New Penguins Era Could Threaten A Longtime Franchise Bond

As the Penguins grapple with potential changes in ECHL affiliations under new ownership, historic ties with the Wheeling Nailers hang in the balance.

The Pittsburgh Penguins could be on the verge of a major shift at the ECHL level, and the ripple effect would hit Wheeling hard.

The Hoffmann Family of Companies got NHL approval to buy the Penguins on June 23, and because the company already owns the ECHL’s Florida Everblades, there’s a real chance the Penguins’ affiliate could move from the Wheeling Nailers to Florida. If that happens, it would end one of the league’s longest-running partnerships and change a setup that has been in place for decades.

Wheeling’s connection to Pittsburgh goes back to February 1998, which makes it the longest active NHL-ECHL affiliation. That link has helped build a strong development pipeline alongside the AHL’s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins. Over the years, players such as Josh Archibald, Casey DeSmith, Avery Hayes, and Sergei Murashov have all spent time in Wheeling on their way up.

For the Nailers, the Penguins identity is woven into everything from the black and gold look to the coaching, development, and resources that have shaped the franchise. Losing that partnership would be more than a paperwork change for Wheeling fans.

There’s also the practical side. The distance between Wilkes-Barre/Scranton and Wheeling is already manageable, but Florida is a much different situation.

The article notes that call-ups and demotions often happen quickly between the three teams, sometimes on game day, and that urgency matters. On April 5, the Penguins had to bring up Taylor Gauthier from the Nailers for goaltending depth against the Florida Panthers.

If Wilkes-Barre/Scranton had to pull a player from the Everblades, the travel would be far less convenient. Players would have to leave from Miami or Fort Lauderdale, get to Philadelphia first, and then take a two-hour bus ride or another flight to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. It’s workable, but not ideal when everything is moving fast.

Even so, the new ownership could see upside in making the switch. Full control over both the AHL and ECHL affiliates would give the Penguins a cleaner organizational structure, and the distance issue might be a tradeoff they’re willing to accept.

Florida brings its own pedigree, too. The Everblades have won four Kelly Cup titles in the last five years, including this season, and the article points to Tanner Jeannot, Cam Johnson, and Alex Nedeljkovic as players who started their careers there.

For Wheeling, though, this would be a real setback. The Nailers just reached the Eastern Conference Final in the Kelly Cup Playoffs before losing Game 5 to the Everblades, and they’ve long benefited from Pittsburgh’s prospect pool.

Even if they lose the Penguins affiliation, they won’t vanish. But the article makes clear they could feel the impact on the ice for a season or two.

ECHL affiliations change all the time, and not every arrangement makes perfect geographic sense. Still, Wheeling has been around a long time and will keep playing. If the Penguins do make the Everblades their ECHL partner, the Hoffmann Family may also need to do some work to win back part of the fanbase.

In Other News...

So Many Familiar Penguins Names Just Vanished On Day 1

The first day of free agency came with a familiar kind of Pittsburgh churn, only this time the ex-Penguins were spread across the league almost as quickly as the market opened. Ian Cole landed with the Blackhawks, Noel Acciari went to the Flyers, and Ryan Shea found a deal with the Oilers, while other former Penguins names also surfaced on new contracts as teams filled out their rosters.

For a club that has spent years cycling through depth pieces and support roles, it was a reminder of just how wide the Penguins old network still reaches. Teddy Blueger, Conor Sheary, Connor Clifton, Vincent Desharnais, Zach Aston-Reese and others all found new homes, leaving Pittsburgh with a little less familiarity around the league and a few more spots to monitor as the rest of free agency unfolds. [Read more 🡒]

Penguins Lose Another Blue Line Depth Piece Fans Were Watching

The Penguins have seen another bit of organizational depth slip away this offseason, with a player many fans had kept an eye on heading back overseas after a year in North America. The latest move adds to a quiet churn around the system, the kind that can be easy to miss on the surface but matters when teams start piecing together their blue line options for the year ahead.

Alexander Alexeyevs departure leaves Pittsburgh with one fewer defenseman in the pipeline to evaluate, and it comes after a season spent with Wilkes-Barre/Scranton. For a club that is always trying to balance short-term roster needs with longer-term depth, losing another potential call-up option narrows the picture a little more, even if the bigger questions on the blue line still remain unresolved. [Read more 🡒]

Penguins Made A Savvy Blue Line Move Fans Didn't See Coming

The Penguins quietly made a blue line move that fits the kind of careful roster work front offices have to do when the margins get tight. Parker Wotherspoon gave them a strong season beside Erik Karlsson, but with the defenseman headed into the final year of his deal and due for a raise, Pittsburgh had reason to think ahead rather than wait for the price to climb.

Kaedan Korczak gives the Penguins a different kind of answer. He is younger, has handled a depth role well in Vegas, and comes with the kind of long-term contract security teams like when they are trying to balance present value with future flexibility. For a club trying to stay competitive without boxing itself in, it was the sort of move that could matter more than it first appears. [Read more 🡒]