Monday, May 25, 2020

On the Cusp of the Cup


1991 Stanley Cup Final, Game 6
Gameday...


For the first time in their history, the Penguins would be playing a game with the Stanley Cup in the building, ready for them to win. But first they’d have to take another game in the resilient North Stars’ raucous home rink.
The mood amongst the players was a good, positive one, recalled Troy Loney. While driving to the rink with Joe Mullen that morning for a team skate, he asked his teammate, Can you feel this? “Joey said, ‘Yeah. We don’t usually get really nervous, but we’re pretty nervous here.’ And then we both said, ‘Yeah but it’s a good nervous.’ We were just on fire at that point, and we knew there was no way we could lose that game.”
According to assistant coach Rick Kehoe, Mario Lemieux was feeling just as confident in the dressing room before the game. “(Defenseman) Grant Jennings was kind of injured and he was on the edge of going or not going that night,” recalled Kehoe. “He said, ‘Well, I should be good for the seventh game.’ And Mario just looked at him and said, ‘Nope. There’s not going to be a seventh game.’”
No one, however, was getting ahead of themselves. They knew how big the task was that lay before them. “Every guy’s got to have the game of his life,” said Phil Bourque. “If everybody does that, it’s going to be worth it."

Excerpted from The Pittsburgh Penguins: The First 25 Years by Greg Enright, available at amzn.to/3cna4N4 or bit.ly/2OGZeYO.



Saturday, May 9, 2020

Pens blast Bruins 7-2 to take command of 1991 Wales Final


Back in Boston for Game 5, the Bruins opened the scoring only 40 seconds in, but the Penguins stayed poised and answered with three goals from Stevens, Lemieux and Trottier. The game became a wide-open affair and the Bruins simply had no hope of keeping up with the high-flying Penguins. 
“It takes a lot from you when they’re coming at you 100 miles per hour,” Bruin defenseman Glen Wesley told the Pittsburgh Press. “It’s tough to stop a team like that.”
Ulf Samuelsson had knocked Cam Neely off his game. Clearly frustrated, the Bruins’ main offensive threat took two retaliatory penalties away from the play, the second of which resulted in one of the Penguins’ three power play goals on the night. When the final buzzer sounded, the scoreboard read Pittsburgh 7, Boston 2. The Penguins were in complete control of the series and but one win away from advancing to their first ever Stanley Cup final.

Excerpted from The Pittsburgh Penguins: The First 25 Years by Greg Enright, available at amzn.to/3cna4N4 or bit.ly/2OGZeYO.






Saturday, April 25, 2020

Mario's playoff magic puts a hex on the Flyers


The Penguins and Flyers faced off in Game 5 of a deadlocked Patrick Division Final. It would be a night of hockey history, thanks to "Le Magnifique":

At 2:15 of the first period, Lemieux snuck behind the Philly D, deked Ron Hextall with the slightest of fakes and backhanded the puck into an empty net to make it 1-0. Ninety seconds later, standing completely unmolested at the side of the Flyer net, Mario took a Bob Errey pass and directed it home for a 2-0 Pens lead. Just before the seven-minute mark, Lemieux again gained a step on the suddenly slothful Flyers’ defense and, fading to his right side, rifled a pinpoint wrist shot to the far side of Hextall’s net, beating him cleanly.

The Igloo exploded in joy. Lemieux had clearly taken his game to another level and the Flyers seemed helpless to stop him. After Errey made it 4-0 only 12 seconds after Lemieux’s hat trick goal and ex-Pen Mike Bullard answered back for the Flyers, Mario scored his craftiest goal on the night. Seeing Hextall venture behind his net for a loose puck, Lemieux swooped in and, with his long reach, stick-checked the big goalie, took the puck around the net and swept it into the open cage.
Lemieux would add three assists and an empty-net goal to tie the NHL single-game playoff records for goals with five and points with eight, leading the Pens to a 10-7 win. He also tied a few single-period NHL post-season records: most goals (four), most points (four), and assists (three). His final goal also set a new Penguin mark for career playoff goals at 10, one more than Jean Pronovost. Incredibly, it had taken Lemieux less than two playoff rounds to accomplish the feat!
“He elevated his game to the point where he just showed everybody else how much better than us he can be,” observed Tom Barrasso.
Even the Flyers were in awe of the display.
“I’ve never seen an individual performance like that,” said coach Paul Holmgren. “We just got in front of that snowball with the Number 66 on it early, and when he gets rolling, it’s a scary thing.

Excerpted from The Pittsburgh Penguins: The First 25 Years by Greg Enright, available at bit.ly/2OGZeYO or amzn.to/3cna4N4 



Saturday, April 18, 2020

Pens score fastest 5 goals in NHL history


The good times kept rolling for the Penguins on November 22, 1972 when, playing at home against the St. Louis Blues, they set an NHL record that still stands to this day. 
The game was a typically close battle between the bitter expansion rivals for the first two periods, with the Pens holding a 5-4 lead with a little over eight minutes to go. Bryan Hextall widened the lead by tipping in a Jack Lynch slap shot at 12:00. Jean Pronovost then took a feed from Greg Polis 12 seconds later and buried it past Blues goalie Wayne Stephenson. Al McDonough completed a hat trick at 13:40 off a pass from Syl Apps to make it a rout at 8-4. 
The crowd of 12,405 had barely started celebrating that marker when Ken Schinkel lit the lamp only nine seconds later. The shell-shocked Blues could not pull themselves together enough to stop Schock from adding a tenth goal only 18 seconds later.
The traditionally goal-starved Penguins had scored five goals in only two minutes and seven seconds, easily obliterating the previous mark for fastest five goals by one team of three minutes, forty-six seconds set by the Rangers in 1942. The fourth and fifth of those Penguin goals, only nine seconds apart, set a new team record for fastest two goals, and the overall tally of 10, in a 10-4 win, marked the first time the Pens had gone into double figures.
“Our guys were driving,” observed GM Jack Riley. “They seemed to have an obsession like Rocket Richard used to have to get down toward the goal and to get a shot. Everything seemed to be going our way.”

Excerpted from The Pittsburgh Penguins: The First 25 Years by Greg Enright, available at bit.ly/2OGZeYO or amzn.to/3cna4N4