The Pittsburgh Penguins and GM Jim Rutherford made no attempt to hide the fact that they were after a third-line center early in the season. Rutherford admitted several times that he had certain candidates in mind, and eventually went out and added Riley Sheahan from the Detroit Red Wings. Sheahan wasn’t the “impact” player that Rutherford had spoken about, but he was at least a temporary fit for the team as they figured out what to do next.
Many still believe the Penguins will add that third-line player at the trade deadline, bumping Sheahan down a spot and away from Phil Kessel’s unit. Adding more skill would certainly be beneficial, or at least it seemed so before a recent surge in Sheahan’s production—four assists in five games. Now, as Jason Mackey of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette writes in his latest 20 Penguins Thoughts, they may not add a third-line center after all, instead making a smaller deal to strengthen the position.
Mackey suggests that Sheahan’s comfort level with Kessel has improved lately, and he points to Matt Cullen as the obvious answer to slide into the lineup. Cullen, who signed in Minnesota last offseason, is Mackey’s pick to “be a Penguin by February 26, maybe sooner.”
Cullen is on a one-year deal with the Wild worth as much as $1.7MM depending on performance bonuses tied to playoff success, and obviously has a great number of ties to the Penguins organization after winning back to back Stanley Cups with them the previous two years. Though his minutes have decreased even further this season, he could still offer the same dependable presence on the fourth line.
The Penguins certainly don’t have the cap space presently that would facilitate a larger move. With just under $2MM of deadline cap space (as per CapFriendly) a move for an impact player would likely require salary heading the other way. While there are obvious options for that—defenseman Ian Cole being one of them—removing players in the middle of a second-half run isn’t ideal. The Penguins have climbed to within four points of the Metropolitan-leading Washington Capitals, and have their eyes set on the playoffs once again. Whether that will be with a new exciting player skating on the third line, or a more experienced familiar face is still to be seen.
TJECK109
I see Cullen coming back to be 4th line center and help with PK
66TheNumberOfTheBest
Rowney is better than Cullen at this point. JS Dea might be as well. Cullen can’t even stay in the Wild’s lineup.
If Jimmy is going to make it deal, it needs to be a semi-big deal. If not, why bother since none of the names are real upgrades?
Derick Brassard and Kessel could be really good together on an unmatchable 3rd line and offer insurance for an injury to Sid or Geno. They need to go for that caliber of player if they are going to do something.
Connorsoxfan
No cap space for Brassard
66TheNumberOfTheBest
Yeah, they’d have to move Ian Cole in a separate deal (unless the Sens wanted him) and still get Ottawa to eat some of Brassard’s cap hit to make it work.
They’d have to offer up at least a first round pick and a prospect.