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Without Kris Letang, Penguins’ defensemen step up in playoffs

By Jeremy Tepper for The 5 min read
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CRANBERRY TWP. — When Kris Letang was lost for the season in April from neck surgery, it seemed like a devastating blow. A top-flight, minutes-eating defenseman has been a constant for just about any championship team, a role Letang played in the Penguins’ Stanley Cup championship run last year.

Without him, the Penguins were left without anybody who could directly and wholly full that role. But where most perceived a hole, the Penguins’ defensemen saw a challenge, an opportunity to step up in LetangĢƵ absence. 

With three playoff-series wins and a chance to now win the Stanley Cup against the Predators, the defensemen have been able to sufficiently hold down the fort. No one has matched LetangĢƵ all-around brilliance, but they’ve done their jobs well enough, and have a 2.32 goals-against average in the playoffs to show for it. That mark is just worse than the Penguins’ 2.29 goals against in last years’ postseason run.

“We’ve had to rally together. No oneĢƵ going to replace him, and we know that,” Penguins defenseman Brian Dumoulin said. “And we just had to continue to play well as a group and no one get outside their comfort zone, everyone just do what they do best. I think thatĢƵ how we approached it.”

In the playoffs last season, Letang was a minutes-eater, playing 28:53 a game. As Dumoulin put it, it was “Kris Letang and then the rest of us.” This time around, the Penguins have split up the duty, rotating pairs in and out constantly. Ian Cole has played the least out of the regular six at 19:10 a game, while Dumoulin is at the top with 21:55. ItĢƵ very much been a group effort, especially when other defensemen, like Trevor Daley and Justin Schultz, have missed time in the playoffs.

“I think we really look at sharing the responsibilities, using our three pairs. Obviously without Kris Letang, other people have filled in and have given us some good minutes,” Penguins assistant coach Jacques Martin said.

“I think that was the key last year in the playoffs from a standpoint that our team game was really a six-man defense, and I think thatĢƵ part of the solution this year as well.”

As the top minutes-getter, Dumoulin and his partner Ron Hainsey have often been on the ice against opponents’ top lines. They’ve usually limited the oppositionĢƵ stars well. Penguins winger Conor Sheary described Dumoulin as someone who just “goes out there and takes care of business” and “doesn’t make too many mistakes.” HeĢƵ one of many who have stepped up since LetangĢƵ injury.

“I think we have a group back there that cares about each other, that really play within their limitations, I think thatĢƵ the key. And they’ve been able to raise their level of play,” Martin said.

Though no one has played the quantity of minutes like Letang, if thereĢƵ been somebody asked to replace some of LetangĢƵ responsibilities, itĢƵ Schultz. Like Letang, heĢƵ been the Penguins’ primary puck-mover, as well as the quarterback on the power play. HeĢƵ scored ten points and three goals in 15 games in the playoffs after a 51-point regular season.

“When you look at Justin when he came here, he always has had the ability to excel on the offensive side. He has a tremendous shot, he has excellent vision. HeĢƵ been able to replace Kris on the power play as far as the quarterback,” Martin said. “But I think the area thatĢƵ been most noticeable in his development as a player has been his defensive side.”

“His defensive ability now, I think over the season heĢƵ been a responsible player as far as choosing when to join the rush, when to pinch in the offensive zone, as well as the defensive zone, I think heĢƵ improved his position, heĢƵ improved his compete level, his use of his stick, his position, those are all areas that heĢƵ grown in over the season thatĢƵ made him the kind of defensemen heĢƵ been lately.”

ItĢƵ been a reinvention year for Schultz, who was traded out of Edmonton to the Penguins last season after sinking to the lowest point of his NHL career. At the time of the trade, one writer called him the “worst player in the NHL.” Now heĢƵ perhaps the best defenseman on a Stanley Cup Finals team.

“HeĢƵ been phenomenal this year. HeĢƵ having fun,” Dumoulin said. “I think last year he never wanted to make a mistake or do something wrong, do something to hurt the team and this year heĢƵ just going out there and playing.”

The rest of the Penguins’ defensemen have taken on a similar mindset this postseason. They’re not worried about their heightened roles or trying to replace Letang. Instead, they’ve just gone out and continued to play their game. And thus far, itĢƵ worked.

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