Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins

American Hockey League team in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania


American Hockey League team in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania

FieldValue
current2025–26 AHL season
bg_colorbackground:#FFFFFF; border-top:#1e191a 5px solid; border-bottom:#fec33b 5px solid;
text_color#1e191a
teamWilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins
logoWilkes-Barre Scranton Penguins logo.svg
logo_size200px
cityWilkes-Barre Township, Pennsylvania, U.S.
leagueAmerican Hockey League
conferenceEastern
divisionAtlantic
founded1981
arenaMohegan Arena at Casey Plaza
colorsBlack, gold, white, red
mascotTux
ownerRonald Burkle
Mario Lemieux
gmJason Spezza
coachKirk MacDonald
captainPhil Kemp
mediaWilkes-Barre Times Leader
Scranton Times-Tribune
SportsNet Pittsburgh
WILK Newsradio
AHL.TV (Internet)
affiliatesPittsburgh Penguins (NHL)
Wheeling Nailers (ECHL)
name1Fredericton Express
dates11981–1988
name2Halifax Citadels
dates21988–1993
name3Cornwall Aces
dates31993–1996
name4Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins
dates41999–present
reg_season_titles2: (2010–11, 2016–17)
division_titles4: (2005–06, 2007–08, 2010–11, 2016–17)
conf_titles3: (2001, 2004, 2008)
calder_cups0

Mario Lemieux Scranton Times-Tribune SportsNet Pittsburgh WILK Newsradio AHL.TV (Internet) Wheeling Nailers (ECHL) The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins (sometimes known as the WBS Penguins) are a professional ice hockey team based in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. They are the American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate of the National Hockey League's Pittsburgh Penguins. They play at the Mohegan Arena at Casey Plaza in Wilkes-Barre Township, Pennsylvania. They have won the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy twice for having the best record in the regular season.

History

The Pittsburgh Penguins' top minor league affiliate throughout the 1990s was the Cleveland Lumberjacks of the IHL. However, in the mid-1990s, the IHL began moving away from being a developmental league and more towards being an independent minor league. For this reason, the Penguins wanted their top minor league affiliate in the AHL. The Penguins purchased the dormant Cornwall Aces AHL franchise from the Colorado Avalanche in 1996, but left the team inactive until the 1999–2000 season due to construction delays at their intended home–a new arena in Wilkes-Barre Township. The team is affectionately referred to as the "Baby Penguins" by fans. Their mascot is Tux the penguin, who wears number No. 99 in reference to the team's first season, in 1999.

The Penguins have gone to the Calder Cup final three times but have never won the championship. The team went all the way to the finals in their second season, losing to the Saint John Flames in six games. The Penguins returned to the finals in their fifth season, but were swept by the Milwaukee Admirals. They most recently made it to the finals in 2008 by way of beating the Portland Pirates in a seven-game series in the Eastern Conference finals. They went on to play the Chicago Wolves in the final, but lost the series in six games.

The WBS Penguins won the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy for the best finish in the regular season, in 2011, with 117 points. Goaltender Brad Thiessen was named the recipient of the Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award, an award given to the AHL's most outstanding goaltender for each season. He posted a record of 35–8–1 in 46 appearances, along with a 1.94 goals-against-average and a .922 save percentage. Head coach John Hynes won the Louis A. R. Pieri Memorial Award, awarded to the most outstanding AHL coach of the season. Despite the best regular season finish in team history, the Penguins were eliminated in the second round of the 2011 playoffs by the Charlotte Checkers in six games.

The Penguins have made the playoffs in all but four seasons of their existence. The Penguins held a playoff streak of 16 seasons from the 2002–03 season to the 2017–18 season.

Prior to the 2009–10 season, they held the inaugural Penguins Black and Gold Game, an intra-squad game which featured members of the Pittsburgh and Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins and was the first ever head-to-head meeting between Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin. The game was a complete sellout and tickets never reached the general public. The Penguins organization held its second Black and Gold Game prior to the 2010–11 season on September 19, 2010.

In 2009, they also spawned an affiliated youth level organization, the Wilkes-Barre Junior Pens. The team is based out of the Ice Rink at Coal Street Park, which also serves as a practice facility for the Penguins.

The Penguins' biggest rivals had been the Philadelphia Phantoms, the AHL affiliate of Pennsylvania's other NHL team, the Philadelphia Flyers. After that team moved to Glens Falls, New York, (as the Adirondack Phantoms) the Hershey Bears, also located in Pennsylvania, became the major rivals of the Penguins (they are currently the AHL affiliate of another rival of the Pittsburgh Penguins, the Washington Capitals). In 2014, the Adirondack Phantoms relocated back to eastern Pennsylvania as the Lehigh Valley Phantoms.

Season-by-season results

Regular seasonPlayoffsSeasonGamesWonLostTiedOTLSOLPointsPCTGoals
forGoals
againstStandingYearPrelims1st
round2nd
round3rd
roundFinals
1999–008023439560.3752363065th, Empire State Div.2000Did not qualify
2000–018036339283.5192522482nd, Mid-Atlantic Div.2001W, 3–2, SYRW, 4–2, PHIW, 4–0, HERL, 2–4, SJF
2001–0280204413356.3502012744th, South Div.2002Did not qualify
2002–038036327584.5252452483rd, South Div.2003W, 2–0, UTAL, 1–3, GR
2003–0480342810886.5381971973rd, East Div.2004BYEW, 4–3, BRPW, 4–2, PHIW, 4–3, HFDL, 0–4, MIL
2004–058039277792.5752272194th, East Div.2005W, 4–2, BNGL, 1–4, PHI
2005–0680511856113.7062491781st, East Div.2006W, 4–3, BRPL, 0–4, HER
2006–0780512324108.6752762212nd, East Div.2007W, 4–2, NORL, 1–4, HER
2007–0880472634101.6312231871st, East Div.2008W, 4–1, HERW, 4–1, PHIW, 4–3 PORL, 2–4, CHI
2008–0980492533104.6502742123rd, East Div.2009W, 4–1, BRPL,3–4 HER
2009–108041342387.5442392293rd, East Div.2010L, 0–4, ALB
2010–1180582101117.7312611831st, East Div.2011W, 4–2, NORL, 2–4, CHA
2011–127644252595.6252352152nd, East Div.2012W, 3–2, HERL, 3–4, STJ
2012–137642302288.5791851783rd, East Div.2013W, 3–0, BNGW, 4–3, PROL, 1–4, SYR
2013–147642263592.6052061856th, Eastern Conf.2014W, 3–1, BNGW, 4–3, PROL, 2–4, STJ
2014–157645243497.6382121634th, Eastern Conf.2015W, 3–0, SYRL, 1–4, MCH
2015–167643274292.6052302033rd, Atlantic Div.2016W, 3–0, PROL, 3–4, HER
2016–1776512032107.7042471701st, Atlantic Div.2017L, 2–3, PRO
2017–187645226399.6512522232nd, Atlantic Div.2018L, 0–3, CHA
2018–197636307382.5392322286th, Atlantic Div.2019Did not qualify
2019–206329263566.5241641935th, Atlantic Div.2020Season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2020–213213134232.500921075th, North Div.2021No playoffs were held
2021–227635334478.5132092254th, Atlantic Div.2022W, 2–1, HERL, 0–3, SPR
2022–237226328666.4581912248th, Atlantic Div.2023Did not qualify
2023–247239248187.6042111943rd, Atlantic Div.2024L, 0–2, LV
2024–257240247188.6112442154th, Atlantic Div.2025L, 0–2, LV

Won Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy for the best record in the regular season Round not held

Details section ---

Players

Current roster

Updated January 31, 2026.

|}

Team captains

  • John Slaney, Stephen Leach & Tyler Wright, 1999–2000
  • Sven Butenschon & John Slaney, 2000–01
  • Jason MacDonald, 2001–02
  • Tom Kostopoulos, 2002–03
  • Patrick Boileau, Kris Beech & Tom Kostopoulos, 2003–04
  • Rob Scuderi, 2004–05
  • Alain Nasreddine, 2004–06
  • Micki DuPont, 2006–07
  • Nathan Smith, 2007–08
  • David Gove, 2008–09
  • Wyatt Smith, 2009–10
  • Ryan Craig, 2010–12
  • Joey Mormina, 2012–13
  • Tom Kostopoulos, 2013–18
  • Garrett Wilson, 2018–19
  • David Warsofsky, 2019–20
  • Josh Currie, 2021
  • Taylor Fedun, 2021–2024
  • Phil Kemp, 2025–present

Notable alumni

Players listed have played at least 100 games with the Penguins and 100 games in the NHL.

  • Josh Archibald
  • Colby Armstrong
  • Kris Beech
  • Paul Bissonnette
  • Teddy Blueger
  • Dennis Bonvie
  • Robert Bortuzzo
  • Jesse Boulerice
  • Wade Brookbank
  • Sven Butenschon
  • Daniel Carcillo
  • Sebastien Caron
  • Erik Christensen
  • Ryan Craig
  • Simon Despres
  • Brian Dumoulin
  • Deryk Engelland
  • Marc-Andre Fleury
  • Brian Gibbons
  • Alex Goligoski
  • Scott Harrington
  • Tristan Jarry
  • Dustin Jeffrey
  • Nick Johnson
  • David Koci
  • Tom Kostopoulos
  • Tom Kuhnhackl
  • Mark Letestu
  • Ben Lovejoy
  • Jayson Megna
  • Josef Melichar
  • Matt Murray
  • Brooks Orpik
  • Michel Ouellet
  • Toby Petersen
  • Derrick Pouliot
  • Carter Rowney
  • Rob Scuderi
  • Dominik Simon
  • Brian Strait
  • Oskar Sundqvist
  • Tomas Surovy
  • Jeff Taffe
  • Maxime Talbot
  • Eric Tangradi
  • Zach Trotman
  • Joe Vitale
  • Ryan Whitney
  • Tim Wallace

Team records

;Single season :Goals: Chris Minard, 34 (2008–09) :Assists: Jeff Taffe and Janne Pesonen, 50 (2008–09) :Points: Janne Pesonen, 82 (2008–09) :Penalty minutes: Dennis Bonvie, 431 (2005–06) :Goaltending wins: Brad Thiessen, 35 (2010–11) :GAA: Jeff Zatkoff 1.93 (2012–13) :SV%: Rich Parent (2000–01), Dany Sabourin (2005–06) and Brad Thiessen (2010–11), .922

;Career :Career goals: Tom Kostopoulos, 181 :Career assists: Tom Kostopoulos, 269 :Career points: Tom Kostopoulos, 450 :Career penalty minutes: Dennis Bonvie, 1081 :Career goaltending wins: John Curry, 103 :Career shutouts: Brad Thiessen, 17 :Career games: Tom Kostopoulos, 627

AHL records

As of the 2009–10 AHL Season. Data from the AHL Hall of Fame Website.

Team

:Most road wins, 80-game season: 28 (2010–2011) (tied)

:Longest road winning streak (one season): 13 games (October 9 – December 3, 2005) (tied)

:Longest road winning streak (overall): 15 games (April 10 – December 3, 2005)

Player

:Most points by a defenseman, career: John Slaney, 486 (Baltimore, Portland, Cornwall, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Philadelphia)

:Most goals by a defenseman, career: John Slaney, 157

:Most goals by a defenseman, season: John Slaney, 30 (1999–2000)

:Most PIM, career: Dennis Bonvie, 4,104 (Cape Breton, Hamilton, Portland, Philadelphia, Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, Providence, Binghamton, Hershey)

:Most PIM, game: Steve Parsons, 64 (March 17, 2002 vs. Syracuse)

AHL awards and trophies

Per the AHL Hall of Fame:

Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy (AHL regular season champions)

Frank Mathers Trophy (Eastern Conference regular season champions from 2004 to 2011)

Richard F. Canning Trophy (Eastern Conference playoff champions)

F. G. "Teddy" Oke Trophy (East Division regular season champions from 2002 to 2011)

Robert W. Clarke Trophy (Western Conference playoff champions)

Eddie Shore Award (best defenseman)

Aldege "Baz" Bastien Memorial Award (best goaltender)

Harry "Hap" Holmes Memorial Award (goalies with lowest goals against avg.)

Yanick Dupre Memorial Award (AHL Man of the Year Service)

Louis A.R. Pieri Memorial Award (coach of the year)

References

References

  1. Marrapese, Nancy L.. (May 19, 1996). "Mighty Casey a pinch hit". [[The Boston Globe]].
  2. Mayer, Sean. (July 2, 1996). "Pirates plundered". [[Press & Sun-Bulletin]].
  3. "Wilkes-Barre Jr. Penguins Youth Ice Hockey Club".
  4. (January 27, 2026). "Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins Roster".
  5. "AHL Record Book".
  6. "AHL Hall of Fame Trophy List".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report