Favorite moments from Mario, Jaromir, Sid, and Geno (Penguins)

The plan was to do a mailbag today and technically I still am. This mailbag is only going to be one question long because it was a great suggestion and deserves its own blog.

This is a great question. I love all four of them. I was very lucky to grow up outside of Pittsburgh and still have access to the number of games I did via ESPN and Sportschannel. Sportscenter also played a huge role as I would sit through three or four showings to see the Penguins highlights again, especially if it was a game against those Sharks teams. Franchises are lucky to get one out of those four players in their prime. Pittsburgh had all four.

I’ll start with Mario because he was the star of all stars for me growing up. Being right-handed it gave perhaps a false hope that I too could mimic some of the things he was doing out there. One of the things I was able to successfully do was his forehand backhand forehand five-hole move. Pretty simplistic but also damning to that era of goaltenders. The best example of this was also bittersweet. Mario’s Last home goal before his first retirement against the Philadelphia Flyers. At the time I couldn’t understand why somebody that good could just walk away from it all. I was so bummed out. This goal checked a lot of boxes. It was against the Flyers, it had Gary Thorne on the goal call, it had John Barbaro on the PA, it had the air raid goal horn, and it had an Igloo going nuts, including people waving their babies in the air to say they “saw… Mario, probably .

Jaromir Jagr was so much fun to watch during his Pittsburgh years. Every game you were given something amazing regardless of if it ended up on the scoresheet or not. His puck protection skills were second to none. He was able to combine those with explosive skating and deking abilities. I think his 1999 performance against the Devils was the most important, but I didn’t fully grasp how bleak things were for the Penguins at that time and how important them winning Game 6 and the series was.

My favorite is the goal you commonly find at the #1 slot on his top ten lists. The goal against the Chicago Blackhawks in Game 1 during the 1992 Stanley Cup Final. I was nine years old going on ten at the time and I had started staying up to watch full games. Game 1 was an epic comeback for the Penguins and Jagr’s goal in the third period came out of what is normally a mundane sequence. I remember how excited I was watching the game and specifically that goal. We take for granted what the current players are able to do. Guys like Jagr and goals like this were necessary to get where we are now.

My favorite goal is tied into Sid being gone. It was a long year and a half during Sid’s prime when he was unable to play because of his concussion/neck injury. Twitter was gaining steam at the time and everyday you’d hope your timeline had a positive update about him. A lot of days being let down. Eventually, Sid did return to the lineup. How was he going to be? Well, it was the same as when Mario came back after extended time off. Should have never been in question. Sid’s goal against the Islanders was cathartic and visceral for both player and fans. His “Fuck yeah… said it all.

Evgeni Malkin was fascinating from the start. There was a mystery to him being in Russia before highlights were easily obtained. It was the early days of Youtube. There was the heavy metal Malkin highlight video. You know the one. I was a huge fan immediately. What a perfect introduction to a player you knew your team drafted, but didn’t know a lot about. I remember sharing this video to all my friends bragging you think we were lucky with Sid, wait until you see the next one they’ve got. I’ve probably seen this thing 100 times.

As for Malkin as a player I love the emotion he plays with. It is a double-edged sword, but when he balances the emotion with his physical skill it is perfection. No better example than his goal on Marty Biron in the 2008 playoffs. This goal is Evgeni Malkin

There are so many more moments for these players. Those are the ones that stick out to me because of what they meant to me on a personal level. It is always great to take a look back and share memories from these four players. A Mount Rushmore of hockey like no other.

I’ll have the rest of the mailbag in the near future.

Thanks for reading!

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