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The Penguins are not accustomed to entering the season with this much salary cap space, almost always spending to the upper reaches of the salary cap, and after spending so many years in Toronto ...
It’s clear the Penguins’ core will likely have a largely different supporting cast next season. Dubas traded Reilly Smith to the New York Rangers, and it was little more than asset management ...
The Penguins will be cap compliant even when center Evgeni Malkin returns from a leg injury, whereas only a few weeks ago they had to expose goalie Casey DeSmith to waivers and keep Tristan Jarry ...
At this point, the Penguins have a sizeable amount of cap space left – and while team ownership Fenway Sports Group has approved spending to the limit, Dubas wants to be patient and remain ...
In describing how the Penguins will utilize their cap space, Dubas specifically avoided saying the team would sign RFAs. However, he described his offseason plans as specifically looking to trade ...
The Penguins have $23,208,158 in cap space to fill out seven vacancies on their roster by the beginning of next season. Whether it be Kris Letang and Evgeni Malkin or two free agents, ...
The Penguins have some moves to make in order to get a 23-man, cap-compliant roster before the start of the 2022-23 season.
If the cap rises to $92.4 million, the Penguins would have $25.2 million in cap space, with 14 active players under contract for 2025-26 and all their core players signed.
The next phase of the Penguins’ rebuild could very well be a continuation of the summer strategy. Dubas’s amassed glut of forwards could soon be turned into more draft picks or future assets ...
About 1:20* into the video above this post’s headline, hockey insider Bob McKenzie shared some interesting tidbits with NBCSN’s Kathryn Tappen regarding potential future moves for the Washington ...