered.
Prosperity rankings were based on factors such as gross domestic product per capita, labor force participation, innovation capital intensity, educational attainment, unemployment and poverty rates, the presence of major corporate headquarters, university quality and the number of direct air connections.
Philadelphia ranked just a few spots above Pittsburgh at No. 20 overall.
Top 10 cities in 2026 ‘Best Cities’ ranking
The top 10 cities in the ranking are:
- New York, NY
- Los Angeles, CA
- Chicago, IL
- Miami, FL
- San Francisco, CA
- Seattle, WA
- Las Vegas, NV
- Dallas, TX
- Houston, TX
- Boston, MA
Finch Walker is the Pittsburgh Connect Reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Contact Walker at FWalker@usatodayco.com. Instagram: @finchwalker_. X: @_finchwalker.
-
Missouri3 minutes agoMissouri ice cream shop named best in the state. Here’s why.
-
Montana6 minutes ago
Social media star Montana Tucker to host Maccabiah Games delegation parade | The Jerusalem Post
-
Nebraska11 minutes agoUNMC teams with Central Nebraska Health Departments to assess needs, test water after March wildfires
-
New Hampshire21 minutes agoMasked men with baseball bats terrorize 12-year-old during NH home invasion
-
North Carolina26 minutes agoHenri Veesaar’s North Carolina exit proves to be costly beyond belief
-
New Jersey26 minutes ago8 Somerset County Cops Named In ‘Major Discipline’ Report Released By NJAG Office
-
New Mexico33 minutes agoFeds allowed millions of fentanyl pills to ‘walk’ on New Mexico streets: DEA Whistleblower
-
North Dakota41 minutes agoFinding a hero: Efforts to identify North Dakota soldier Irvin C. Ellingson’s remains took years