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The Pittsburgh Penguins did not have the best start to their Friday evening pre-season tilt against the Detroit Red Wings.

But they were able to storm back in convincing fashion.

The Penguins erased a 2-0 deficit and came back to beat the Red Wings, 3-2. Connor Dewar, Robby Fabbri, and Philip Tomasino notched three unanswered goals for the Penguins en route to the victory, and goaltender Arturs Silovs entered the game midway through the second period and stopped the seven shots he faced – including a few nice saves late in the game.

Tristan Jarry started in net for the Penguins and stopped 11 of 13 shots.

“[Silovs] stood on his head there with some big saves,” Fabbri said. “We didn’t help ‘Jars’ out as much as we would have liked, but he played well as well. We can’t win without those two.”

Here are some thoughts and observations from this one:

– There are a handful of young forwards and defensemen on this training camp roster who probably deserve to, at least, have a shot at supplanting some veterans from NHL roster spots by the end of the pre-season.

But I don’t think the goaltending battle is being talked about enough.

Obviously, the injury to Joel Blomqvist – who is out for “at least four weeks” with a lower-body injury – opens up some of the logjam for the AHL and NHL spots. But Taylor Gauthier is also injured, which means the Penguins have open season on two of their affiliate goaltending slots.

As for the two NHL jobs? Again, GM and POHO Kyle Dubas said that the two best goaltenders will win the NHL roster spots. As of now, the two best goaltenders in this camp have been Silovs and Sergei Murashov.

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‘I’m Happy It All Worked Out’: Fleury, Teammates Relish Chance To Share Ice One Last Time
Normally, NHL training camp is an all-business kind of affair, and that’s exactly how it’s been at Pittsburgh Penguins’ camp this year.

While I strongly believe Jarry will begin the season at the NHL level by default – and Murashov will begin in the AHL both for developmental purposes and because of Blomqvist going down – I’m not so sure he is going to end up getting the bulk of the starts. Silovs has shown his capability so far in camp, and – while it is only fair to give Jarry a bit more time and runway to show in camp, as this was his first pre-season appearance – he has a track record of performing well in big games.

Keep a watchful eye on those two as camp progresses. They are, likely, the two NHL goaltenders to start the season. But the battle between the two will be fun to watch.

– When Dewar was acquired from the Toronto Maple Leafs in a last-minute deal before the 2025 trade deadline, I didn’t really think much of it. Defenseman Conor Timmins – who was traded on draft day to the Buffalo Sabres along with defensive prospect Isaac Belliveau for a second-round pick – was the bigger piece of that initial deal, and I assumed he would have a higher impact.

But Dewar has been a nice surprise for the Penguins, and he showed out Friday. He scored a Sidney Crosby-esque backhand in the first period to give the Penguins life, and he fought Detroit’s Carson Bantle at the beginning of the third to give the team a spark.

Even head coach Dan Muse said he’s seen a little bit of everything from the 5-foot-10, 187-pound forward.

“Him and [Blake] Lizotte have gotten a lot of time on the penalty kill in the last couple of games, and they’ve done a really good job,” Muse said. “He’s a guy that gets in on the forecheck… a big goal there. That was a time in the game, too, you talk about two big momentum swing we had, and he had his fingerprints all over it. Big goal there to get us going a little bit more offensively, and then a fight there to follow it up. And he had some other big moments there I thought late in the game as well.

“Those types of things… he’s showing his ability to impact the game and swing the momentum, and he’s showing it in different ways.”

I’m not saying Dewar has been some kind of huge revelation for the Penguins, but he has been more than solid since his acquisition. He’s fiesty, he drives the net, he’s put the puck in the back of the net semi-regularly for a fourth-liner, and he’s sound defensively.

I think he’s been a really solid bottom-sixer for the Penguins.

Penguins Fall To Blue Jackets In Second Pre-Season Tilt
Penguins Fall To Blue Jackets In Second Pre-Season Tilt
After a hard-fought 2-1 shootout loss to the Montreal Canadiens in their pre-season opener on Monday, the Pittsburgh Penguins looked to carry some of that momentum into their tilt against the Columbus Blue Jackets on Wednesday.

– Another couple of forwards who stood out against Detroit? Tomasino and Fabbri.

While it’s easy to point to the three goal-scorers as the standouts of the game, they truly were the best players in this one.

Tomasino is someone who really needs to have a strong camp for the Penguins. This was his second game of the pre-season, and he has looked better and better. He was making an impact from the jump on Friday, creating scoring chances and hovering around the slot and net-front areas – and he also led the team in shots on goal with five.

Those are the kinds of things – as well as honing in the details – that Tomasino needs to continue doing in order to solidify his spot on the NHL roster.

I feel that Fabbri has had a pretty good camp so far, and his middle-drive to the net leading up to his goal was refreshing to watch. He’s almost always one of the hardest-working players on the ice, and he is a relentless forechecker with a little bit of bite – as well as a scoring touch.

The former first-round pick (21st overall in 2014 by the St. Louis Blues) was signed to a paid tryout (PTO) contract prior to training camp. Yes, there are a lot of young forwards in the mix for roster spots, and there are a few injuries to veterans at the moment as well. Making the NHL roster out of camp is probably an uphill climb for Fabbri.

But, so far, I think he’s earned it. He will have to come out strong for the rest of the pre-season, though, to really make a strong case for himself.

– Saturday is Fleury day. Everyone in the city of Pittsburgh – including Fleury’s longtime teammates and good friends in Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, and Kris Letang – is looking forward to it, and PPG Paints Arena is expected to be a packed house.

Get there early, folks. There is more construction around the arena than there was last season, and it’s going to be nuts down on Fifth Avenue tomorrow in celebration of an all-time great.

Ticket Prices For Fleury's Final Game Keep Rising
Ticket Prices For Fleury’s Final Game Keep Rising
When the Pittsburgh Penguins signed goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury to a paid tryout (PTO) contract on Friday, along with that came the announcement that he’d be appearing in one final pre-season game in Pittsburgh on Sept. 27 against the Columbus Blue Jackets before officially retiring from the NHL.

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India v New Zealand, 5th ODI, Vizag: Want to successfully overcome challenges thrown at me, says JadhavKedar Jadhav said he varies his action according the batsman so as to make it difficult to read. (AFP Photo) VISAKHAPATNAM: From a specialist batsman to someone whose off-breaks are proving to be more than handy, Kedar Jadhav believes that the key to his transformation is accepting challenges and knowing how to overcome it.
Jadhav has bowled 18 overs in four games taking six wickets for 73 runs at a decent economy rate of 4.05.
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“It’s all about taking this responsibility and accepting the challenge that comes at you and then, coming out of the challenge successfully,” Jadhav said on the eve of their fifth and final One-dayer against New Zealand.
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Jadhav, who’s playing in place of an indisposed Suresh Raina, bowled for the first time in international cricket when MS Dhoni gave him the ball ahead of the regular spin duo of Axar Patel and Amit Mishra on a seaming Dharamsala track in the first one-dayer.
“Here, you need to contribute if the captain is asking you to bowl (some) overs. You don’t have to bowl (just) as a part-time bowler. You need to take the responsibility with the ball or bat,” Jadhav said.
“I guess when you play for India, you have to contribute in every possible way you can. While playing in the IPL, I do that with wicketkeeping — by contributing rather than batting,” Jadhav said.
Jadhav said he varies his action according the batsman so as to make it difficult to read.
“It’s both – a bit of my action and the pace I vary according to the batsmen that makes it difficult (for them) to read I guess. Mahi bhai asked me to bowl. Obviously, Mahi wants a few bowlers from the top five or six batsmen to bowl at least 4-5 overs. If a bowler has a bad day, it helps (the team) you know.”
Jadhav who got out for a duck in the fourth ODI in Ranchi is yet to click as a batsman and he said he’s to learn quickly. Youngster Manish Pandey too is missing among runs and Jadhav said they would have to get into their act soon.
“Obviously, the opportunity has been missed, especially in the last game. But it’s still early stages for Manish (Pandey) and me. We need to grab whatever opportunity is thrown at us. We need to learn quickly from the opportunities we have missed. That’s what international cricket is all about – delivering when it matters most to the team.”
An attacking middle-order batsman, Jadhav who came into the limelight with a 29-ball-50 for Delhi Daredevils on his IPL debut, also spoke about his favourite sweep shot.
“Sweep is a natural shot to me. It’s my strength. If a spinner is bowling to my pads in the middle overs and when you don’t wanna take too many high-risk shots.
“That’s the shot which you can take when the bowler tries to bowl outside the leg stump or off stump. You can paddle it out because we have 4 fielders on the leg side and behind the square, you have only one (fielder). If you pass that fielder, you get a sure-shot boundary. It’s a good shot to play when the bowlers attack my pads.”
Jadhav also backed their batting unit which looks too much dependent on Virat Kohli.
“Virat is a great player and it’s always nice if he scores. It makes life easy for the batsmen coming next to get whatever runs (possible). But it’s not like that (we’re overdependent on him). We have too many quality batsmen in the team and we need to deliver whenever we get the opportunity.”
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