Western Pennsylvania's trusted news source
Penguins' Jesse Puljujarvi finds net after switch to left wing | TribLIVE.com
Penguins/NHL

Penguins' Jesse Puljujarvi finds net after switch to left wing

Justin Guerriero
7954916_web1_ptr-PensLight01-112024
Chaz Palla | TribLive
Penguins winger Jesse Puljujarvi puts a shot past Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy in the first period Tuesday at PPG Paints Arena.

Jesse Puljujarvi couldn’t put his finger on exactly how many of his 374 career NHL games involved him being deployed at left wing, other than admitting it has been with far less frequency as compared to the right side.

Regardless, on the left is where coach Mike Sullivan has seen fit to place Puljujarvi, a right-handed shot, the past five games dating to Nov. 11.

During that stretch, Puljujarvi has contributed goals in back-to-back games Nov. 16 and 19 against the San Jose Sharks and Tampa Bay Lightning.

“I think he’s playing really well for us,” Sullivan said. “He’s in on the forecheck. He’s good on the walls. He’s going to the net. I think he’s playing very well.”

The 26-year-old Puljujarvi has shuffled around the Penguins’ bottom-six corps of forwards of late, which has been necessary in the aftermath of Lars Eller’s trade and several injuries.

Encompassing his current modest two-game point streak, Puljujarvi has skated as left wing on a third line centered by Drew O’Connor, with Sam Poulin at right wing.

“It’s pretty good for me,” Puljujarvi said of playing left wing. “I can learn more. I’ve been strong playing left, too, with chances. You can come (over the) middle, and you have backhand, forehand a little different. It’s been a good change and gives me an opportunity to be (a) better player overall.”

Puljujarvi scored the opening goal Tuesday night in an eventual 3-2 overtime loss to the Lightning.

The sequence that led to the goal was begun by Puljujarvi himself, who pressured Tampa Bay defenseman J.J. Moser into making an errant pass out of the defensive zone on the forecheck.

After Moser’s attempted wall pass to Michael Eyssimont in the neutral zone missed its mark, Poulin tapped it back the way of Puljujarvi on the offensive blue line.

Following passes between Puljujarvi and O’Connor, Poulin kept the play alive, forwarding the puck to Marcus Petterssson.

From there, Puljujarvi broke toward the net and received a precision pass from Pettersson, tapping it in past Andrei Vasilevskiy at the crease.

“It was a nice pass,” Puljujarvi said. “I feel like we had (a) good forecheck there, and then you have to keep both feet moving and find those spots.”

Poulin, recently recalled from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton of the American Hockey League, notched a secondary assist on Puljujarvi’s goal for his first point of the year and second of his NHL career.

The Puljujarvi-O’Connor-Poulin line also managed to capitalize in the Penguins’ previous game, with Puljujarvi burying a loose puck after Sharks goalie Vitek Vanacek made a kick save on an O’Connor shot.

Puljujarvi, a former first-round (No. 4 overall) pick by the Edmonton Oilers in 2016, has scored three goals with five assists through 18 games played this season.

A healthy scratch for a handful of games this year, Puljujarvi played part of last season with the Penguins after being brought aboard on a professional tryout contract, eventually appearing in 22 games with three goals and an assist.

Signed to a two-year deal with the Penguins worth $800,000 annually last February, Puljujarvi’s opportunity with the Penguins followed his exit from the Carolina Hurricanes organization after appearing in 17 games for the 2022-23 campaign.

That summer, Puljujarvi underwent double hip surgery, leading to limited NHL opportunities to start 2023-24.

Last season, those significant surgeries were apparent in his overall play.

Now, with his health improved, Puljujarvi looks to continue a new chapter of his career that had gotten off to a promising start for parts of six seasons in Edmonton.

“I think his skating is stronger, he’s faster, he’s more powerful, he’s stronger on pucks, he’s not falling down as much when he’s over the puck and I’m sure his confidence is building because of all those things,” Sullivan said.

Notes: Defenseman Kris Letang, who has missed the Penguins’ past three games because of illness, practiced with the club Tuesday and Wednesday. Per Sullivan, Letang’s status remains day-to-day ahead of the Penguins’ next game Friday evening at home vs. the Winnipeg Jets. … Forward Kevin Hayes also returned to practicing while remaining on injured reserve with an undisclosed ailment. Sullivan had no status changes to report for Hayes. … Fellow forwards Blake Lizotte and Cody Glass, both on injured reserve with concussions, skated on their own Wednesday morning. … Wednesday’s practice featured only 12 skaters plus goalies Alex Nedeljkovic and Tristan Jarry, but was not listed as optional. “Some of the guys stayed off the ice today,” Sullivan said. “It was more about a recovery day. The reason for it is we’re playing three games in five nights. We haven’t had too many opportunities where we get two days between days, so we’re trying to maximize that.”

Justin Guerriero is a TribLive reporter covering the Penguins, Pirates and college sports. A Pittsburgh native, he is a Central Catholic and University of Colorado graduate. He joined the Trib in 2022 after covering the Colorado Buffaloes for Rivals and freelancing for the Denver Post. He can be reached at jguerriero@triblive.com.

Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.

Get Ad-Free >

Categories: Penguins/NHL | Sports
Sports and Partner News