Pittsburgh Penguins center and future Hall of Fame inductee Evgeni Malkin addressed his future with the team today, expressing to the media (including NHL.com’s Wes Crosby) that his desire is to remain with the only franchise he’s ever played for. He also confirmed that he would be willing to play for another team if the Penguins decide not to extend him an offer of a new contract. Malkin, who turns 40 this summer, had a strong campaign when healthy, scoring 61 points in 56 games. While the pace of the game got away from him during the team’s first-round series loss to the Philadelphia Flyers, he still spent most of 2025-26 producing at a star level.

Whether the Penguins want to keep Malkin beyond this season is a complicated question. For as well as he played for most of 2025-26, Malkin isn’t part of the Penguins’ long-term future, something the team has become increasingly focused on building towards. If Malkin were to be re-signed, the minutes he would play would be minutes that couldn’t be devoted to developing a younger center. If the Penguins take a player development mindset towards their roster-building this summer, there is an argument to be made that they should not keep Malkin. On the other hand, this is a player who is a franchise icon, someone who captain Sidney Crosby no doubt still wants to play with, and someone who has proven he can still be a valuable NHLer in most cases. The Athletic’s Josh Yohe reported in January that the Penguins “are not expected to offer him another contract with the franchise,” but it’s unclear if anything has changed in the months since. For as long as he remains unsigned, Malkin’s status will be one of the more compelling storylines to track this offseason.

Other notes from the Metro:

  • Penguins netminder Arturs Silovs, who nearly became the story of the first round with his heroics to extend Pittsburgh’s comeback effort against the Flyers, told the media today that he was playing through a knee injury. It’s unclear what the full extent of the injury is, but at the very least it was minor enough for Silovs to play through. It didn’t seem to impact his form too greatly, as he posted a .939 save percentage in three starts in the postseason. Regardless of the injury, Silovs appears poised to take on a bigger role for the Penguins next season.
  • The Carolina Hurricanes will enter their second-round playoff series against Philadelphia with Nikolaj Ehlers and Alexander Nikishin healthy and ready to play, head coach Rod Brind’Amour announced. Ehlers missed the final game of Carolina’s sweep of the Ottawa Senators with a lower-body injury. He’s one of the Hurricanes’ top offensive talents, producing 71 points in his debut season with the club. Nikishin was knocked out of game four against the Senators with a concussion, but appears to have worked his way back and will resume his role on a pairing with veteran Shayne Gostisbehere.
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