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New era arrives for Pens

PITTSBURGH — Ron Hextall, Pittsburgh Penguin. Yeah, it might take some getting used to.

Still, longtime Penguins captain Sidney Crosby pointed to the club’s decision to hire Hextall — long associated as both a player and an executive with cross-state rival Philadelphia — as the team’s new general manager as proof that the NHL is in essence one big family.

“It’s funny when you think about it, you don’t ever anticipate that,” Crosby said Wednesday, a day after the Penguins brought in Hextall to replace Hall of Famer Jim Rutherford, who resigned abruptly last month. “I think you find yourself saying that a lot in hockey, that it finds a way of bringing people together in different circumstances.”

Hextall spent 11 of his 13 seasons in the NHL as a goalie with the Flyers, often clashing with Pittsburgh superstar Mario Lemieux, who now happens to be Hextall’s boss. He even spent four-plus years as Philadelphia’s general manager, where one of his main jobs was to find a way to build a roster capable of toppling Crosby and the Penguins. Now, his gig is to surround Crosby and Evgeni Malkin with a team talented enough to make a deep playoff run.

Bringing on a former nemesis to build a winner isn’t exactly new territory in Pittsburgh. The Penguins acquired Philadelphia forward Rick Tocchet in February 1992 on the way to the Stanley Cup. Tocchet won two more Cups as an assistant coach with the Penguins in 2016 and ‘17.

It speaks to the whirlwind nature of Hextall and new president of hockey operations Brian Burke’s courtship that neither had spoken to Crosby or Penguins coach Mike Sullivan until after the ink on their respective contracts was dry.

While they exchanged pleasantries on Wednesday morning, there’s no time for a honeymoon period. Most front-office overhauls happen during the offseason. Not this one. Rutherford’s stunning exit came two weeks into a 56-game sprint. There will be no feeling-out process. It will be trial and error done on the fly in one of the NHL’s most competitive divisions.

Yet filling the positions does give Pittsburgh something it’s lacked during the last month: some semblance of normalcy. The 5-5-1 start has been filled with a steady stream of injuries to defenseman and a power play that’s been ineffective.

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