PITTSBURGH — Dan Bylsma couldn't avoid speculation about his status as the Penguins coach in the days following Pittsburgh's four-game pratfall against Boston in the Eastern Conference Finals, even in his own house.
Shortly after the Bruins swept the Stanley Cup favorites out of the playoffs last week, Bylsma's son Bryan asked his dad if he still had a job.
"I would be lying to say that I was able to block all that stuff out," Bylsma said.
Now he won't have to.
The Penguins signed the second-winningest coach in franchise history to a two-year extension through 2016 on Wednesday, a very public vote of confidence after Pittsburgh's quest for a Stanley Cup to bookend the one it captured in 2009 ended with four miserable losses to the Bruins.
"I have a very good coach moving forward that I want to lead this team," general manager Ray Shero said. "I want to reward him with an extension that shows him and shows people that he's my coach and I believe in him."
It's a belief Shero stressed was not shaken despite a fourth straight spring without a Cup for one of the NHL's most talented teams. Assistants Tony Granato and Todd Reirden will also be retained after the Penguins decided it wasn't time to change course following a regular season in which the Penguins posted the second-best record in the league.
Shero, who met with owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle earlier this week, was prepared to go to bat for Bylsma, who is 201-92-25 since taking over for Michel Therrien in February, 2009. Turns out, Shero didn't have to step up after Lemieux and Burkle told him they were fully on board with keeping Bylsma in the fold.