The Pittsburgh Penguins announced Wednesday that they are placing goalie Tristan Jarry on waivers. Jarry, 29, signed a five-year, $26.875 million
Penguins goaltender Tristan Jarry will be placed on waivers Wednesday, the team announced. The move comes as the struggling Pens have lost three straight games, and seven of their last eight, to drop to 18-20-8 on the season.
It seemed like an innocuous comment at the moment. But with the benefit of almost nine years, it proved to be insightful. During the Pittsburgh Penguins’ prospect development camp in Cranberry in June 2016,
The Pittsburgh Penguins have announced that goaltender Tristan Jarry will be placed on waivers at 2 p.m. on Wednesday. Jarry has struggled to not only live up to his contract, but perform at a replacement level this season,
The Tristan Jarry era in Pittsburgh isn’t over just yet. Jarry, the 29-year-old goalie, cleared waivers and can now be sent to the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins, Pittsburgh’s AHL affiliate, Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman and others reported on Thursday.
The Pittsburgh Penguins have reached their final straw with starting goalie Tristan Jarry. After another blown lead in their recent loss to the Seattle Kraken,
The Pittsburgh Penguins will place goaltender Tristan Jarry on waivers Wednesday at 2 p.m. That planned transaction was announced by the team via social media just as a practice session in Cranberry began.
Not even a two-game NHL slate can stop Josh Inglis from finding the best NHL player props including a double stack in Sabres vs. Penguins.
Kelsey Surmacz is the Pittsburgh Penguins reporter and site editor for The Hockey News and has been sports writing since she could hold a pen. She hails from the 412, comes from a hockey-crazed family, and hopelessly dreams of seeing a Pittsburgh Pirates World Series win during her lifetime.
The Penguins’ goaltending crisis started when the general manager made the right decision. No, not when current GM Kyle Dubas gave Tristan Jarry a five-year, $26.875 million contract in 2023. That was the wrong decision,