The Penguins had just enough offense to go along with a milestone effort from goaltender Tom Barrasso for a 4-1 victory over the Panthers on Sunday. Pittsburgh's Ed Olczyk and Rob Brown scored in a 57-second span in the first period and Barrasso notched his 300th career victory as the Penguins improved to 3-0-1 on their road trip. Barrasso became the first American-born goalie to win 300 games, and is the 14th goalie in NHL history to reach that plateau. "It's great company to be in," Barrasso said. "There are a lot of people responsible for it. I have to thank my mom and dad, and my wife and kids have been very supportive and given me motivation. "Any goaltender wants to get 100 and then 200, and not many guys have won 300. Obviously, I'd like to keep adding to it and climb even higher on that list." Eddie Olczyk and Martin Straka scored midway through the first period, beating Florida goalie John Vanbiesbrouck, to help the Penguins overcome an early 1-0 deficit. Florida, which lost its second straight, did little to pressure Barrasso. Leading 1-0 on Esa Tikkanen's goal, the Panthers failed to score on a two-minute, two-man advantage. After that, the Penguins took control. "I thought they'd be up 2-0, maybe 3-0," said Straka, a former Panther. "That was the game right there." Added Pittsburgh coach Kevin Constantine: "That gave the momentum right back to us." Barrasso, who faced only 23 shots, is 5-1 lifetime against Florida. "I've seen a lot of his games as a fan and now as a coach," Constantine said. "He has been tremendous with his attitude in meetings and his contributions. It's easy to see why he has two Stanley Cups and now 300 wins." Kevin Hatcher had three assists for the Penguins and Ron Francis added two. Jaromir Jagr scored his fourth goal for Pittsburgh, which also picked up a goal from Jiri Slegr, his first. Pittsburgh won despite getting off just 18 shots. The Penguins made the most of them, though. They took just six shots through the first 21 minutes, but led 3-1. "We worked hard and played smart," Jagr said. "We've been playing very good defensive hockey, and now we're getting the offense to come along." "We're not reacting. We're very passive in our play," Panthers center Tom Fitzgerald said. "We've lost that edge that we once had, and that's something that we took a lot of pride in."