October On September 27, the Penguins embarked on a trip for Sweden where they opened the season against the
Ottawa Senators, at the
Stockholm Globe Arena. The Penguins were one of four teams to participate in
NHL Premiere which began the season with games in
Prague, Czech Republic and
Stockholm, Sweden. Pittsburgh won the opening game of the season in overtime, getting two goals from
Tyler Kennedy, including the game-winner. The team returned to Pittsburgh after ten days in Europe and a 1–1–0 record. On October 18,
Sidney Crosby scored one goal in addition to three assists to surpass benchmarks of 100 goals, 200 assists, and 300 total points for his career. In the same game,
Evgeni Malkin assisted on four goals, giving him 200 total career points. The Penguins received continued fan support from their
previous season. In addition to extending a home sellout streak to 72 games on October 23, the Penguins ranked 113% above the national average for male television viewers aged 18 to 34. The franchise ranked as the 18th most valuable in the league at US$195 million, marking a 26% increase from the past season. The Penguins finished October with a 3–1–1 record in Pittsburgh and concluded the month with three consecutive road losses.
November The Penguins won their first six games in November before losing in a shootout on November 18.
Rob Scuderi and
Hal Gill were selected by Therrien to be November's alternate captains, taking over for
Brooks Orpik and Malkin who served in October. On November 11, the Penguins returned to Detroit for the first time since the
2008 Stanley Cup Final. The third goal of
Jordan Staal's second career
hat-trick came with 22.8 seconds remaining in regulation, sending the game into overtime where the Penguins achieved a 7–6 victory. Malkin's 13-game point streak ended on November 18, during the streak he scored 27 points. Through November 19, the Penguins led the league in overtime games with nine of 18 games taking extra time to decide. Through the first 20 games of the season,
Mike Zigomanis led the league in faceoff percentage and
Alex Goligoski led rookie defensemen in points. After an injury to
Marc-Andre Fleury,
Dany Sabourin and rookie
John Curry split goaltending duties in his multi-game absence in which the team was 5–6–2. On November 26, Malkin scored three goals for his third career hat-trick, three days later Sidney Crosby also achieved a hat trick—the second of his career. After the team's final game of the month, Malkin and Crosby ranked first and second in league scoring with 39 and 34 points respectively. Malkin also ranked first in the league with 29 assists,
December Therrien named
Jordan Staal and
Matt Cooke December's alternate captains. "I think it's important for our young group to try to extend the leadership group," the coach said of the decision. A survey by Turnkey Sports & Entertainment released on December 2 that surveyed fans of all 122
NFL,
NBA,
NHL and
MLB teams ranked the Penguins eighth. The survey consisted of 21 categories such as entertainment value, commitment to winning, ticket value and likeability of the players and owners. Ranked 20th in the same poll in 2007, the Penguins were the second-ranked NHL team, behind the
Detroit Red Wings. The Penguins began the month with seven games in eleven days in which they were 2–4–1. As of December 10, Crosby and Malkin continued to lead the league in points as well as leading voting for the
All-Star Game in
Montreal. On December 11, after losing three consecutive games,
Petr Sykora and
Pascal Dupuis each scored their first career hat-tricks in a 9–2 victory over the
New York Islanders in Pittsburgh. It was the seventh time in the Penguins' history that two players scored a hat-trick in the same game, the first since 1993. On December 21, Sidney Crosby surpassed the record for most All-Star Game votes at 1,020,736, set by
Jaromir Jagr, then with the Penguins, in 2000. Crosby broke the record with 13 days remaining in voting. Defenceman
Ryan Whitney made his first appearance of the season on December 23, after missing 33 games with a foot injury. On December 26, Marc-Andre Fleury made 37 saves in Pittsburgh's first shutout of the season, defeating the
New Jersey Devils, 1–0. After concluding the month with a 5–8–1 record, the team held a players-only meeting on December 30. "The attitude is a little off right now," said Brooks Orpik, "It's easy to be a good team when you're winning games. When you're going through rough batches like this, it's what tests guys' character."
January The Penguins began 2009 with three consecutive losses, extending their losing streak to five games—the most consecutive since 2006. During the streak, the Penguins fell from second to ninth place in the Eastern Conference and failed to score on 32 consecutive power plays. Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin led all players in voting for the
2009 All-Star Game. However, Crosby did not play due to a knee injury. The top vote-getter for the second year in a row, Crosby also missed the 2008 All-Star Game. On January 8, the team announced that they had agreed to a four-year contract extension with
Jordan Staal worth $16 million. Staal's rookie contract was set to expire at the end of the season. He was the Penguins first round pick, second overall in
2006. The team suffered from injuries, culminating in January where at one point they had eight starters injured. Mike Zigomanis had been inactive since December 3 and
Ruslan Fedotenko was ruled out for four to six weeks after breaking his hand on January 6.
Sergei Gonchar practiced with the team for the first time on January 16 after suffering a
separated shoulder during the pre-season. By that time, the Penguins had lost 173
man-games due to injury, after losing 239 in the entire
2007–08 season. With a 3–0 victory over the
New York Rangers on January 18, the Penguins won a second consecutive game for the first time since November 15. However, the team was unable to capitalize and lost their last game before the All-Star break to the
Carolina Hurricanes. The Penguins entered the break with a 23–21–4 record. The team's 50 points put them in tenth place in the
Eastern Conference, two spots out of the
playoffs.
February On February 14, Sergei Gonchar made his season debut and Ruslan Fedotenko returned to the line-up after missing over a month due to a hand injury. On February 15—with the Penguins five points out of the playoffs—Therrien was replaced by
Dan Bylsma, the coach of the Penguins'
AHL affiliate
Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, on an interim basis.
Tom Fitzgerald was promoted from Director of Player Development to assistant coach for forwards, while
Mike Yeo, already with the team, became assistant for the defensemen. Assistant
Andre Savard was reassigned within the organization. On February 21, Crosby recorded his 250th career assist in a 2-goal, 2-assist victory over the Philadelphia Flyers. On February 25, Fleury recorded his third shutout of the season, as the Penguins defeated the Islanders 1–0; the team remained two points out of the playoffs after the win. The day after the shutout,
Ryan Whitney was traded to the
Anaheim Ducks for
Chris Kunitz and signing rights to prospect
Eric Tangradi. In his first game after being traded to Pittsburgh, Kunitz recorded a goal and an assist as the Penguins defeated the
Chicago Blackhawks in overtime.
March The Penguins began March with five of six games on the road, before a homestand of eight consecutive games. Upon the Penguins' win on March 1, the team moved into eighth place in the Eastern Conference with 70 points. The
NHL trade deadline was on March 4. On March 3, the Penguins placed
Miroslav Satan on waivers to clear roster space for a trade. Before the deadline, the Penguins acquired
New York Islanders' captain
Bill Guerin in exchange for a conditional draft pick in the
2009 draft. The team went a franchise-first 5–0–0 on a road trip at the beginning of March. On March 15, the Penguins soldout their 100th consecutive game at the Mellon Arena. Evgeni Malkin recorded his 100th point of the season while tying a career-high five point game against the
Atlanta Thrashers on March 17. On March 20,
Vince Lascheid, Penguins and
Pittsburgh Pirates organist of 33 years, died. Vice President of Communications Tom McMillan said, "[Lascheid] probably is the only organist in the history of professional sports to be inducted into a team Hall of Fame." The Penguins concluded March with eight consecutive games at the Mellon Arena—their longest homestand of the season.
April and season results Pittsburgh finished their homestand with a 6–1–1 record, moving into fourth place in the Eastern Conference. The final game of the homestand was the most watched game of the season on
FSN Pittsburgh, the Penguins regional television network. FSN Pittsburgh was the most-watched regional Fox network in the NHL for the second consecutive season. On April 7, Sidney Crosby scored his 100th point of the season, Evgeni Malkin acquired his 300th career point and Petr Sykora scored his 300th career goal, while the Penguins qualified for the post-season for the third consecutive season with a 6–4 win over the
Tampa Bay Lightning. Tickets for Pittsburgh's first two opening round playoff games sold out within a few hours of going on sale. The team collected over $100,000 for the families of three
Pittsburgh Police officers who were
killed days before the game. The Penguins finished their regular season on April 12 with a win over the Montreal Canadiens. Through his first 25 games as Penguins' coach, Dan Blysma's 18–3–4 record amounted to 40 points—the second-most of any coach in NHL history through their first 25 games. The Penguins finished with a 45–28–9 record, for 99 points; fourth place in the Eastern Conference and second place in the Atlantic Division. Evgeni Malkin won the
Art Ross Trophy as the league's leading scorer with 113 points. Malkin followed
Mario Lemieux,
Jaromir Jagr and Crosby to become the fourth different Penguin to win the award. The award was the 13th overall for the Penguins since 1988.
Game log Standings ;Divisional standings ;Conference standings
Detailed records Final ==Stanley Cup playoffs==