The location of Sergei Murashov’s seat about an hour before puck drop on Wednesday night in Philadelphia is telling. Not in the tunnel of the locker room, not on the bench. The press box. As the Flyers’ crowd filed in below, already boisterous and ravenous, a rookie goalie in a pressed suit watched warmups from above. Earlier that day, the Penguins had subtly called him back from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton; the team didn’t even bother to make an announcement. Before any press release, the transaction was reflected on the AHL website.

That tactful approach conveys a message. Due to their inability to get Murashov to town in time, Pittsburgh has been doing this dance for weeks, moving him up, sending him back, and calling up Taylor Gauthier from Wheeling on Easter Sunday. This type of logistical chaos occurs when a team’s goaltending situation is more precarious than it appears on paper. Stuart Skinner, who was hired in part to keep things stable, has been recovering from what looked to be a facial injury sustained by an unruly puck a few weeks ago. Arturs Silovs has been carrying a lot of weight. Murashov is waiting somewhere behind all of that.
He is twenty-two. This season, he was named an AHL All-Star, which typically has some significance, but in goaltending, it can also mean absolutely nothing. Wilkes-Barre’s stats—a.919 save percentage, four shutouts, and a 24-9-4 record over 38 games—make scouts lean forward in their seats. His five-game NHL tryout earlier this year ended with a 1-1-2 record and a save percentage of.897, which is neither very encouraging nor condemning. It makes sense for a young goalie experiencing his first real taste. The shutout is noteworthy. Seldom do rookies pitch those.
| Player Profile: Sergei Murashov | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Sergei Murashov |
| Position | Goaltender |
| Age | 22 |
| Current NHL Team | Pittsburgh Penguins |
| AHL Affiliate | Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins |
| 2025-26 NHL Record | 1-1-2, .897 SV%, 2.56 GAA, 1 shutout |
| 2025-26 AHL Record | 24-9-4, .919 SV%, 2.20 GAA, 4 shutouts |
| AHL Recognition | All-Star Selection |
| Recent Recall Date | April 22, 2026 (Game 3 vs. Philadelphia Flyers) |
| Venue | Xfinity Mobile Arena, Philadelphi |
Naturally, the game on Wednesday quickly became ugly. In fact, the first twenty minutes of the series were the Penguins’ best. They outshot Philadelphia and eventually converted on the power play thanks to Evgeni Malkin.
The second period, which Bryan Rust subsequently referred to as a WWE match, followed. An elbow, a takedown, a brawl between Rust and Travis Konecny, and penalties administered with what Erik Karlsson described as bewildering generosity. On the subsequent power play, Trevor Zegras scored. The structure exploded. According to TribLIVE coverage, the Penguins lost 5-2 and fell behind 3-0 in the series, never really recovering.
This brings us back to Murashov, observing from his perch in the press box. It’s difficult not to question his thoughts. A Russian-born child playing in front of an enthusiastic Flyers crowd in a building where one officiating call changed the mood. The Penguins seem to view him as their future in goal. The days of Tristan Jarry have been coming to an end. As a bridge, Skinner was brought in. Silovs has made significant progress. However, it appears that Murashov is being prepared for something greater.
The emergency backup position is practically ceremonial until all of a sudden it isn’t. A rookie goalie can become a playoff starter with just one bad-angle shot off a mask and one collision behind the net. It has previously occurred. Teams act in this way for this reason. However, with the Penguins on the verge of elimination and needing four straight games to salvage their season, Sergei Murashov’s quiet recall feels more like a team hedging every remaining wager than insurance. Whether or not he appears in this series, the organization is letting you know where its eyes are. Perhaps not this spring. Soon, though.
