Home US SportsNHL Sid Isn’t Done Yet — And Neither Is The 2,000-Point Discussion

Sid Isn’t Done Yet — And Neither Is The 2,000-Point Discussion

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Sid Isn’t Done Yet — And Neither Is The 2,000-Point Discussion

At the juncture Pittsburgh Penguins‘ captain Sidney Crosby has reached in his storied NHL career, it’s inevitable that he is going to be asked a whole lot about his future and how long he intends to keep playing the sport he loves.

After all, Father Time is undefeated, right?

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Well, that’s the case for most athletes. Sports are a young man’s game, and it’s only a matter of time before the end comes calling. Legs start to give out. Basic conditioning becomes harder and harder. Performance begins to dwindle. The pace of the game suddenly starts to feel faster than you remember, with things happening at a speed you can no longer keep up with.

Yet none of that is happening for Crosby, at least, not yet. And in an exclusive interview with The Athletic’s Josh Yohe on Thursday at the IIHF World Championship in Switzerland, he made sure to clarify on his comments from locker cleanout day earlier this month about going “year-to-year” that this season – the final season of his current two-year contract – will not be his last playing in the NHL.

“It’s pretty obvious why I would just go year-to-year with the contracts,” Crosby told Yohe. “At the end of the day, I’m just going to do what’s best for the team. It’s got nothing to do with how long I want to play. It’s not like that at all.”

He added: “I definitely want to keep playing for as many years as possible.”

Sidney Crosby isn’t close to retiring, wants to play ‘for as many years as possible’

Sidney Crosby isn’t close to retiring, wants to play ‘for as many years as possible’ Crosby is signed for one more year, the 22nd of his career. Only 13 players in NHL history have played more seasons.

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Not only is that music straight to the ears of Penguins’ fans and hockey fans everywhere, it’s also a statement that Crosby believes he has a whole lot more left in the tank.

Simply put, he isn’t built like other hockey players, like other athletes. When his legs start to give out, when the conditioning gets harder, when performance isn’t up to par, and when the pace appears to be catching up, he always finds ways to reinvent himself and maintain the separation between he and the Hockey Reaper.

Right now, Crosby – who will turn 39 this summer – has 654 goals and 1,761 points in 1,420 career NHL games. He is currently sitting at seventh all-time in NHL points, and assuming he is healthy in 2026-27, he should surpass both Marcel Dionne (sixth) at 1,771 and Ron Franis (fifth) at 1,798. And with at least a 90-point season, he will also surpass Gordie Howe (fourth) at 1,850.

Wayne Gretzky is the only player in NHL history – and the guy at the top of the list – to have hit 2,000 points.

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You do the math.

Sidney Crosby Is Up To His Usual Shenanigans At The World Championships

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If 2026-27 is, indeed, not Crosby’s final season playing in the NHL – which, he’s adamant it won’t be – that means with one more season above point-per-game, he’ll be at 1,844 points. And it would be his 22nd consecutive season accomplishing the feat.

In order to reach 2,000 points, Crosby would need to average 79.6 points in the next three seasons to get there. Should he remain healthy and at point-per-game or higher? He will get there sometime during that third season, which would be his age 41 season.

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And you know what? All of that sounds pretty attainable.

The fact of the matter is that the longer Crosby keeps playing, the closer he gets to that historic mark. The longer he keeps playing, he only keeps proving that he isn’t slowing down in any kind of remarkable way. He is designed for longevity, and he has delivered on that design for 21 years already.

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