May 29, 2014

Clean House

I was waiting to write this article till after Coach Dan Bylsma was fired, which after the Penguins most recent meltdown I thought was all but a certainty.

Clearly I was wrong.

What happened to the Pittsburgh Penguins this year, neigh, the past five years in the postseason is unforgivable from a organizational standpoint.  Post Stanley Cup victory in 2009, the Penguins have flamed out each year in the postseason in spectacular fashion, each year more spectacular than the last.

The Pens need to clean house.  Flat out.  Firing Shero was a good first step - but stringing Bylsma along has me scratching my head as to just how much the leaders of this organization (Lemieux, Burkle, Morehouse) truly think change is necessary.

Don't kid yourself people, this organization is on the decline.  Serious change is needed in order to regain some semblance of organizational structure.  That means everyone must go.  The coaching staff, the GM and even some key players.  No one should be safe in this situation.

Crosby, Malkin, Kunitz, Neal, Letang, Fleury.
No one.    

This is a key moment in this organizations history.
Change now, or fall back into irrelevance.

That means letting all our UFA's walk.

That means actually bringing up some of the great defensive products this organization has in it systems and actually using them on a regular basis.

That means trading James Neal.

That means buying out rapidly declining defenseman Rob Scuderi and equally rapidly declining forward Craig Adams.

That means taking a long hard look at Malkin and Letang and seeing if trading them would fix the many holes of the team's roster.

That means signing upcoming UFA Ryan Callahan to play on Sid's right wing.

That means firing Dan Bylsma.  Right now.

Serious change needs to happen.  Right now.  As a fan of another organization which was also once at the height of the hockey world, the Vancouver Canucks, I know what it looks like when an organization is at a turning point.  The aging roster.  The missed playoff opportunities.  The serious lack of organizational depth.  The terrible drafts.  I've seen it all before.  And unless the Pens make some major changes right now - their fate will be the same as the Canucks - league wide irrelevancy.  




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