CRANBERRY, Pa. -- Sidney Crosby has been a constant amid an ever-changing NHL.
For 19 seasons, the center has led the Pittsburgh Penguins. Meanwhile, new stars have emerged, two expansion teams were introduced, the Vegas Golden Knights (2017) and the Seattle Kraken (2021), and the Winnipeg Jets relocated from Atlanta in 2011.
Crosby won the Stanley Cup for the first of three times in 2009 against the Detroit Red Wings, a matchup that became impossible when the Red Wings joined the Penguins in the Eastern Conference beginning with the 2013-14 season.
The League isn't the same as it was in 2005, when the Penguins selected Crosby with the No. 1 pick in the NHL Draft. He'll see that first-hand during the 2024 NHL All-Star Weekend in Toronto from Feb. 1-3, when he'll represent Pittsburgh for the sixth time.
But Crosby hasn't changed all that much, remaining a force at 36 years old.
"I think everybody wants to be that as long as they can," Crosby told NHL.com. "There's a lot of factors that go into that. You just have to do your best to perform at your highest level and hope that you can keep having that impact and put in the work to do it, so I think that we all have our, I guess, outlook as far as where we want to be at or what we want our game to look like as the years go on."
Crosby has suffered little, if any, drop in production.
Through 46 games, the Penguins captain leads them with 50 points (27 goals, 23 assists). He has averaged 0.59 goals per game, the highest since his 0.78 led the NHL in 2010-11.
Maintaining that pace, Crosby would reach 50 goals for the first time since scoring 51 in 2009-10. Currently at 577 NHL goals, he would also get to 600.