The Pittsburgh Penguins are set to enter their most fascinating, and potentially important, offseason in almost two decades.
They not only have to figure out what direction to take a team that missed the playoffs for the first time in 16 years and how to fix all of the things that went wrong, but they also have to find a new general manager and front office to guide that journey.
Front office changes are not really a new thing around here. Over the past decade we have seen general managers get fired and hired, general managers leave, assistant general managers leave, and different voices get added into the mix.