The NHL Board of Governors voted unanimously Thursday to approve Fenway Sports Group's purchase of the Pittsburgh Penguins, clearing the final regulatory hurdle for a transaction that values the franchise north of $900 million according to people familiar with the terms. The sale closes FSG's eighteen-month pursuit of a fourth North American property and gives the Boston-based ownership group its first NHL asset alongside Liverpool FC, the Red Sox, and the Penguins' ECHL affiliate they already controlled.
Mario Lemieux retains a minority stake under the new structure, though his exact equity percentage and operational authority remain undisclosed. NHL insiders say the board session lasted under ninety minutes—brief for a franchise transfer of this size—suggesting FSG's track record and balance sheet posed no concerns. The approval follows months of quiet due diligence that included granular audits of PPG Paints Arena lease terms, local media rights with AT&T SportsNet Pittsburgh, and the team's $67 million annual hockey-related revenue base as of the 2020-21 season.
The strategic logic centers on portfolio diversification and real estate optionality. FSG already runs a venue management playbook from Fenway Park and Anfield; PPG Paints Arena, opened in 2010 and controlled by a separate public authority, offers limited upside unless the group negotiates new naming rights or concert promotion deals. What FSG gains instead is exposure to NHL media economics ahead of the league's next U.S. broadcast cycle in 2028, when analysts expect linear and streaming bids to push the average team's national rights allocation past $40 million annually—double the current figure. The Penguins also carry relatively clean cap management through 2025, with Sidney Crosby's $8.7 million hit running through 2025 and Evgeni Malkin locked at $6.1 million. No dead salary, no rebuilding penalty.
The Lemieux subplot carries more intrigue than the board vote itself. Multiple sources in Pittsburgh say the 58-year-old has been sounded out for a senior hockey operations or advisory role, though no title has been formalized. Lemieux's post-playing career has mixed ownership (he converted deferred salary into equity in 1999, saving the franchise from bankruptcy) with intermittent front-office involvement, most recently as a sounding board during the 2014 general manager search that landed Jim Rutherford. His relationship with current GM Ron Hextall is cordial but not close; Hextall was hired in February 2021 by the prior ownership group and has one year remaining on his initial deal. If FSG installs Lemieux in a president-of-hockey-ops structure above Hextall, it would mirror the Celtics' Danny Ainge era under the same ownership umbrella—legend as strategist, GM as executor. If they don't, Lemieux becomes the high-profile minority investor with no clear lane, a setup that tends to get noisy by Year Two.
Watch FSG's first offseason personnel moves, expected before the July draft. The group tends to hire aggressively in analytics and performance science—Liverpool's data operation is considered a template—and the Penguins' current hockey ops staff skews traditional. Sponsor renewal talks with PPG Industries are up in Q4 2025; the naming-rights deal pays roughly $4 million annually, below market for a metro of Pittsburgh's size. And Lemieux's next public appearance will be parsed for body language; he hasn't spoken on the record about his role since the sale was announced in November.
The board's efficiency tells you everything. FSG passed the NHL's wealth and character tests months ago. What they do with the Penguins' post-Crosby future is the test that actually matters.