No joke: Penguins are in 1st



The Pens upended the New Jersey Devils 4-2.
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- A seemingly insignificant game in late October might be the night the Pittsburgh Penguins first gave the NHL a glimpse of its new generation of stars, one that already has the look of being very special, very soon.
No, the Penguins aren't Mario Lemieux, Jaromir Jagr or Ron Francis. They're Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Marc-Andre Fleury and Jordan Staal. All are No. 1 or No. 2 draft picks, and they aren't taking long to show why.
Malkin scored a goal in his fourth consecutive game to start his career and fellow rookie Staal scored his third goal in two games as the Penguins beat the New Jersey Devils 4-2 Tuesday night.
The Penguins, the Atlantic Division's last-place team the last four seasons, find themselves in an unfamiliar spot since the days following Mario Lemieux's comeback nearly six years ago: first place. They have won three in a row for the first time since March 19-23, 2004, a span that includes the 2004-05 labor shutdown season.
"We'll take that," Crosby said.
Big improvement
No kidding. Their 5-3 record may not seem that great, but it's a big improvement from the Penguins' nine-game losing streak to start last season. The players most responsible for their success -- 18-year-old Staal, 19-year-old Sidney Crosby and 20-year-old Malkin -- teamed for 13 of Pittsburgh's 25 shots.
Fleury turned aside 20 shots, making three good saves during a four-minute Devils power play to end the second period and start the third. The former No. 1 pick has a 2.50 goals-against average while starting all eight games.
"It's a much better atmosphere than what we had before," Fleury said of a team that won only 22 games last season. "Everything is more relaxed. We have a lot more confidence that we are going to win games, and that's what you're seeing. It was a big win."
The Devils, who got goals from Scott Gomez and Sergei Brylin, lost their third in a row and have scored only 13 goals in six games.
"It's not Devils hockey," goalie Martin Brodeur said.
Playing better
Or maybe it was the new Penguins hockey, with Malkin moved up to Crosby's line for the first time. Crosby and Malkin each had a goal and an assist, as did Nils Ekman, shifted to the second line with Staal and Mark Recchi.
Malkin's goal came midway through the third and was exactly the kind of highlight-reel goal he scored so often for Russia in international play and with the Russian Super League last season. Taking a cross-ice pass from Crosby, he split two defenders and did a spin move near the net to beat Brodeur on a backhander to restore Pittsburgh's two-goal lead.
"I came right from the bench and I had a lot of energy," Malkin said, speaking through an interpreter.
Brodeur's take on the goal?
"Pretty amazing," he said. "It was a great pass, but there's not too many guys who can control that and after that, have the presence to outmuscle a guy and shift when a guy is trying to take your head off. I thought I had it the whole way, he had nowhere to go, and he just stopped and went right around me with his reach."
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