I can't remember the exact math, but about midway through last season I played with numbers and if the PP was just mediocre it would have added I think 10-15 points at the time. I'm sure we can do the math with X more PP goals potentially equaling X more points. Another sore spot is giving up leads.dark_forces wrote: Wed Jul 10, 2024 2:49 pmI still believe they'll live/die on PP success. If the PP is top 12-15, they probably are like this past year's Isles or Caps—they get in, but lose in 6 games to their first round opponent.FLPensFan wrote: Wed Jul 10, 2024 11:04 amThe Athletic recently ranked which teams improved the most this offseason. Penguins came in at 19, with basically a net zero improvement. The main comment...
Technically the Penguins finally improved on Jeff Carter in the bottom six. Technically Kevin Hayes is a sizeable upgrade. Technically.
Perhaps they should’ve aimed higher though as Hayes isn’t a great answer. The downgrade from Reilly Smith to Anthony Beauvillier nullifies whatever advantage is earned on that upgrade.
This probably won’t be a fun season for Sid and friends.
I think if the team played a defensive posture and tried for 2-1 3-2 games with a good PP the team can be much better. While the skill isn't great, better coaching could make it a playoff team. Going into the playoffs with a defensive posture that relies on opportunities, who knows what'll happen.