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Dubas Puts the Lumber to Erik Karlsson; ‘Actions Must Match Ambitions'

Dubas Puts the Lumber to Erik Karlsson; ‘Actions Must Match Ambitions'

Yahoo13-05-2025

CRANBERRY — It would seem the Pittsburgh Penguins and Erik Karlsson are stuck with each other, but there may be some lingering frustrations.
The moment Friday was as close to honest as a general manager could be without levying heavy criticism after another failed season that ended in the Penguins' third-straight playoff miss.
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Penguins general manager Kyle Dubas buried a few nuggets in his more than 30-minute press conference Monday, but the moment that leaped from the page was his plain-spoken criticism of defenseman Erik Karlsson and a slight bristle at Karlsson's expression of frustration.
Dubas said that as part of the exit meetings on Friday, he and Karlsson had a lengthy meeting. Dubas seemed a little put off by Karlsson's comments and disappointment.
Dubas put the responsibility back on Karlsson.
'Erik, I think, is and will forever be a polarizing figure. While I don't know his exact comments, my view would be that we expect him to be one of the people who pulls us from where we're at and into contention,' Dubas said. 'I had a long meeting with Erik on Friday. My push to him would be that his actions have to match his ambitions. That's in consistency, preparation, and training, like every other player on the team.'
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In other words, if you're angry or frustrated by the results, you bear more responsibility than most players.
Karlsson missed all of training camp, and the defenseman admitted the early part of the season was a struggle for him. He didn't feel his best and struggled.
Read More: Frustrated Karlsson Speaks of Uncertain Penguins Future; 'Whatever Happens…'
Overall, his offensive production looks solid. He had 53 points, including 11 goals in 82 games, but that's well down from his 100-point season that earned him a Norris Trophy and a trade to the Penguins two summers ago. His minus-24 rating is deep red ink, too.
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Karlsson was visibly frustrated when he spoke to the media on clean-out day last Friday. He didn't publicly ask for a trade as he did in San Jose, but he also didn't close the door to the possibility, either.
At the risk of stating the obvious, Dubas noted multiple times that the Penguins' defense must improve, and even saddled the blue line with some of the goaltending struggles, too.
However, he reserved specifics for Karlsson, who has two years remaining on a contract that carries a $10 million salary cap hit to the Penguins (San Jose is picking up about $1.5 million of the $11.5 million total).
The Penguins and Dubas, who made Karlsson the centerpiece of his attempted team revamp during his first summer on the job, need more. Much more. Dubas, especially, seemed to bear the disappointment of not getting Karlsson's best consistently.
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'He's shown throughout the year that he has another level to him. (He did so) at times playing for us, certainly playing for Sweden at the Four Nations Face-Off, he was a player that you would watch and say, 'this guy can help any team not only contend, but probably win.' But it's emblematic of the rest of the group as well,' said Dubas, pulling back the reins of criticism.'There were moments of great play with too many inconsistencies, and we have to push him to get there. And that's the expectation that's dictated by his talent level and the impact he can make.'
Karlsson was magnificent for Team Sweden at the Four Nations Face-Off in February and was one of the stars of the tournament. Yet his elevated play was seen only sporadically while wearing a Penguins sweater.
Read More: Insider Nuggets: Why Karlsson Lit Up Team Sweden (+)
That juxtaposition of Team Sweden's version of Karlsson vs. the Penguins' version clearly struck a negative chord with the GM.
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'It's a joint venture. So, yes, part of it is on the team, part is on Erik,' Dubas concluded. 'We have to find our way through.'
From the comments, one could also extrapolate greatly diminished trade possibilities, as Dubas clearly spoke of a future together and finding a way to get more out of Karlsson, rather than any future uncertainty. Perhaps it won't be Karlsson's choice if he remains with the Penguins.
Perhaps the circumstances will dictate, which could be just the beginning of the next Penguins drama.
The post Dubas Puts the Lumber to Erik Karlsson; 'Actions Must Match Ambitions' appeared first on Pittsburgh Hockey Now.

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With the Panthers clinching the East for a third straight year after Advertisement Canada, largely due to the Oilers' powerhouse squads throughout the '80s, saw one of its teams reach the Cup Final in nine consecutive seasons, 1982-90, culminating with Since that last Oiler triumph, a Canadian team has squeezed through to the final only eight times, with the lone win in those 35 years by the Canadiens (1993). It may be Canada's game, but this drought of 30-plus years is by far the longest in its history. The list of Canadian runners up since '93 consists of: Vancouver ('94), Calgary (2004), Edmonton ('06), Ottawa ('07), Vancouver ('11), If the Oilers can close the deal now, it will be the longest distance a Canadian team has gone to get the job done. Air miles, Edmonton to Sunrise, Fla.: 2,546. ETC. Verhaeghe worth the wait Former Bruins captain Brad Marchand , wearing No. 63 for the Panthers, is headed to the Cup Final for a fourth time (with Boston in '11, '13, and '19). 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Karl B DeBlaker/Associated Press Swayman high on Warsofsky Jeremy Swayman's read on Ryan Warsofsky , the Team USA bench boss at the world championship that concluded last Sunday: 'Since [the time] I walked through the door, he was incredible.' Warsofsky, who'll begin his second season as the Sharks coach this fall, was raised in Marshfield and played high school hockey for his hometown Rams, followed by a season at Cushing Academy. He moved into the top job in San Jose last summer after two years as one of David Quinn's assistant coaches. Related : With Swayman in net for Warsofsky, 'I've got nothing to say but great things about Warsy,' offered Swayman, 'the way he carried himself and he's just so well spoken. I think he takes over a room very well. Every one of the guys in there would do anything he asked — and it takes a special kind of human to get 25 or 30 guys all on the same page within three weeks. That's a testament to his coaching ability and his style.' 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The list also includes Ryan Lindgren , drafted by Boston at No. 49 in 2016, but dealt to the Rangers (for Rick Nash ) before ever wearing the Spoked B. A look at the pending UFAs, including their most recent team and cap hit (by descending order): Forwards: Marchand, Florida $6.125 million; Reilly Smith , Vegas, $5 million; Sean Kuraly , Columbus, $2.5 million; Frederic, Edmonton, $2.3M; Ryan Donato , Chicago, $2 million; Pat Maroon , Chicago, $1.3 million; Craig Smith , Detroit, $1 million; Curtis Lazar , New Jersey, $1 million; James van Riemsdyk , Columbus, $900,000; Tomas Nosek , Florida, $775,000; Cole Koepke , Boston, $775,000; Justin Brazeau , Minnesota, $775,000. Defensemen: Dmitry Orlov , Carolina, $7.75 million; Lindgren, Colorado, $4.5 million; Matt Grzelcyk , Pittsburgh, $2.75 million; Derek Forbort , Vancouver, $1.5 million; Mike Reilly , NY Islanders, $1.25 million. It's not out of the question that two or three alums could be offered deals to return. Keep in mind, the Bruins were negotiating with Marchand before Donato, 29, is coming off a career season (31-31—62) with the moribund Blackhawks (five consecutive playoff DNQs). That kind of goal production should bring him at least $4 million a year for 3-4 years. The Bruins need goal production, and Donato, who played at Harvard, was still on good terms here when dealt to the Wild for Charlie Coyle ( Grzelcyk, 31, delivered 1-39—40 (career bests for assists and points) this season with the Penguins , who are yet to name a new coach to replace Mike Sullivan . He would not answer the Bruins' need for a power-play quarterback, but he's a good puck mover and defends well with his feet and stick. Maybe two years/$5 million total? Kuraly, 32, left to go home to Columbus in the summer of '21 for a sweet four-year/$10 million deal. A solid citizen with size (6 feet 2 inches, 215 pounds), he'd be a good, heavy bottom-six addition on a one- or two-year deal at, say, $1.4 million per. Maroon, by the way, announced his retirement as his season came to a close with the Blackhawks — his eighth NHL employer over a career that included 848 games and three Cup rings. Loose pucks Marco Sturm , then 27, proved to be the best of the three assets (along with Wayne Primeau and Brad Stuart ) the Bruins acquired from San Jose in the infamous Nov. 30, 2005, deal that sent Jumbo Joe Thornton to the Sharks. Also known as 'The German,' Sturm remained in Boston for four more seasons, then was dished to the Kings early in 2010-11, in what was the season the Bruins won the Cup. Among the candidates believed to be interviewing to be the next Bruins bench boss, Sturm, 46, in the spring wrapped up his third season as coach of the Ontario (Calif.) Reign, the Kings' AHL affiliate. They were knocked out, 2-0, in a best-of-three vs. the San Jose Barracuda in the Calder Cup playoffs … Thornton, like Zdeno Chara , has been out of the NHL for three seasons and likely will be a first-ballot shoo-in to the Hockey Hall of Fame. Jumbo (1,539 career points) never won a Cup. His only trip to the Final was in '16, Henri Richard (Montreal), Jean Beliveau (Montreal), Red Kelly (Detroit, Toronto), Maurice 'Rocket' Richard (Montreal). Henri Richard, aka The Pocket Rocket, took home a ring from 11 of those 12 visits … Former forward Jeff Halpern (976 games) just wrapped up his seventh season as one of John Cooper's assistants in Tampa. Seems the Lightning's two Cups and three trips to the Final with him on the beat should be getting the '99 Princeton grad some head coach looks … The rumor mill in recent days has had Mitch Love (Capitals assistant), Jay Woodcroft , and Sturm all certain to be the Bruins' next coach. With apologies to Chief Brody, looks like you're gonna need a bigger bench. Kevin Paul Dupont can be reached at

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