He's going to be a real good player, a superstar in this league. It's a great opportunity for him to learn what's going on, on and off the ice. He's played a lot of hockey, so I think he knows when and where he's got to be careful. It's everybody's job to help him out.

It was a quick whistle, but it's tough to argue. I heard the whistle before it went in.

Mark didn't exactly have to sell me hard on Pittsburgh at all. The Penguins, after all the moves they had made, weren't really a hard sell.

It was probably a quick whistle, but you just have to move on. We got the goal (later), so it worked out OK.

We really got to work on making ourselves accountable earlier. We put ourselves behind the eight-ball and it makes it a tough game.

If our [penalty killers] gets some confidence, then one special team feeds off of the other and, hopefully, we can get the power play going.

I think he can be a superstar. Everybody is watching him, but he handles it so well. It's tough when everyone is watching you on every shift ... but he's very mature for his age.

You would think so. If you look at the way the team's been shaping up and the way things have been going, this team's about the future. You have to build for the future. You don't know how realistically a guy like me is part of the future.

It was something I was prepared for. I knew it was a very realistic possibility for over a year now. My disappointment comes from knowing my years with the Flyers are over.