He finished second among defensemen with 15 points (three goals, 12 assists), trailing only Brent Burns of the Sharks (24 points). Before his neck injury during a Feb. 21 game against the Carolina Hurricanes, Letang was leading the Penguins in ice time (25:31 per game). He had 34 points (five goals, 29 assists) in 41 games.
The Penguins initially hoped that with rest and rehab, Letang would be back in time of the playoffs. But it was eventually determined that surgery was unavoidable. Instead of viewing it as a blow to their repeat hopes, the Penguins other defensemen approached it as a challenge to prove that they could win without Letang.
"We're a confident group that way," defenseman Olli Maatta said. "We know we're good enough to win. … I think we're all a little different, everybody, but we all just want to play a simple game."
Instead of giving all of Letang's minutes to one defenseman, the Penguins have spread them out. Dumoulin leads the group in playing 21:55 per game, followed by Ron Hainsey (21:12), Maatta (21:02), Justin Schultz (20:12), Daley (19:39) and Ian Cole (19:09). Daley (lower body) and Schultz (upper body) have also missed time with injuries, so Mark Streit and Chad Ruhwedel have stepped in when needed.
For the most part, the defense-by-committee approach has worked well.
"If you look at last year in the playoffs, it was kind of Kris Letang and the rest of us," Dumoulin said. "I don't think that's the case right now. Whatever role that you're asked to do, whatever opportunity is there, I'm not going to be the offensive guy Kris Letang was or I don't think anyone in our lineup is going to be to that aspect. For me, it's go out there and take it as the next-shift approach and go out there and try to play my best. Not look ahead, not try to do too much. Just go out there and try to play like I have."