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Pittsburgh Penguins

{{NHL Team
team_name = Pittsburgh Penguinsbg_color = blacktext_color = whitelogo_image = Pittsburgh Penguins.gifconference = Easterndivision = Atlanticfounded = 1967history = Pittsburgh Penguins
1967-present
arena = Mellon Arenacity = Pittsburgh, Pennsylvaniamedia_affiliates = FSN Pittsburgh
WBGG (970 AM)
team_colors = Black, White, and Goldhead_coach = Michel Therriengeneral_manager = Ray Sheroowner = Lemieux Group L.P.captain = Vacantminor_league_affiliates = Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (AHL)
Wheeling Nailers (ECHL)

The Pittsburgh Penguins are a professional ice hockey team based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. They play in the National Hockey League (NHL).

Facts

*Team Colors: Las Vegas Gold, black and white
*Logo: A skating penguin against a gold triangle
*Home: Mellon Arena, a.k.a. "The Igloo" (17,132 capacity)
*Stanley Cup Championships: 2 - 1990-91, 1991-92
*Stanley Cup Finals appearances: 2 - 1990-91 (defeated Minnesota, 4-2), 1991-92 (defeated Chicago, 4-0)
*Presidents' Trophies: 1 - 1992-93
*Conference Championships: 2 - 1990-91, 1991-92
*Division Championships: 5 - 1990-91, 1992-93, 1993-94, 1995-96, 1997-98
*Mascot: Iceburgh
*Rivals: Philadelphia Flyers, New York Rangers, New Jersey Devils, Washington Capitals
*Current Affiliates: Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (AHL), Wheeling Nailers (ECHL)
*Former Affiliates: Syracuse Crunch (AHL), Cleveland Lumberjacks (IHL), Muskegon Lumberjacks (IHL), HC CSKA Moscow (Russian Hockey Super League, partnership only)
*Added in the 1967 NHL Expansion along with the Minnesota North Stars, Los Angeles Kings, Philadelphia Flyers, Oakland Seals, and St. Louis Blues
*Local Media: FSN Pittsburgh, WNPA

Franchise history

Expansion Years: 1967-1969

PIT_67-68.gif

The original Penguins logo (1967-68)

Home to the early NHL incarnation of the Pirates during the 1920s and the successful Hornets AHL franchise from the 1930s through the 1960s, Pittsburgh was one of six cities awarded an expansion team when the NHL doubled in size for the start of the 1967-68 season. The Penguins' first general manager was Jack Riley. The new teams were hampered by restrictive rules that kept most major talent with the "Original Six," and beyond aging ex-Rangers star Andy Bathgate and tough ex-Bruin defenseman Leo Boivin, the first Penguins team was manned by a cast of former minor leaguers. The club missed the playoffs in their first season in the NHL finishing 5th in the closely fought West Division. However; they were only six points out of first place.

Logo used (1968-71)

Former player Red Sullivan was the head coach for the club's first two seasons. He was soon replaced by Hall of Famer Red Kelly in 1969. Though Bathgate led the team in scoring, both he and Boivin were soon gone. Despite a handful of decent players such as Ken Schinkel, Keith McCreary, agitator Bryan Watson and goaltender Les Binkley talent was thin. The Penguins' record was poor in the early years. They missed the playoffs in five of their first seven seasons.

1970s

Pittsburghpenguinslogo80s.gif

Logo used (1971-1992)

Tragedy struck the Penguins in 1970 when rookie center Michel Briere, who finished third in scoring on the team during his only season in the league, was injured in a car crash. He died in 1971 after spending a year in the hospital.

For a few years in the mid-Seventies, Pittsburgh iced some powerful offensive clubs, led by the likes of 'Century Line' forwards Syl Apps, Jr., Lowell MacDonald and Jean Pronovost. They came tantalizingly close to reaching the Stanley Cup semifinals in 1974-75, but were ousted from the playoffs by the New York Islanders in one of the few best-of-seven game series' in professional sports history where a team came back from being down three games to none. As the 70s wore on, they brought in stars such as Rick Kehoe, Pierre Larouche and Ron Schock on offense, along with defensemen Ron Stackhouse and Dave Burrows. But the Pens' success was always neutralized by mediocre team defense and poor goaltending, and the club never went far in the playoffs.

1980s

By the early Eighties Pittsburgh had Kehoe, star defenseman Randy Carlyle and prolific scorers Paul Gardner and Mike Bullard, but little else. The team had the league's worst record in both the 1983 and 1984 seasons. The reward for such pitiful hockey was the right to draft French Canadian phenom Mario Lemieux. Other teams offered substantial trade packages for the draft choice, but the Penguins kept the pick and a legend was born.

On a side note, the Penguins began the decade by changing their team colors in January 1980, during the middle of the season. The team went from blue & white to their present day black & gold, to honour Pittsburgh's other two sports teams, the Pirates and Steelers. Both the Pirates and Steelers wore black & gold, and both were fresh off world championship seasons at that time. (Strangely enough, the patterns on the uniforms remained the same, just the colours were changed.) The Boston Bruins supposedly tried suing the Penguins and the NHL for preventing the team from using black & gold (the same colours as the Bruins), but the lawsuit was later dismissed because Pittsburgh was able to claim a link between the colors of the Steelers and the Pirates, as well as the Pirates hockey team that played in Pittsburgh during the 1920s and 1930s.

Lemieux Era: 1984-2006

The Penguins finished last in the league in 1984. With the first overall pick in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft Pittsburgh selected QMJHL superstar Mario Lemieux, who would become one of the greatest players in NHL history. He paid dividends right away, scoring on the first shot of his first shift in his first NHL game. And the player whom he stole the puck from was fellow born Montrealer, and Boston Bruins Hockey Hall of Fame defenceman Ray Bourque. After four more years out of the playoffs, Lemieux led the league in scoring in 1988-89. The Penguins gave him a supporting cast for the first time, trading for superstar defenseman Paul Coffey from the Edmonton Oilers, and adding scorers Kevin Stevens, Rob Brown, and John Cullen from the minors. And there was finally a top-flight goaltender between the pipes, with the acquisition of Tom Barrasso from the Buffalo Sabres. The team made the playoffs, but lost in the second round to the Philadelphia Flyers.

In 1990-91, the Penguins reached the top. They drafted Czech right winger Jaromir Jagr in the 1990 NHL Entry Draft, and he paired with Lemieux as league's biggest one-two scoring threats throughout the 1990s. Mark Recchi arrived from the minors, Joe Mullen and Bryan Trottier signed as free agents, major trades brought Larry Murphy, Ron Francis, and Ulf Samuelsson. The Penguins finally became the league's best team, defeating the Minnesota North Stars in the Stanley Cup finals in six games. The following season, the team lost coach Bob Johnson to cancer, and Scotty Bowman took over as coach. Under the legendary Bowman, they swept the Chicago Blackhawks to repeat as Stanley Cup champions.
Pittsburghpenguinslogo90s.gif

Logo used (1992-2001)

Cancer nearly dealt the Penguins a double whammy in 1993. Not only were they reeling from Johnson's death, but Lemieux was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease. Only two months after the diagnosis, his comeback was one of the league's great "feel-good" stories of all time. Despite the off-ice difficulties, Pittsburgh finished with a 56-21-7 record, winning the franchise's first (and still only) Presidents' Trophy as the team with the most points in the regular season. After Lemieux's return, the the team played better than it ever had before, winning an NHL record 17 consecutive games before playing to a tie in the final game of the season. Despite all of this success, they were still eliminated in the second round by the New York Islanders.

Mario Lemieux played for the Penguins from 1984-1997, 2000-2006

The Penguins continued to be a formidable team throughout the 1990s. The stars of the Stanley Cup years were followed by the likes of forwards Martin Straka, Petr Nedved, Alexei Kovalev and Robert Lang, and defencemen Kevin Hatcher and Darius Kasparaitis. Lemieux retired in 1997 and formally passed the torch to Jagr as the league's leading scorer. Because of his legendary status, the Hockey Hall of Fame waived its three-year waiting period and inducted him as an Honoured Member in the same year he retired.

The Penguins' free-spending ways came with a price – they had paid so much for their talent that they filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in November 1998. Lemieux, a principal creditor owed many millions in deferred salary from his playing days, took the team over in bankruptcy court and prevented it from relocating. Just as he saved the franchise in 1984, he did it again. He later shocked the hockey world by deciding to come back in late 2000 and led the Penguins into the 2001 playoffs, where they lost to the New Jersey Devils in the Eastern Conference Finals. He was the first player-owner in NHL history.

Still, the Penguins needed to cut costs. They dealt Jagr and Frantisek Kucera to the Washington Capitals for prospects Kris Beech, Michal Sivek, and Ross Lupaschuk, and $4.9 million in the summer of 2001. The absence of Jagr proved devastating to the Penguins, and in 2002 they missed the playoffs for the first time in 12 years. Further financial difficulties saw them trade fan favorite Kovalev the next season, quickly followed by the departure of Lang in free agency. Unfortunately for the franchise, none of the prospects acquired for the stars' salary dumps materialized into NHL stars. Thusly, the Penguins spent the next several seasons in the NHL's cellar.

The 2003-04 NHL season was expected to be a rebuilding year for the Penguins, with first overall pick Marc-Andre Fleury in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft and new head coach (and former Penguin and commentator) Eddie Olczyk. Cost restrictions made the signing of Fleury rather tense, but he later showed his resolve with excellent goaltending. Lemieux suffered a hip injury early in the season, and he sat out the rest of the season to recover. The Pens then traded Straka away to the Los Angeles Kings and sent Fleury back to his junior team due to further money problems. The Penguins finished with the worst NHL record, but lost the lottery for the 2004 NHL Entry Draft to the Washington Capitals.

The Penguins suffered small-market syndrome for most of their existence, and cost-cutting prevented another collapse into insolvency. Financially, the team was one of the better-managed NHL franchises between its 1998 bankruptcy and the 2004-05 NHL lockout. Thanks to significant post-season runs, the Penguins broke even in 2000 and turned a small profit in 2001. Failure to make the playoffs in the next three seasons hurt the team's bottom line, but the shedding of contracts kept the team afloat as other franchises, like the Ottawa Senators, faced significant losses or declared bankruptcy.

Lockout Season: 2004-2005

With the 2004-05 NHL season cancelled due to the NHL lockout, several Penguins signed with the club's AHL affiliate Wilkes-Barre Penguins, while experienced players like Aleksey Morozov and Milan Kraft honed their talents in the elite European and Russian leagues.

Crosby Era: 2005 and beyond

The Penguins won an unprecedented draft lottery in the summer of 2005, in which all thirty teams had weighted chances to win the first overall pick of the 2005 NHL Entry Draft. The Penguins chose junior league superstar Sidney Crosby from the QMJHL. With a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) signed by the owners and players to end the 2004-05 NHL lockout, the Penguins began rebuilding the team under a salary cap. They signed big-name free agents Sergei Gonchar, John LeClair and Zigmund Palffy, and traded for goaltender Jocelyn Thibault from the Chicago Blackhawks. Crosby set a new record for the youngest NHL player to score 100 points, previously held by past rookie of the year Dale Hawerchuk in 2005-06. He was also the rookie to score 100 points and have 100 penalty minutes in the same season. Hawerchuk had been 100 days older than Crosby in 1981-82 when he scored 103 points for the Winnipeg Jets, now the Phoenix Coyotes.

The team began the season with a long winless skid that resulted in a coaching change from Olczyk to Michel Therrien. Palffy announced his retirement due to a lingering shoulder injury while the team's second-leading scorer. Then on January 24, 2006, Mario Lemieux announced his second retirement after developing an irregular heart beat. He finished as the NHL's seventh all-time scorer (1,723), eighth in goals (690) and tenth in assists (1,033).[1][2][3]

Pittsburgh's alternate logo; the Penguins logo of the 1992-01 period, now with a gold triangle instead of yellow.

It was now, for all intents and purposes, Crosby's team, and on April 17, Crosby became the youngest rookie in history to score 100 points, tying Lemieux's rookie record. The next day, on the Penguins' final game of the season, Crosby scored a goal and an assist to break Lemieux's record and became the top scoring rookie in team history with 102 points, despite losing the rookie scoring race to Alexander Ovechkin by 4 points. Despite a decent finish, the Penguins posted the worst record of the Eastern Conference and the highest goals-against in the league. Only the St. Louis Blues closed the season with a worse record.

The team announced on April 20, two days after the close of the 2005-06 NHL season, that the contract for General Manager Craig Patrick would not be renewed. Patrick had been GM since December 1989, and the Penguins won five division titles and back-to-back Stanley Cups during his tenure. On May 25, Ray Shero signed a five-year contract as General Manager. Shero had previously spent eight seasons as Assistant General Manager for the Nashville Predators preceded by six seasons as Assistant GM for the Ottawa Senators. Ray is the son of the late NHL coach Fred Shero.

Russian superstar Evgeni Malkin is expected to sign a contract in the summer of 2006 to join the team next season. The Penguins also added Jordan Staal, the third of four Staal brothers in hockey, with the second overall pick in the 2006 NHL Entry Draft.

Various reports had the Penguins in dire financial straits even after the lockout. Lemieux himself stated that it is doubtful the club will remain in Pittsburgh once the Mellon Arena lease expires unless a new arena is built. A recent arena proposal includes a partnership with Isle of Capri Casinos, a gambling company intending to install slot machines. The project cost is estimated at $290 million. A new arena is part of a proposed $1 billion development financed by Nationwide Realty. Without a new arena, it is likely the team will move. However, recent pledges by groups representing the other two slots license applicants (Forest City Enterprises and PITG Gaming LLC) to provide signficant private funding towards a new arena have cast doubts on any relocation efforts. On July 28, 2006 Hartford businessman, Sam Fingold, signed a letter of intent to purchase the team for a reported $175 million. Fingold has stated his desire to keep the team in Pittsburgh provided a new facility is constructed.

Season-by-season record

Note: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses/Shootout losses, Pts = Points, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, PIM = Penalties in minutes
SeasonGPWLTOTLPtsGFGAPIMFinishPlayoffs
1967-6874273413--671952165545th in WestOut of playoffs
1968-6976204511--511892526775th in WestOut of playoffs
1969-7076263812--6418223810382nd in WestLost in 2nd round
1970-7178213720--6222124010796th in WestOut of playoffs
1971-7278263814--662202589784th in WestLost in 1st round
1972-737832379--732572658665th in WestOut of playoffs
1973-747828419--652422739505th in WestOut of playoffs
1974-7580372815--8932628911193rd in NorrisLost in 2nd round
1975-7680353312--8233930310043rd in NorrisLost in 1st round
1976-7780343313--812402526693rd in NorrisLost in 1st round
1977-7880253718--6825432113004th in NorrisOut of playoffs
1978-7980363113--8528127910392nd in NorrisLost in 2nd round
1979-8080303713--7325130310383rd in NorrisLost in 1st round
1980-8180303713--7330224518074th in NorrisLost in 1st round
1981-8280313613--7531033722124th in PatrickLost in 1st round
1982-838018539--4525739418596th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1983-848016586--3825439016956th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1984-858024515--5327638514936th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1985-868034388--7631330515385th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1986-8780303812--7229729016935th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1987-888036359--8131931622116th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1988-898040337--8734734926702nd in PatrickLost in 2nd round
1989-908032408--7231835921325th in PatrickOut of playoffs
1990-918041 33 6-- 88 3423051641 1st in Patrick Won Stanley Cup
1991-92 8039 32 9-- 87 343 3081907 3rd in PatrickWon Stanley Cup
1992-938456217--11936726817761st in PatrickLost in 2nd round
1993-9484442713--10129928516241st in NortheastLost in 1st round
1994-9514829163--6118115810362nd in NortheastLost in 2nd round
1995-968249294--10236228416231st in NortheastLost in 3rd round
1996-978238368--8428528014982nd in NortheastLost in 1st round
1997-9882402418--9822818812251st in NortheastLost in 1st round
1998-9982383014--902422259773rd in AtlanticLost in 2nd round
1999-00823731868824123612213rd in AtlanticLost in 2nd round
2000-01824228839628125615853rd in AtlanticLost in 3rd round
2001-02822841856919824912485th in AtlanticOut of playoffs
2002-03822744656518925511255th in AtlanticOut of playoffs
2003-04822347845819030312705th in AtlanticOut of playoffs
2004-052|--
2005-06822246--145824431615395th in AtlanticOut of playoffs
1 Season was shortened due to the 1994-95 NHL lockout.
2 Season was cancelled due to the 2004-05 NHL lockout.

Notable players

Current squad

As of July 24, 2006 [4]|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Goaltenders
Number!width=15%|PlayerCatchesAcquiredPlace of Birth
29Marc-Andre FleuryL2003Sorel, Quebec>- bgcolor="#eeeeee"41Jocelyn Thibault L2005Montreal, Quebec
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Defensemen
Number!width=15%|PlayerShootsAcquiredPlace of Birth
2Josef Melichar - AL1997Ceske Budejovice, Czechoslovakia>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"3Mark EatonL2006Wilmington, Delaware>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"4Noah WelchL2001Brighton, Massachusetts>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"5Rob ScuderiL1998Syosset, New York>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"19Ryan WhitneyL2002Boston, Massachusetts>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"33Eric CairnsL2006Oakville, Ontario>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"44Brooks OrpikL2002San Francisco, California>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"55Sergei Gonchar - AL2005Chelyabinsk, U.S.S.R.
|-bgcolor="#eeeeee"
Forwards
Number!width=15%|PlayerShootsPositionAcquiredPlace of Birth
7Michel OuelletRRW2000Rimouski, Quebec>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"8Mark RecchiLRW/C2006Kamloops, British Columbia>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"10John LeClair LLW2005St. Albans, Vermont>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"12Ryan MaloneLW/C1999Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"18Dominic MooreLC2006Thornhill, Ontario>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"20Colby ArmstrongRRW2001Lloydminster, Saskatchewan>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"26Ronald PetrovickyRRW/LW2006Zilina, Czechoslovakia>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"28Nils EkmanLLW/RW2006Stockholm, Sweden>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"36Andre RoyLLW2005Port Chester, New York>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"37Jarkko RuutuLLW/RW2006Helsinki, Finland>-bgcolor="#eeeeee"87Sidney Crosby - ALC2005Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia

Team Captains

*Ab McDonald 1967-68
*no captain 1968-73
*Ron Schock 1973-77
*Jean Pronovost 1977-78
*Orest Kindrachuk 1978-81
*Randy Carlyle 1981-84
*Mike Bullard 1984-86
*Mike Bullard & Terry Ruskowski 1986-87
*Dan Frawley & Mario Lemieux 1987-88
*Mario Lemieux 1988-94
*Ron Francis 1994-95
*Mario Lemieux 1995-97
*Ron Francis 1997-98
*Jaromir Jagr 1998-01
*Mario Lemieux 2001-06
*no captain 2006- present

Hall of Famers

* Andy Bathgate (1967-1968 and 1970-1971, inducted 1978)
* Scotty Bowman (Director of Player Development 1990-1991, Head Coach 1991-1993, inducted 1991)
* Paul Coffey (1987-1992, inducted 2004)
* Bob Johnson (Head Coach 1990-1991, inducted 1992)
* Mike Lange (Announcer 1975-2006, inducted 2001)
* Mario Lemieux (1984-1997 and 2000-2006, inducted 1997)
* Joe Mullen (1990-1995 and 1996-1997, inducted 2000)
* Larry Murphy (1990-1995, inducted 2004)
* Craig Patrick (General Manager 1989-2006, Head Coach 1989-1990 and 1997, inducted 2001)
* Bryan Trottier (1990-1992 and 1993-1994, inducted 1997)

Retired numbers

*21 Michel Brière, C, 1969-70; taken out of circulation following his death but not officially retired until January 5, 2001
*66 Mario Lemieux, C, 1984-97, 2000-06; retired November 19, 1997, his jersey number was lowered from Mellon Arena roof and "unretired" when he began his comeback on December 27, 2000; re-retired January 24, 2006.
*99 Wayne Gretzky (retired league-wide by the NHL in 1999)

NHL All-Rookie Team

*1985 - Mario Lemieux, Warren Young
*1989 - Zarley Zalapski
*1991 - Jaromir Jagr
*1997 - Patrick Lalime
*2003 - Sebastien Caron
*2004 - Ryan Malone
*2006 - Sidney Crosby

First Team All-Star

*1981 - Randy Carlyle
*1988 - Mario Lemieux
*1989 - Paul Coffey, Mario Lemieux
*1992 - Kevin Stevens
*1993 - Mario Lemieux
*1995 - Jaromir Jagr
*1996 - Jaromir Jagr, Mario Lemieux
*1997 - Mario Lemieux
*1998 - Jaromir Jagr
*1999 - Jaromir Jagr
*2000 - Jaromir Jagr
*2001 - Jaromir Jagr

Second Team All-Star

*1986 - Mario Lemieux
*1987 - Mario Lemieux
*1990 - Paul Coffey
*1991 - Kevin Stevens
*1992 - Mario Lemieux
*1993 - Tom Barrasso, Larry Murphy, Kevin Stevens
*1995 - Larry Murphy
*1997 - Jaromir Jagr
*2001 - Mario Lemieux

First round draft picks

* 1967: Steve Rexe (2nd overall)
* 1968: Gary Swain (4th overall)
* 1969: none
* 1970: Greg Polis (7th overall)
* 1971: none
* 1972: none
* 1973: Blaine Stoughton (7th overall)
* 1974: Pierre Larouche (8th overall)
* 1975: Gordon Laxton (15th overall)
* 1976: Blair Chapman (2nd overall)
* 1977: none
* 1978: none
* 1979: none
* 1980: Mike Bullard (9th overall)
* 1981: none
* 1982: Rich Sutter (10th overall)
* 1983: Bob Errey (15th overall)
* 1984: Mario Lemieux (1st overall), Doug Bodger (9th overall) and Roger Belanger (16th overall)
* 1985: Craig Simpson (2nd overall)
* 1986: Zarley Zalapski (4th overall)
* 1987: Chris Joseph (5th overall)
* 1988: Darrin Shannon (4th overall)
* 1989: Jamie Heward (16th overall)
* 1990: Jaromir Jagr (5th overall)
* 1991: Markus Naslund (16th overall)
* 1992: Martin Straka (16th overall)
* 1993: Stefan Bergkvist (26th overall)
* 1994: Chris Wells (24th overall)
* 1995: Aleksey Morozov (24th overall)
* 1996: Craig Hillier (23rd overall)
* 1997: Robert Dome (17th overall)
* 1998: Milan Kraft (23rd overall)
* 1999: Konstantin Koltsov (18th overall)
* 2000: Brooks Orpik (18th overall)
* 2001: Colby Armstrong (21st overall)
* 2002: Ryan Whitney (5th overall)
* 2003: Marc-Andre Fleury (1st overall)
* 2004: Evgeni Malkin (2nd overall)
* 2005: Sidney Crosby (1st overall)
* 2006: Jordan Staal (2nd overall)

Franchise scoring leaders

These are the top-ten point-scorers in the history of the Penguins. Figures are updated after each completed NHL regular season.

Note: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points
PlayerPOS GP G A Pts
Mario LemieuxC88968310181701
Jaromir JagrRW8064396401079
Rick KehoeRW722312324636
Ron FrancisC533144449613
Jean PronovostRW753316287603
Kevin StevensLW522260295555
Syl Apps, Jr.C495151349500
Martin StrakaC560165277442
Paul CoffeyD331108332440
Ron SchockC619124280404

NHL Awards and Trophies

Stanley Cup
*1990-91, 1991-92

Prince of Wales Trophy
*1990-91, 1991-92

Presidents' Trophy
*1992-93

Hart Memorial Trophy
*Mario Lemieux: 1987-88, 1992-93, 1995-96
*Jaromir Jagr: 1998-99

Lester B. Pearson Award
*Mario Lemieux: 1985-86, 1987-88, 1992-93, 1995-96
*Jaromir Jagr: 1998-99, 1999-00

Art Ross Trophy
*Mario Lemieux: 1987-88, 1988-89, 1991-92, 1992-93, 1995-96, 1996-97
*Jaromir Jagr: 1994-95, 1997-98, 1998-99, 1999-00, 2000-01

Conn Smythe Trophy
*Mario Lemieux: 1990-91, 1991-92

James Norris Memorial Trophy
*Randy Carlyle: 1980-81

Calder Memorial Trophy
*Mario Lemieux: 1984-85

Frank J. Selke Trophy
*Ron Francis: 1994-95

Lady Byng Memorial Trophy
*Rick Kehoe: 1980-81
*Ron Francis: 1994-95, 1997-98

Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy
*Lowell MacDonald: 1972-73
*Mario Lemieux: 1992-93

NHL Plus/Minus Award
*Mario Lemieux: 1992-93
*Ron Francis: 1994-95

Lester Patrick Trophy
*Jack Riley: 1985-86
*Joe Mullen: 1994-95
*Mario Lemieux: 1999-00
*Craig Patrick: 1999-00
*Scotty Bowman: 2000-01
*Herb Brooks: 2001-02

Pittsburgh Penguins Individual Records

*Most Goals in a season: Mario Lemieux, 85 (1988-89)
*Most Assists in a season: Mario Lemieux, 114 (1988-89)
*Most Points in a season: Mario Lemieux, 199 (1988-89)
*Most Penalty Minutes in a season: Paul Baxter, 409 (1981-82)
*Most Points in a season, defenseman: Paul Coffey, 113 (1988-89)
*Most Points in a season, rookie: Sidney Crosby, 102 (2005-06)
*Most Wins in a season: Tom Barrasso, 43 (1992-93)

Broadcasters

* Bob Errey (former player, 1983-1993)
* Paul Steigerwald
* Phil Bourque (former player, 1983-1992)

See also

* List of Stanley Cup champions
* List of Pittsburgh Penguins players
* Head Coaches of the Pittsburgh Penguins
* List of NHL seasons
* List of NHL players
* 1967 NHL Expansion

External links

*Pittsburgh Penguins official site
*Letsgopens.com unofficial fan site
*Pittsburghhockey.net unofficial fansite



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