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Penguins players size up new coach Dan Muse on Day 1 of training camp | TribLIVE.com
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Penguins players size up new coach Dan Muse on Day 1 of training camp

Justin Guerriero
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Chaz Palla | TribLive
Penguins coach Dan Muse gives instructions during the first day of practice Thursday at UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex.

The sights and sounds Thursday at the Pittsburgh Penguins’ opening day of training camp were reflective of the organization’s new direction, but so was what wasn’t seen or heard.

Gone was the familiar presence of Mike Sullivan, whose rough New England accent boomed from UPMC Lemieux Sports Complex ice for the last decade.

Instead, it was first-year coach Dan Muse’s show, Muse having been hired in early June after the Penguins parted ways with Sullivan, who promptly landed with the New York Rangers.

Under the watch of Muse and his new-look staff, 69 skaters and goalies took to the ice as the Penguins began the process of formally molding their 2025-26 roster into form.

Attendees at camp ranged from franchise pillar Sidney Crosby to $10 million defenseman Erik Karlsson to young bucks, past draft picks and hopefuls on professional tryouts, and all got the opportunity to size up Muse.

“It’s been good,” Karlsson said. “I think everything has been very clear and it’s Day 1, but even yesterday was very organized and easy to move around and do your usual business. At the same time, obviously, a lot of new things and new voices. Today was a good day. It was probably one of the harder first-day training camp skates I’ve done in a long time.”

Added fellow defenseman Kris Letang: “You could feel the energy. It’s through the roof. … You kind of see the emphasis on what we’re trying to do out there, (which) is battle and play the game situationally in every single drill. It was pretty intense out there, pretty hard.”

Justin Brazeau, a 6-foot-7 winger signed to a two-year, $1.5 million deal over the summer, was among the Penguins’ latest class of free-agent acquisitions to turn in a first day of work with his new employer.

Brazeau, who split last season between the Boston Bruins and Minnesota Wild, posting 11 goals and 11 assists in 76 games, spoke with Muse a few times after signing to go over some basics as to how the Penguins envisioned deploying him.

But phone calls don’t compare to actually hitting the ice in a live practice setting.

Having done so with Muse for a day, Brazeau was impressed, echoing Karlsson’s remarks about Muse’s practice structure.

“I thought it was really good,” Brazeau said. “It was organized. Practice had a good flow to it. There weren’t too many lapses here or there, so I thought he ran a really good practice and did a good job of getting ready for us to go.”

Defenseman Jake Livingstone is one of five players at camp on a professional tryout (not counting goalie Marc-Andre Fleury, who inked one in a ceremonial capacity after retiring from the NHL at the conclusion of last season).

Livingstone, 26, does not have the luxury of security that comes with an NHL contract.

He’ll have to fight for that, earning a role within the organization via a strong performance in camp.

As he works towards that, Thursday allowed a chance to soak in his new environment under a coach he’s yet to deeply get to know.

“It’s obviously one day, and I just met him (Wednesday), but he’s really high-energy, he demands a lot in the details and that’s what it takes to win,” Livingstone said. “It also keeps it fun out there even when you’re doing the hard stuff. For Day 1, I thought he did a great job.”

For Muse, Thursday represented the culmination of efforts dating to June 4 when he was hired to lead the Penguins.

It’s been a busy several months, as Muse has gone about introducing himself to players, navigating the NHL Draft, filling out his assistant coaching staff and laying the groundwork for the start of the preseason.

As that work continues, a new chapter of Penguins hockey begins.

“It’s a new voice, and sometimes it’s different,” Letang said. “Last night, I came and grabbed dinner here at the rink and when I left at 8 o’clock, Dan was still here on his computer working on some stuff. You see the passion he has for the game in trying to work on every little detail to make us better and improve every single guy out there. I think the attention to detail, intensity, emotion — there are things that he brings every single day.”

Notes: Winger Kevin Hayes was forced to leave practice after absorbing a hit along the boards from Ryan Graves in the Penguins’ final session of the day. Per Muse, Hayes is being evaluated for an upper-body injury.

Dubas revealed five players who entered training camp Thursday with injuries.

• Forward Noel Acciari is sidelined with a core muscle injury. The Penguins hope he’ll recover in time to see some late preseason game action, but “in the short run,” he will be sidelined, Dubas said.

• Winger Rutger McGroarty is out indefinitely because of an unspecified injury, although different from the suspected foot ailment that ended his 2024-25 campaign a handful of games early.

“Because of the player, his age, the potential that he has, we just have to be very patient with Rutger on that one,” Dubas said.

• Forward Bill Zonnon, a 2025 first-round draft pick (No. 22 overall), suffered a lower-body injury while playing for the Rouyn-Noranda Huskies of the Quebec Maritmes Junior Hockey League. Dubas expects him to be out for another month.

• Defenseman Peyton Kettles, a 2025 second-round (No. 39 overall) pick by the Penguins, is also nursing an ailment and will be out a few weeks after going down in a game with his Western Hockey League club, the Swift Current Broncos.

• Winger Tanner Howe, a 2024 draft pick (second round, 46th overall), continues to rehab an ACL injury suffered with the Calgary Hitmen of the WHL this past spring.

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.

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