News Bruins Team Notes

Preview: Bruins finish off season against Devils

Boston Bruins v New Jersey Devils

Photo by Rich Graessle/NHLI via Getty Images

This is it.

Just the facts


When: Tonight, 7 PM

Where: TD Garden — Boston, Mass.

How to follow: NESN, 98.5 The Sports Hub

Opposing SB Nation site: All About The Jersey

Know your enemy

  • 41-32-7, 89PTS, 3rd in Metropolitan Division
  • Jesper Bratt: 21G-67A-88PTS; Nico Hischier: 35G-32A-67PTS; Timo Meier: 25G-25A-50PTS
  • Jacob Markstrom: 26-16-6, 2.50 GAA, .900 save percentage; Jake Allen: 12-16-1, 2.61 GAA, .911 save percentage

Game notes

  • Well, we’ve reached the end of the road. Tonight, the Boston Bruins will drop the puck one last time on this season, as the New Jersey Devils come to town to lose out the Bruins 2024-2025 campaign.
  • It’s been a season to say the very least, but we thank you for sticking with us through it all!
  • The Devils are likely to rest some guys tonight so not sure what their lineup will look like,
  • In his third best points season, David Pastrnak has 104 points heading into the game and is on a nine-game point streak. He’s registered multiple points for five consecutive games, accumulating a whopping 15 points in that stretch since the Bruins were officially eliminated from the postseason.
  • Morgan Geekie continues to hit career highs as well. He’s on a 10-game point streak with eight goals and nine assists. He’s on a five-game goal streak heading into this last game.
  • The Bruins made a couple transaction yesterday. They recalled forward John Farinacci and defenseman Frederic Brunet from Providence on an emergency basis. Riley Duran and Michael Callahan were sent to Providence. The two are slated to make their NHL debuts with the call-ups.
  • We’ll see ya tonight!

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...s-finish-off-season-against-new-jersey-devils
 
Morning Skate: Epilogue

NHL: New Jersey Devils at Boston Bruins

Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

What a long, strange trip it’s been.

It’s too bad this isn’t the good ol’ MySpace days, because we could have an acoustic version of “Good Riddance” by Green Day playing in the background while you scroll through.

Anyways, the season is over! It sure was...something.

The Bruins suffered through one of their worst seasons (statistically) of the 21st century, currently sitting at fourth-worst in the NHL.

The Flyers and Sabres play tonight, and if the Flyers lose that one in regulation, they’ll finish with the exact same record as the Bruins (33-39-10) but will have fewer regulation wins, so they’d slip below the Bruins in the standings.

Ultimately, when the dust settles Thursday night, the Bruins will either have the fourth or fifth worst record in the league, giving them a shot at a draft lottery win or, worst case, picking 7th overall (if they finish fifth worst, as you can only slide back a max of two places).

The take-home point: the Bruins will probably be making a top-five draft pick for the first time in quite a while, making this the first time in quite a while fans will want to pay attention to the first round of the draft.

Elsewhere, the B’s sent some reinforcements to Providence yesterday ahead of their playoff run, with Fabian Lysell, John Farinacci, Vinni Lettieri, Fraser Minten, and Frederic Brunet all optioned to the AHL; Ian Mitchell was sent down as well, but he’ll need to clear waivers.

The P-Bruins’ regular season wraps up on Friday.

Also, the Bruins will hold break-up day today at Warrior Arena, with Joe Sacco and some of the players speaking to the media.

The bigger availability will come next week, when Charlie Jacobs, Cam Neely, and Don Sweeney meet the media at TD Garden.

Lastly, we’ll being to shift into offseason mode here over the next few weeks. We’ll have some post-mortems on the season, I’m sure, but for now, we’ll keep you busy with Morning Skates and any big news.

Plus, I’m sure Sky, the king of draft profiles, will have us covered with the Bruins actually making a pretty high pick this year.

As a long, at times torturous, season comes to an end, I’d like to thank the folks who help keep this place running:

  • Sky for being on top of just about everything, from previews and recaps to news and moderation, and for continuing to be the king of content.
  • Angelina for covering all of this season’s home games (including preseason) in person from TD Garden’s press box, no small feat given how much of a slog this season was at times.
  • Jake for helping us out with breaking news, the trade deadline, and other content.
  • Nathan for continuing to provide great coverage of the Boston Fleet and women’s hockey.

I’d like to send a special thanks to the commenters as well.

We have a few stalwarts who really keep the conversations going, but I noticed a lot more new names join the mix this season, which is always encouraging to see.

Without the commenters and community here, it’s just us writers talking to ourselves, and nobody really wants that.

We’ll be here providing content until they shut the lights off in this place, which hopefully isn’t anytime soon.

If you have any requests for stuff you’d like to see done differently this offseason or ideas for how we can better engage with the community, send me an email at bruinshockeynow(at)gmail or leave a comment.

I’m especially curious about player ratings/season reviews — if that current setup of voting works or doesn’t work for you, let me know.

Other than that, what’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...s-end-of-season-news-bruins-press-conferences
 
Morning Skate: Settled

NHL: New Jersey Devils at Boston Bruins

Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Kind of.

Welcome to Friday, folks! Happy Easter weekend, if you’re observing.

The NHL regular season officially wrapped up last night, with one result of consequence for the Bruins: the Flyers lost to the Sabres.

The loss helped the Flyers leapfrog (reverse leapfrog?) the Bruins to the fourth-worst points mark in the league, putting the B’s in fifth-worst position.

This, of course, means that if there’s no shuffling in the lottery, the Bruins will pick fifth overall in June’s draft; they could win the lottery, or could slide back as many as two spots to seventh overall.

Time will tell.

The playoffs will start on Saturday with two Western Conference games, followed by a three-game slate on Sunday.

Your first-round match-ups:

  • Toronto vs. Ottawa
  • Florida vs. Tampa Bay
  • Carolina Vs. New Jersey
  • Washington vs. Montreal
  • Winnipeg vs. St. Louis
  • Dallas vs. Colorado
  • Vegas vs. Minnesota
  • Los Angeles vs. Edmonton

Elsewhere, the Bruins held their end-of-season player availability yesterday, with several guys speaking before splitting up.

There wasn’t a ton of noteworthy sound from yesterday, but Charlie McAvoy’s injury was bad — like, really bad.

(You can click here to read an excerpt if you don’t have a subscription to The Athletic.)

A few guys hope to play in the IIHF World Championships (Jakub Lauko), while others plan to skip it (Pavel Zacha).

Also, Elias Lindholm revealed he suffered a back injury in August and felt like was playing catch-up the whole season, which would lead to some optimism that maybe he can turn it around next year.

Lastly (and unsurprisingly), Joe Sacco mentioned that he hasn't received clarity on his future yet.

I find it hard to believe they’ll hand him the keys full time, but I guess that may depend on who else is out there and attainable for the job.

Again, time will tell.

What’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...ruins-news-bruins-draft-lottery-flyers-sabres
 
The Unofficial SCoC Playoff Preview

Toronto Maple Leafs v Boston Bruins

Photo by Richard T Gagnon/Getty Images

In a few short hours, the chase begins. Let’s take a look at those looking for Lord Stanley!

The Bruins will not be participating in the NHL playoffs this year, which means that the official position of SCoC is that “we hope they all lose and a cup isn’t awarded this year.”, but that shouldn’t be a reason to not watch, there’s plenty of good hockey left on the calendar!

So why don’t we take a quick look at all the battles scheduled for this first round, and have a good moment to think about all of them!

Eastern Conference​

The Battle of Ontario - Toronto vs. Ottawa​


I’m so bored of the Leafs.

I have in my head how they will blow this because I’ve seen them blow it in the exact same way multiple times. This year’s version of the team might even be the most painful version of that to date, with a team that did end up gaining home-ice advantage at the cost of nearly everything else. I can see how Ottawa can and likely will beat them, and I am bored of seeing them attempt to overcome their self-inflicted issues.

That doesn’t mean this series won’t be fun, don’t get me wrong, because this series is gonna be great! Ottawa and Toronto hate each other’s guts, and a Sens team that seems raring to go to both inflict punishment via sheer physicality and a deep willingness to game the referee’s interpretation of the rules will drive a Toronto team that is trying desperately to make it seem like their dragons can in fact be beaten crazy. It will be bloody, it will be fierce, there will be goals scored that have no business happening in regular NHL games. Some of the most ridiculous provincial discourse you’ve ever heard in your life will be flung back and forth as both sides declare the other the true worst team in Ontario. It’s gonna be a wonderful time!

The Sens aren’t a perfect team by any stretch; while they have some damn fine scoring threats like Tim Stutzle Drake Batherson and Shane Pinto, their defense is looking a little thin thanks to a plethora of injuries. The Injuries are rough too; Claude Giroux, Jake Sanderson, and Brady Tkachuk are either out or day-to-day, with Tkachuk only recently being greenlit for play on Thursday. Linus Ullmark has been phenomenal, but he will be called upon to be spectacular. If the Leafs come out swinging and Ottawa has to adjust to being down multiple games, I won’t be shocked at all.

But I will only be shocked if it’s a rout. Toronto isn’t built for this. Hasn’t been for years.

The Leafs will come into this series, their best players will suddenly be bottled up, their depth will fail them, and even good goaltending will not save them from the sustained pressure. Everyone will blame defense or the goaltending and never once interrogate why the goals keep drying up on them once the postseason starts. They might lead this series the entire time and still never figure it out. They will repeat this process until Brad Treliving loses another trade and Leafs fans insist a curse will have once again be risen from the grave, even if the only curse that team ever had was that of Indolent management and ownership for over 60 years.

So it was, so it shall be.

I’m bored of the Leafs because you can see the seams in where they usually fail, and they’ve never, ever figured out how to actually cover for it in spite of the loud insistence of their fanbase. They might get out of this round alive, but I don’t see how ceding the ice and the puck to your opponent for long stretches of game time is a better way to do things than what they were doing before.

Anyway I’m sure we’ll all be watching Game 7 with bated breath. See you when we get there.

Ex-Bruins in this series:​


Goaltender Linus Ullmark for OTT and Defenseman Brandon Carlo for TOR

The “F#!k off, please” Series - Florida vs. Tampa​


I think you and I as Bruins fans...We can come to an agreement.

We want the Battle of Florida to go as long as humanly possible.

Not only do we want this going 7 games, if there’s a way buried deep in the NHL Rulebook to add games onto playoff rounds, we want these teams to find the exact circumstances for that to happen and for both sides to absolutely murder each other; spare no dirty trick, deplete every last advantage they have, leave nothing left in the tank for the next round. Make each other as weak as humanly possible so that whoever comes out of the 2nd round and sweeps the winner of this series handily.

Of course, that’s the emotional side. From the objective point of view; this is probably gonna be a great watch regardless; precisely because both sides relish the opportunity to harm each other.

Both sides have been Eastern Conference favorites for years at this point. Florida’s commitment to finding insane value and the Lightning’s enormously shrewd if sometimes heartless management have created strong teams with plenty of pedigree among their skaters for both good reasons and bad, with world class talents that take turns being infuriatingly creative rulebreakers who seem to know how to game the system better than anyone in the NHL; leading to high event penalty-fests and a season series that went 2-2, with each game being a penalty filled gong show. Adding Brad Marchand and Yanni Gourde back into this particular brew, even if they themselves aren’t quite at their peak, will be adding a truly spectacular finishing touch if you’d like to see the kind of hockey that makes you annoyed with refereeing as a concept.

The X-factor, as it often is, will be goaltending; Andrei Vasilevskiy has returned to form after a year off to be one of the league’s premiere netminders again, and Sergei Bobrovsky has also returned to form...as the deeply, deeply inconsistent goaltender who rubber bands between all-star and sub-AHL in terms of performance. It also behooves the Florida Panthers to play to their potential; something they have not been able to do over the last few weeks as cracks in their tradeline acquisitions appear to have formed, and many of the important players on the Panthers are already out; Ekblad, Barkov, Lundell, Tkachuk, and Reinhart are out for one reason or another. Maybe one or two being gone would be less of a challenge, but all five of them feels like the version that’s limping into the playoffs now will be a far cry from what this team wants to be, and unless they can get more out of their impressive depth, they may not be able to hang with a mostly healthy Tampa.

For all of our sakes, and I mean this in the meanest possible way...I hope they do it and make this series a grueling war.

Oh, and the Panthers to win so the Bruins get a better pick out of the Marchand trade. Makes me bleed a little bit in my mouth to type that out, but hey! The future needs to get here somehow!

Ex Bruins in this series:​


Brad Marchand will be suiting up for the Florida Panthers.

Turnaround vs. Taking a Step - Washington vs. Montreal​


Washington last year ended up being just bad enough to be less an underdog, and more of a consolation prize for a team that managed to suck the least to make it to the NHL Playoffs in an East that seemed interested in ensuring nobody got that spot. Now, Washington is the one on easy street looking down at the kids down in the wildcard wondering what all the racket’s about.

Hockey can be very funny like that.

Of course, ever since Alex Ovechkin got his goalscoring record, the Caps are in need of a bit of a wakeup call. They’ve been playing some pretty ugly hockey recently; even with the multiple healthy scratches they’ve been utilizing to get to the playoffs. Part of that has come from their goaltending deciding to take April off; as Logan Thompson finished his season with some mediocre starts and an injury, and Charlie Lindgren having taken until Tuesday night to have a half decent game; all the rest being .880 or below efforts.

That’s a bit of a shame, because otherwise the Caps scoring has been pretty strong outside of their crazy russian uncle’s one timers; Alexei Protas, Dylan Strome, and yes, even Tom Wilson have been phenominal pieces for the Red Machine, and have been bolstered by Pierre-Luc Dubois, Connor McMichael, and Jakob Chychrun. Given where the Caps were last year; this turnaround has been dramatic and a pretty fun story, and this recent stint of poor play threatens to undo it all.

Meanwhile, Montreal played spoiler for Columbus by finally taking the fabled step forward they were prophecized to do months ago by beating a sleepwalking version of the Carolina Hurricanes after failing to beat the Blackhawks and almost the entire Atlantic Division down the stretch; the only actual thing they needed to do in order to advance. Nick Suzuki, Cole Caufield, Lane Hutson, and Juraj Slafkovsky have blossomed into fine NHL talents, and have dragged the rest of Montreal’s roster to a half respectable season. The inclusion of Ivan Demidov and his flashes of brilliance make for a roster that is scrappy, a bit flawed, but innately fun to watch if you don’t happen to have some pre-determined hatred for them like I do.

That said, if the Habs wanna win this and shock the world, then they need to start testing their opponent’s goaltender for consistent periods of time, and critically control their own slot; something they have been both really, really bad at letting shots through on...and the place where the Caps do an outsized amount of their shooting. If they can’t do that, then even with all the goodwill they’ve managed to pull together, it will be a very short series.

Ex-Bruins in this series:​


Neither team will have any Ex-Bruins.

“We’re good! We Swear!”: The Series - New Jersey vs. Carolina​


You could also call this series “Fraudwatch” if you really wanted to.

New Jersey and Carolina are two very interesting teams because they’ve met each other a lot over the years, and either absolutely annihilate their foes in lopsided asskickings or fail to generate enough offense to beat teams they probably should and their goaltending, which hasn’t been a strength for either side, starts to fall apart at the worst possible time. That’s been true in the regular season and the playoffs in equal measure, and little about that has changed even with their fairly regular success.

For Carolina, part of it is Rod Brind’Amour’s system; which prioritizes fishing for rebounds and taking shots above all else; even if they aren’t especially dangerous shots. That means they forecheck like crazy and shoot constantly, but rarely if ever find a way to go to the net if the puck didn’t make it there off a defenseman’s stick, and tend to leave their goalie out to pasture if things go wrong. They even have spectacular talents who could help overcome that if they really wanted to, but Rod’s got a system, and he’s sticking to it. It’s not a bad idea necessarily, but it does turn their defenders into potential targets, and the men they’ve been using to facilitate that haven’t been all that great at it lately. The Canes also have, by my count, seven players who are day-to-day; that might be a major problem if Slavin and Aho can’t go.

For New Jersey, they simply have some of the most atrocious injury luck possible and to the worst possible players for it to happen to. They just got Dougie Hamilton back, which is a major shot in the arm for them, but they’re now missing Jack Hughes, Jonas Siegenthaler, and Ondrej Palat. Siegenthaler was expected; he’s been out for awhile, but being without Hughes sucks, as their center depth gets kind of spotty once you get past Hischier and Cody Glass. While the Devils are a blindingly fast team that’s been able to get some exceptional performances out of guys like Stefan Noesen and Jesper Bratt, the games the Devils have played all seem to be somewhat stifled without their Hughes to help push it along.

Both happen to share the same issue in net; it’s going..fine! It’s just fine. Both sides have had their injuries at netminder, but neither Markstrom nor Andersen have been truly dominant in their division nor conference, and that has sunk them on more than one occasion. The single biggest x-factor for both sides will be their netminders and whether or not they can pull it together long enough to survive the round. This in my opinion makes for the kind of series that could either be enormously fun, north-south boatrace nonsense, or it could be a much more stoic series on account of what both teams are going through.

There’s also a lot of rubbernecking going on in this series for fans outside of either fanbase as a great many narratives beg to be born; Are the Canes actually bad all this time for cheaping out? Is Sheldon Keefe actually a terrible coach in disguise? Whose goaltender is the bigger flake in the playoffs? Your average midwit hockey podcaster/commentator is just raring to go about all this! This is the series for the hack writer in you!

Former Bruins in this series:​


New Jersey seems to collect them; they’ve got Erik Haula, Curtis Lazar, Marc McLaughlin, and Dougie Hamilton suiting up for them. Taylor Hall meanwhile will suit up for the Hurricanes.

Western Conference​

Manitoba vs. Monty - Winnipeg vs. St. Louis​


The Winnipeg Jets are the President’s Trophy winners, and there isn’t really much behind it that can’t be seen on the surface; they have great goaltending, a strong transition game, and excellent goalscorers. They even did it in a fairly mundane manner; making shrewd picks at the Draft and getting the most out of the few Free Agents who’d be willing to brave a Manitoba winter for a paycheck. Are they the best team in the world at possession? Maybe not, but they get to the dangerous areas of the ice and quick, and have a world class goalie who’s been playing absolutely out of his mind for a ridiculous 62 game season that ended with a .924 SV%. For Winnipeg? It’s more than enough.

By all accounts, if you wanted an easy money pick for the cup, it’s Winnipeg.

Which brings us to the Blues.

The Blues probably shouldn’t be here. The problems they faced all year long felt like we were going to watch a team blow itself up for the sake of improvement...and then Boston went and fired Jim Montgomery, who did exactly what you’d expect Jim Montgomery to do after running into a team that’s been having no fun; made hockey fun for the team again, and got them on a massive winning streak. Are their underlying numbers good? No, not really, but that’s never stopped Monty teams before. He works on vibes, and so far over the last 20 games or so, so do the Blues.

The Jets should probably make short work of the Blues. There’s very little to suggest that a team that’s been cruising at their pace should struggle for much of any reason. Unfortunately for Monty, If there was a series earmarked for a potential sweep, it should be this one.

But Jordan Binnington could go on another heater. That’s always a terrifying possibility, and with how little real friction the Jets faced this year, it’s hard to say how they’ll handle it. Given Winnipeg’s luck with playoff series historically, they should try to win every game by double digits and crush his spirit before it ever starts to believe.

Ex-Bruins in this Series:​


Coach Jim Montgomery will be the skipper for St. Louis, and had Torey Krug not had a serious injury that ate his entire season, he would’ve been playing in this one. The Jets meanwhile would have Colin Miller on the team, but he is Day-to-Day.

All Gas, No Brakes - Dallas vs. Colorado​


Unlike the Cats and Bolts, this is a series that I want to see go 7 because I want to watch these two teams invent crazy new ways to maneuver a puck. This is a lucha libre match in the playoffs.

These two squads are the Central Division’s most entertaining teams by a mile if you’re not into goalie play or Kyle Connor; two wildly fun teams with some of the best individual players in the game with nothing but great stories on either side.

Dallas; aside from being Team Finland’s official winter home, is looking to fully introduce Thomas Harley to the rest of the league; a defenseman who finished his year with 50 points and was such a comically impactful player for the Stars it’s a wonder they tried to play anyone else besides him and Miro Heiskanen. Wyatt Johnson, Roope Hintz, and Jason Robertson have also become fantastic scoring threats for Dallas; supplementing the old guard of the Stars with fresh, hungry, wickedly talented skaters. Further, the chance for redemption after two rough trades in a season for Mikko Rantanen looms large.

The Avs meanwhile have managed to stay relevant through sheer force of will, as Colorado’s injury and goaltending luck threatened to keep Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar out of the playoffs, were it not for the sheer force of will between them and their skating corps; overcoming their lineup becoming effectively half Colorado Eagles at some points throughout the season by sheer force of will, and the luck of somehow acquiring former Devils goalies and finally making them work out. And of course, the entire locker room has to be jazzed about the return Gabriel Landeskog; back after 3 years of intensive rehab and realistically having a very slim chance of ever being an NHL player again. Will he actually suit up for Colorado? Who cares, he’s here again.

As for who would win? Anybody who’s watching will most likely get an absolute belter of a series of out of it, so we might as well just hope it lasts. Part of this series lasting will almost certainly being you raising your hands to the sky to give Jason Robertson your energy, as he’s day-to-day and losing him for any length of time would be awful for the Stars.

Ex Bruins in this series:​


Tyler Seguin will play for Dallas, and Charlie Coyle will play for the Avalanche. Avs D-Man Ryan Lindgren was drafted by Boston, but he never played for the team.

The Speedbump Series- Vegas vs. Minnesota​


Vegas is running into a Minnesota Wild team who’s had their first entirely healthy game this week. 82 games, and they’ve been missing guys like Brodin, Kaprizov, Faber, Eriksson-Ek, Spurgeon, Nyquist. Johansson, Zuccarello, and Hartman on the mend throughout all of it.

As Bruins fans, I think we can agree that Minnesota medical staff needs to be tried at the Hague, but maybe they were just next to collapse from overwork.

While parts of me are aware that Vegas, built like they are, can easily fart around in series like this until they decide to press the “we have more talent than you” button and win it (something they’ve done to Central Division foes before), I can’t help but feel like the Wild may cause a little more trouble for the Knights than people are giving them credit for. While they can’t be at 100%, the Wild were, at least at one point, witnessing the grand revealing of an exciting, interesting hockey team before the plague doctors who run their medical staff began trying to balance humors got a hold of Kaprizov and Eriksson-Ek.

There still has to be some parts of that squad that was lighting up the Western Conference sitting in there, right? With a complete roster they’ve gotta be at least a little more dangerous than everybody’s saying right? A team that still can take over games with ease...right?

Because otherwise...This could get ugly fast. The only players the Knights could miss are Mark Stone and Noah Hanifin, both being Day-to-day, and the rest of Vegas is as you would expect a Bruce Cassidy team to be; a little unhappy that their boss is a little surly, but otherwise close-knit, extremely talented, and deep. Sure, having Stone out sucks, but they’ve got a Pavel Dorofeyev now, while not necessary a patch defensively, he’s been an absolute nightmare of goalscoring that makes up for it.

Minny better hope they stay healthy, or there’s a very short series in here.

Ex Bruins in this Series:​


Quite a few here: Coach Bruce Cassidy will be the man behind the bench for Vegas, Reilly Smith will be playing wing for Vegas, Marcus Johansson and Justin Brazeau will be playing for Minnesota.

The Pacific Proving Ground - Edmonton vs. Los Angeles​


If I was a Kings fan, I’d be wondering what I did to deserve this.

The Kings have been good enough to make the playoffs, but not nearly good enough to avoid playing Connor McDavid’s Edmonton Oilers in multiple years; having shown up to get rinsed by 97 in 6 or 7 games time and time again. The scariest part is it could very easily happen again in spite of this being the best possible chance the LA Kings have to actually overcome Edmonton.

Edmonton is less entering the playoffs and more limping at them; Evander Kane is hurt. Trent Frederic is still kind of hurt. Mattias Ekholm is hurt. Darnell Nurse is hurt. John Klingberg’s on IR. Draisaitl, Hyman, and Jake Walman are all Day-to-Day. If Walman can’t go they will absolutely need to pull somebody up from Bakersfield to fill the hole. Their goaltending has only one long-term player on it who has a .900 SV%. While accepting that the Oilers still have plenty of quality options to keep the play moving; McDavid’s healthy, RNG is still doing pretty well, Jeff Skinner, Viktor Arvidsson, and Corey Perry (ugh) have been contributing decently, they are potentially walking into this series as beaten up as they have ever been.

All LA has to do is not screw this up by suddenly forgetting how to clog up the ice like they’re sometimes prone to doing.

Los Angeles has been able to get a little bit of veteran presence and youthful improvement throughout the season; Quentin Byfield, Alex Laferriere and Brandt Clarke all finding their footing as a future player to watch among Adrian Kempe, Anze Kopitar and Kevin Fiala having damn fine seasons. Their goaltending has even been reasonably sound under Darcy Kuemper’s watch; coming into this with a very respectable .922 SV%. They control pucks better than almost everyone in the Western Conference, they shoot better than almost anyone in the Western Conference, they attack the net better than almost anyone in the Western Conference...this should be their time!

It’s just one minor thing; the “almost anyone” out west that’s overtaken them...is Edmonton.

Even with all the progress the Kings have made, the Oilers still manage to find a way to be even better. Part of it of course is Leon Draisaitl and Connor McDavid being a step above your average player, but they’ve managed to pull together a very, very, very good team. One that is perfectly fine trading chances if it has to (and it often does). I’m not sure LA can say the same.

But, the thing is, LA’s healthier than Edmonton by a considerable margin. That so-called juggernaut is as vulnerable as it could be.

Now’s as good a time as any to prove you can slay your dragons, right?



How on earth did this balloon into 4100 words.

Today’s Games:

  • St. Louis vs. Winnipeg, 6pm ET
  • Colorado vs. Dallas, 8:30pm ET

Both are Game 1’s.

Good luck to Charlie Coyle, Jim Montgomery, and Tyler Seguin in their opening games!

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...25-nhl-hockey-toronto-ottawa-florida-tampa-nj
 
Morning Skate: Beginnings

NBA: Playoffs-Orlando Magic at Boston Celtics

Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Welcome to a new week, folks! It’s the last full week of April, with May somehow right around the corner.

Unlike March, which seemed to draw on forever, April has actually moved by pretty quickly.

The NHL Playoffs began over the weekend, with no real surprises thus far: the Jets, Avalanche, Hurricanes, Maple Leafs, and Golden Knights all jumped out to 1-0 series leads.

A couple more series kick off tonight, while two other series continue:

  • Capitals vs. Canadiens
  • Oilers vs. Kings
  • Jets vs. Blues
  • Avalanche vs. Stars

It’s kind of weird that a few series will play two complete games before the Panthers and Lightning begin their series, but I guess it’s just one of those scheduling quirks.

While the playoffs roll on without the Bruins, the Celtics are back in playoff action, if you’re an all-Boston sports fan — Nikita Zadorov, seen above, attended the Game 1 win over Orlando yesterday.

Elsewhere, today is the Boston Marathon, a day of endurance and testament to the human spirit, both in terms of the runners and of the college kids who start day drinking at 8 AM.

In both cases, pace yourselves.

Other than that, the quiet period begins, with no real Bruins news likely while the playoffs are happening, the draft a few weeks away, etc.

The draft lottery should be the next notable thing on all of our calendars, but that doesn’t have a set date yet; it’ll probably occur sometime around the first week in May, based on historical precedent.

And that’s about it.

Question for the group who watches the playoffs in general — would it help to have a daily Morning Skate where you could chime in on that night’s games?

Last year, I did an every-other-day cadence for Morning Skates, but can put one together daily if you’d like to have a place to chat.

Open to any suggestions in that regard.

What’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com/2025/4/21/24412954/morning-skate-beginnings
 
Morning Skate: Farming

AHL: FEB 01 Providence Bruins at Cleveland Monsters

Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

AHL postseason, baby.

It is Wednesday, my dudes.

While the NHL Bruins are wistfully watching the playoffs from home, all is not lost in the organization: the Providence Bruins managed to make the postseason this year!

The P-Bruins will begin their Calder Cup Playoffs journey tonight, kicking off an all-Massachusetts (Editor's note: I'm dumb) all-New England series against the Springfield Thunderbirds, who are the AHL affiliate of the St. Louis Blues.

For those unfamiliar, the first round of the AHL playoffs uses of a best-of-3 format, leaving very, very, very little room for error.

The P-Bruins are the higher seed, so they’ll get home-ice advantage. The schedule:

  • April 23 vs. Springfield, 7:05 PM
  • April 25 @ Springfield, 7:05 PM
  • April 27 vs. Springfield, 3:05 PM

All games will be broadcast online via FloHockey, which costs $30 a month unless you pay for a year in advance.

For the big club, there may be some intrigue today as well, with the end-of-season leadership media availability slated for this morning.

Charlie Jacobs, Cam Neely, and Don Sweeney will all meet the media at 10:30, and there’s obviously plenty to cover.

We’ve already seen the (kind of) canned statement from Jacobs, so it seems unlikely that we get anything really groundbreaking today, but it’ll be awkward to see Jacobs asked “hey, are you going to fire these guys” while they’re seated next to him.

Good times.

I’m putting this together prior to the end of Tuesday night’s playoff action so I can’t tell you what happened, but there’s a three-game schedule tonight:

  • Montreal @ Washington, Game 2
  • Dallas @ Colorado, Game 3
  • Edmonton @ Los Angeles, Game 2

Most of the series have been pretty entertaining thus far, aside from Carolina looking they’re ready to skate right past New Jersey.

Anyways, what’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...ng-providence-bruins-ahl-playoffs-bruins-news
 
Takeaways from the Bruins leadership press conference: Sweeney’s status, a new coach, and more

Bruins seem to have made their statement regarding Jeremy Swayman negotiations

Photo by Jessica Rinaldi/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Some fine, some yikes.

The Bruins wrapped up the last of their 2024-2025 season post-mortem duties today, with Charlie Jacobs, Cam Neely, and Don Sweeney meeting the media to get grilled on what went wrong and what’s next.

I think it’d be fair to say that there wasn’t much earth-shattering (or even surprising) news that came out of the availability, but there were still a few items worth unpacking.

Sacco is in the mix, but the team will conduct a full coaching search


The Bruins plan to include interim head coach Joe Sacco as one of the finalists for the permanent job, but the team will look elsewhere as well.

“We’ve already started that process,” Sweeney said. “Knowing who’s available and narrowing that down.”

Sweeney mentioned structure, detail, and organization as being key points for the new hire, along with the ability to evolve offensively and effectively communicate with players, including younger players.

Sweeney wouldn’t come right out and say that he’d be hiring a current or former NHL coach, but kind of spelled out that’s the way things are heading.

He cited wanting the head coach to have “some form of NHL exposure,” and referenced his last head coaching search, where the three finalists had NHL head coaching experience.

Sweeney didn’t like a question asking if the head coaching job would be viewed as a land mine


The term “land mine” obviously wasn’t used, but Sweeney got a bit testy when asked if he thought potential coaches might be hesitant to take the job.

“I’ll call you up and let you know if somebody turns it down, the invitation to interview for one of the most historic jobs in the National Hockey League,” he said.

That’d be kind of an awkward phone call, but sure...

Charlie Jacobs stepped in it when asked about the season ticket price increase


Sometimes, saying less is more — and that was the case when Bruins CEO Charlie Jacobs was asked about rescinding the 4% increase in season ticket prices (on top of a big increase last year).

The simple answer was “no, we’re not going to rescind that.”

The actual answer was...well (per a team transcript):

“I see ticket pricing is a sensitive subject. I’m aware that things cost more as the way our structure of the US economy is based, things cost [more]. I expect that you probably pay a higher electric bill than you did last year. I know that we, for instance, pay more to open our building for security, for ushers, for concession workers, for parking attendants, everything. People deserve a raise and an increase. Likewise, we increase our ticket prices as our expenses go. I mentioned this before, every dollar we bring in, 50 percent goes to the players, we share it. We’re in a partnership together with them. The ticket increase, the price, whether it’s 4 percent or 9 percent, is all going back into the hockey club. So we’ve made our decision. We’ve raised our ticket prices, and no, we will not be rescinding that.

The bold part (emphasis mine) probably should have been the entire answer.

No fan, season ticket holder or not, wants to be lectured about prices increasing, electric bills increasing, etc.

If the team and TD Garden are actually increasing wages for employees as part of this, that’d be a more palatable spin, but it doesn’t look like that’s actually what’s happening here.

To call it “tone deaf” is probably unfair, as Jacobs was likely just trying to be transparent and offer a peak behind the curtain at how revenue is spread out, but it didn’t really land.

Neely gave Sweeney a bit of a pass for the infamous 2015 draft


Ah, the 2015 draft. We relive it constantly.

When asked if he was happy with the team’s drafting and player development, Neely acknowledged that the team could be doing better, but also called out what he viewed as a “narrative” about that nightmare draft.

“Our drafting and developing, the narrative there is a little off, and it’s been going on for quite some time,” he said. “Goes back to 2015 and it was really unfair to Don.”

He went on to say that Sweeney was hired relatively late in the draft preparation process and gave him credit for acquiring assets prior to the draft, but acknowledged that the team should have taken a beat to regroup with the picks after trading up failed.

The rumor (at the time, not sure if it has ever been confirmed) was that the B’s were trying to package their three picks to move into the top five or top ten, with eyes on Noah Hanifin.

Instead...well, we know the rest.

Sweeney is heading into the final year of his contract, with no extension currently in sight


Sweeney said that his contract status would have no bearing on the decisions he makes (i.e. he’s not going to do something super shortsighted to try to save his job), and confirmed that he is in the final year of his deal.

Neely said that he thinks Sweeney has “done a good job here, for the most part,” but also said he doesn’t know if he’s going to offer Sweeney an extension:

“I’ve given it a lot of thought, I’m still contemplating what the best course of action is...I’ll figure that out in the near future, with that particular question whether we’re going to resign Don or not, but he’s got another year left.”

A bunch of players are planning to go to the IIHF World Championships


Sweeney mentioned that the Bruins will be well represented at the upcoming Worlds, with Elias Lindholm, David Pastrnak, Jakub Lauko, Andrew Peeke, Mason Lohrei, and Jeremy Swayman planning to participate.

Nothing really to report on pending free agents


Sweeney wasn’t likely to break news about re-signing a player at this news conference, so it was no surprise to get a basic “we’ll have talks with all players” line.

He mentioned that the team would prefer to have Morgan Geekie back on a “longer-term deal,” and noted that the team planned to have internal discussions on guys like Henri Jokiharju and Cole Koepke.

Odds and ends


A few more things that came up:

  • The team plans to use all available options to improve this offseason, including the draft, free agency, and trades.
  • Swayman didn’t think the extra workload this year was what led to his less-than-stellar performance.
  • While acknowledging that he expects both of them to be better, Sweeney pointed to the team’s performance as a whole when asked if Lindholm and Nikita Zadorov needed to provide better return on investment. He also noted Lindholm’s difficult start due to injuries and Zadorov’s consistency issues partly being attributable to having “every different partner known to man this year.”
  • No players are facing major offseason medical needs, with Pavel Zacha needing a “small” non-surgical procedure and Johnny Beecher possibly needing a small procedure as well.

Your thoughts on today’s briefing?

I thought it was, for the most part, fine — a little defensive at times, a little testy, but mostly candid and an acknowledgment that the team is kind of in uncharted waters and figuring out what to do next.

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...ence-bruins-news-don-sweeney-cam-neely-jacobs
 
Morning Skate: Spring

Ottawa Senators v Boston Bruins

Photo by Steve Babineau/NHLI via Getty Images

Do or die for Providence.

Welcome to Friday, folks! Last Friday in April. Make it count.

As we all continue to argue about the fallout from Wednesday’s triumvirate press conference, the NHL playoffs roll on without us.

Florida, Toronto, Minnesota, and St. Louis all won last night, with the most surprising result of the night probably being the seven goals the Blues put up on Winnipeg.

Toronto won in overtime again, putting Ottawa on the brink of elimination and the rest of us on the brink of not being able to ask when the last time was that the Leafs won a series.

Tonight, we have:

  • Washington at Montreal
  • Carolina at New Jersey
  • Los Angeles at Edmonton

In all three games, the home team will need a win to avoid going in a 3-0 hole. I’d put my money on Edmonton being the most likely to pull one out, but I am also a terrible gambler, so don’t listen to me.

In organizational news, the Providence Bruins need a win tonight to continue their Calder Cup playoff journey, as they fell to Springfield on Wednesday night, losing by a score of 2-1.

The P-Bruins will journey to Massachusetts (which I know is a separate state from Rhode Island) today for Game 2 tonight; the first round in the AHL is a best-of-three, so it’s do or die for the P-B’s.

Puck drop is at 7:05 PM, with the game streamed on FloHockey again.

Prior to that Game 1 loss on Wednesday, the AHL announced that P-Bruins goalie Michael DiPietro has been named the winner of the Baz Bastien Award as the AHL’s best goalie.

DiPietro, who the Bruins acquired as part of the Jack Studnicka (remember him?) trade, was 26-8-5 for Providence this season with a .927 save percentage and 2.05 GAA.

He also had four shutouts.

What’s on tap for today/the weekend?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...rovidence-bruins-nhl-playoff-news-bruins-news
 
Morning Skate: Onward

NHL: MAR 02 Bruins at Wild

Photo by Bailey Hillesheim/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The P-Bruins, that is.

Welcome to a new week, folks!

It’s supposed to be a decent day in the Boston area, which is a blessing after pretty bad weather weekend.

It was an eventful weekend of playoff hockey at the NHL level, with St. Louis knotting their series with Winnipeg at 2-2, the Senators staying alive in OT, and Carolina jumping out to a 3-1 series lead, among other things.

The Tampa-Florida series got even more nasty, with the Lightning getting a game back and Matthew Tkachuk somehow avoiding a suspension for a late, late hit on Jake Guentzel.

And then there’s us Bruins fans, sitting around and looking forward to the draft lottery.

This must be how it feels to be a Sabres fan all of the time.

But don’t fret — the Providence Bruins, who headed into the weekend facing a do-or-die game in Springfield, won two in a row and are moving on to the second round of the AHL playoffs.

The P-Bruins won in OT on Friday night, with Vinni Lettieri scoring the game’s lone goal, then won 5-1 on Sunday to clinch the series.

Sunday’s game featured two-goal performances from both Matt Poitras and Riley Tufte, plus two-assist games from Lettieri and Patrick Brown.

The P-B’s actually fell behind in Game 3, then scored five unanswered goals (four in the third period) to send Springfield home (to Massachusetts, which is a different state than Rhode Island).

As the AHL playoffs move to the second round, the series become best-of-five.

The P-B’s will face the Charlotte Checkers in the second round. In a weird AHL quirk, the Checkers had a first-round bye, as they finished second in their division.

Even though they’re the higher seed, Providence will host the first two games of the series before shifting to Charlotte for the last three.

Your schedule:

  • May 2: Charlotte @ Providence, 7:05 PM
  • May 4: Charlotte @ Providence, 7:05 PM
  • May 7: Providence @ Charlotte, 7 PM
  • May 9: Providence @ Charlotte, 7 PM
  • May 11: Providence @ Charlotte, 3 PM

As with the first round, you can stream the second round via FloHockey.

Hopefully the P-B’s have better playoff luck with Charlotte than the NHL Bruins have had in recent years with Charlotte’s NHL affiliate, the Florida Panthers.

(I was surprised to learn that my assumption that Charlotte was Carolina’s affiliate was, in fact, incorrect.)

Anyways, what’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...rd-providence-bruins-ahl-playoffs-springfield
 
Morning Skate: Pressure

Ottawa Senators v Toronto Maple Leafs - Game Five

Photo by Claus Andersen/Getty Images

It’s building.

Welcome to Thursday, folks!

The NHL playoffs rolled on over the past few days, with three eliminations:

  • The Capitals knocked out the Canadiens
  • The Panthers brushed aside the Lightning
  • The Hurricanes knocked out the Devils

Elsewhere, the Jets beat St. Louis to take a 3-2 lead in their series.

There’s a chance for four more eliminations tonight, with Toronto, Dallas, Vegas, and Edmonton all up 3-2 in their respective series.

Ideally, we get at least one Game 7 out of the bunch — and I think we all know which series we’d like to see go seven.

Can you imagine the Leafs playing a Game 7 at home after being up 3-0 in the series? The joy? The shots of Maple Leafs Square?

We can dream. With the Bruins missing the playoffs, schadenfreude and a higher Panthers draft pick is all we have left.

To me, the Leafs have too much talent to actually let it get that far (this time), but I’ve been wrong before. A Linus Ullmark heater could make things very interesting.

Elsewhere, the Bruins got a bit of nice news on the prospects front, as Will Zellers picked up a few USHL awards.

Zellers, acquired from Colorado in the Charlie Coyle trade, was named the USHL’s Player of the Year and Forward of the Year; he was also named an All-USHL First Team player.

The University of North Dakota commit had an impressive 71 points in 52 games, with 44 goals and 27 assists.

While he still may be a couple of years away from making an impact for the Bruins, it’s nice to see him succeed at his current level.

Finally, the Providence Bruins will kick off their second-round series against Charlotte tomorrow night in Providence.

That game will have a 7:05 PM puck drop, with Game 2 set to follow on Sunday (same time).

Those games are streamed online via FloHockey, if you’d like to tune in.

What’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...ure-nhl-playoffs-bruins-news-bruins-prospects
 
Bruins will pick 7th overall in the 2025 NHL Draft

Bruce Bennett Collection

Photo by Robert Shaver/Bruce Bennett Collection/Bruce Bennett Studios via Getty Images

A confusing broadcast brings disappointing results to Boston.

In a broadcast that felt like Eric Andre had his fingerprints on it entirely by accident, the NHL did a live drawing of their NHL Draft lottery, and came away with the New York Islanders getting the 1st overall pick; and the Utah Hockey Club jumping all the way to 4th overall.

That leaves Boston with the 7th overall pick in the draft, a drop from their anticipated space in the draft that will have a perfectly reasonable reaction, I’m sure.

At 7th overall, the players available are projected to be guys like the following:

Viktor Eklund, a Left Wing from the storied Djurgårdens program:

The Large but oft-injured Roger McQueen, who played 17 games this year (a worrying trend at this draft):

The Moncton Menace of the net-front, Caleb Desnoyers:

The intriguingly named Carter Bear, who led the Everett Silvertips in points and goals this year in the WHL:

Definitely a bunch of interesting players to be sure, but that will mean at this point in the draft they are not sure things and will require a year or two of development in junior or the AHL in order to bring them up to speed, which was looking like the case for the entire first round on account of some of it’s best players spent almost the entire year on the Injured Reserve list. There’s even one listed expert who has the semi-consensus number 1 in Matthew Schaefer all the way down where the Bruins could take him. That would be funny!

It is however, very disappointing that the Bruins spent all that time getting absolutely hammered by the opposition down the stretch only to fall out of the Top 5 entirely. A top 5 pick could’ve theoretically been useful as either a prospect or as a potent trade chip for the team as they look to revamp their roster heading into the offseason.

Either way, this is a sounding board for your complaints about the broadcast, the nature of the draft, the kind of player Don Sweeney would pick, that sort of thing. Be cool, eat fruit, and we’ll see you for the Draft Profiles; starting with Roger McQueen.

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...key-desnoyers-schaeffer-victor-eklund-mcqueen
 
NHL Draft Lottery PREVIEW/LIVETHREAD

2024 NHL Draft Lottery

Photo by Mike Stobe/NHLI via Getty Images

The Bruins are in the mix for the first overall pick, and thus we should get ready for the big day!

Just the Facts​

  • The Time: 7pm EST
  • The Place: In a studio in Secaucus, New Jersey
  • Place to Watch: ESPN, SportsNet, TVA Sports

The Odds as of 5/5/25​

Chances of the First Overall Pick​

  • 1st - San Jose - 25.5%
  • 2nd - Chicago - 13.5%
  • 3rd - Nashville - 11.5%
  • 4th - Philadelphia - 9.5%
  • 5th - Boston - 8.5%
  • 6th - Seattle - 7.5%

The Main Prize of this draft: Matthew Schaefer - D - Erie Otters​

Overview​


Here we are, the show that the NHL will be putting on that they have promised over and over again will be fun. Will it be? I’d sure love it to be!

Otherwise, we’re waiting to see how the Lottery plays out with our very best friends in the ESPN panel; a horrifying amalgam of both trying too hard to appeal to the network’s current desire for T A E K Z while also trying to entertain the concept of actively covering something they were down with actually broadcasting.

I should probably write about exactly why and how, but we’ve got draft odds to discuss! You’re free to use this particular post as a livethread of the moment.

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...ton-bruins-san-jose-sharks-chicago-blackhawks
 
Morning Skate: Runway

Washington Capitals v Boston Bruins

Photo by Richard T Gagnon/Getty Images

No room left for Providence.

It is Wednesday, my dudes.

The NHL playoffs rolled on last night, with two more second round series getting under way. In both of those series, the road teams won Game 1: Edmonton beat Vegas and Carolina beat Washington in OT.

Tonight, Florida and Toronto will play Game 2 of their series, while Dallas and Winnipeg will begin their series.

The fun goes on without us, I guess.

In Bruins-related news, the B’s announced on Tuesday that they’ve signed forward Patrick Brown to a one-year, two-way contract extension.

The deal is worth $775,000 at the NHL level.

Brown captains the Providence Bruins, who are facing a “do or die” Game 3 in Charlotte tonight.

The P-Bruins dropped Games 1 and 2 of their second round series at home, losing 5-1 last Friday and 2-0 on Sunday.

The second round is a best-of-five series in the AHL, so there’s no more room for error for the P-B’s.

If you’re a basketball fan, the Celtics will host Game 2 of their second round playoff series tonight, hoping to avoid blowing a 20-point lead in this one. Aim high.

That’s about it around these parts.

Sky will have you covered with an IIHF World Championships primer later this week, and the draft profiles will begin rolling out relatively soon.

What’s on tap for today?

Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...runway-providence-bruins-playoffs-bruins-news
 
2025 IIHF World Championships PRIMER

IIHF World Champions Celebrations in Prague

Photo by RvS.Media/Monika Majer/Getty Images

The playoffs in the NHL are going now, and the World Championships are about to get going in Stockholm/Herning!

Just the Facts​

  • What is it?: The premiere annual international tournament of ice hockey featuring 16 of the highest ranked nations at the sport!
  • When is it?: Tomorrow!
  • Where is it?: Sweden and Denmark this year; Group A will primarily be playing in Stockholm, while Group B will primarily play in Herning. Group B will be literally be playing in a giant box.
  • Place to Watch: ESPN+, NHL Network, IIHF TV

Group Previews​

Group A - True North vs. Everybody​

  • Canada, as you’d expect, is looking to medal this tournament. This should be considered a bare minimum for the nation that popularized the sport, and their roster, even at this young stage before the tournament gets started, definitely looks like it could make some noise; players like Zayne Parekh get to play with Adam Fantilli, Macklin Celebrini gets to work with Travis Konecny, and even Mackenzie Weegar can come to terms with working with a pair of Kraken defensemen for the goal of getting Canada it’s first gold medal in a couple of years; headlined by Nathan Mackinnon, Sidney Crosby, and Marc-Andre Fleury all showing up at the same time. Of course, all of this talent requires them to not go on the bizarre runs of allowing teams much, much worse than they are scare the living daylights out of them like they did last year; a 7-6 OT winner over Austria, getting beaten in the shootout by Switzerland, and then being dumped unceremoniously out of the tournament by Sweden does not foment good feelings about how the Red and White (and sometimes Black) have been handling the slow, incremental improvements certain countries have made. Even worse, Canada is now in a much tougher group than last year; if only because they’re buttressed on all sides by rising eastern european powers like Slovakia, and the traditional nordic powers like Sweden and Finland. Canada made a big statement at the 4 Nations Tournament, they need to make one here as well.
  • Looking to take the canucks down a peg will be Sweden; the home team of Group A and likely to be one of the most complete teams as per usual. Elias Lindholm will be joining a mix of youth and experience on the side of Tre Kronor; taking Rasmus Andersson, Filip Forsberg, Marcus Pettersson, Mika Zibanejad, Leo Carlsson, Alex Wennberg, and William Eklund. They’ve also got a mix of experience and youth in net! Who would I start of the three? Kind of depends on who’s lateral movement looked better in practice that day. But either way, the Swiss and these tournaments have a bit of a love-hate relationship: in the late 2010s, they were next to unstoppable; racking up three gold medals in 5 years. This decade? It’s considered impressive for them that they’ve even made it to Bronze. With a squad as talented as they have, they’re built to succeed; what they need now is to kill the demons that the 2020s have inflicted on the program.
  • Finland has gotta be kicking the Colorado Avalanche for not eliminating the Dallas Stars, as a good portion of their stars that would’ve almost certainly are still going to be in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. Finland however still sports a strong team that plays a hard-nosed style; guys like Eeli Tolvanen, Joona Koppanen, and Juuso Pärssinen will feature, but it’s clear they’re keeping open some invites in case of playoff elimination over the next month. It’ll need to come soon, as the Finns get to start this tournament with France and then their old buddies in Sweden. Working hard’s gonna be a big feature of this tourney for them.
  • Alright, sit down for this: Slovakia was going to have a pretty decent team together, but they’re about to be a major victim to almost their entire group that would’ve gone actively choosing to ignore the federation or quietly boycotting them as 26 potential players for this squad either opted out or straight up left them on read, or the organization actively dislikes them and has chosen not to bring them for any number of reasons. Their Minister of Sport apparently wouldn’t be out of place in this current administration and I mean that in the worst possible way, and Miroslav Satan, the supposed savior of the program who took over in 2019, has turned out to be a little more buddy-buddy with Russia than anyone would care for, an ESPECIALLY big over there, and much of the corruption that had been in the organization has, according to players like Juraj Slafkovksy, has not been addressed. As a result, they have almost nothing but local league players and a few prospects; Martin Chromiak, Dalibor Dvorsky, Sam Honzek, and Adam Sykora star alongside Sam Hlavaj; a veteran of that squad who’s VERY used to getting shelled. If they do well, it will be because of these youthful talents playing above their heads, and in spite of their organization; nothing else.
  • Latvia travels well. If there’s any atmosphere in the sport that rivals Latvia’s, it’s probably Czechia after a world championship or the stands of larger Swedish clubs. They also have played the part of your favorite underdog team for just about every year they’ve been in this tourney with the explicit exception of last year, where being in Group B was the best thing that could’ve happened to them as they ended up medaling for the first time in their history. This is how they celebrated it. As for this year? Well, the problem with being the cool big story coming out of one tournament is that you usually end up being upgraded in the next tournament to the big boy’s table, and I’m gonna be real; as much as I love the Latvian team’s ferocious work ethic, and have been very excited for Dans Locmelis’ continued improvement as a prospect, it’s going to be a helluva fight. If you’ve gotta play Finland and Sweden in consecutive games, you’d better be on their level, and that’s never quite been Latvia’s bag. If there is reason for hope, it’s that they do have games they could win pretty reasonably in between their visits to the ass-kicking factories, so maybe they’ll get the chance to shock people again. I hope they do so, genuinely.
  • Austria will have Marco Kasper, a couple of Utah prospects, and a prayer. Granted, that kept them from getting eliminated last year and they did get to be Finland’s prerequisite Really Bad Loss In Prelims For many of the middle tier teams in the World Championships, that’s what most can only hope for, and while their Canada game will probably be a lot less fun for them than it was last year, they’ll get plenty of opportunities to flex their might against Slovakia and Latvia. Maybe not a knockout round favorite, but definitely going to make themselves an interesting watch.
  • Bonjour, France! Bienvenue the world championships! I hope Pierre-Edouard Bellemare and Alex Texier have a good tournament on your behalf! Anyway, enjoy your games against Austria and Slovenia because those are probably your best shot at a win. Might even be a convincing one!
  • Slovenia depends nearly entirely on whether or not they get to bring Anze Kopitar to the tourney; and if the answer to that is no, it will be rough sailing. Their neighbors have supercharged their program in a way the Slovenes just haven’t found a way to do, having only recently rejoined the World Championship level of competition last year after earning promotion in Division 1A. I wish that things were better for them, but I don’t think that there’s going to be much hope. It’ll be nice to see their jerseys again, though! I always liked Slovenia’s look.

Group B - Yearning to win in Herning​

  • So hey, the USA is the official heel of this tournament and every tournament from here on out; for reasons I’m sure you can figure out, please don’t be discouraged by that! The Americans are still going to be a wildly dangerous squad with players old and new pouring in; Cole Hutson, Zeev Buium, Logan Cooley, and Isaac Howard now stand tall with Matty Beniers, Michael Eyssimont, Tage Thompson, and Clayton Keller, and they are looking to redeem their nation (on a sheet of ice, anyway) for their lack of success last year; starting awkwardly against Sweden, and then the indignity of yet another Slovakia sudden death win, and then finally getting bounced from contention by Czechia. It’s clear that Dylan Larkin’s message at the end of the 4 Nations Tournament about joining up at Worlds to make the best case for yourself for the Olympics has rung true for a number of players, and if there’s a clear favorite to win Group B that isn’t the world champs, it’s them.
  • Czechia is your current world champion, and they’re bringing a lot of the same guys who helped them win it last year; most notably David Pastrnak, who has plenty of recent experience bringing sub-NHL talent to halfway decent results, so he should be good and ready for the tournament! In seriousness, Czechia’s the free-wheeling goalscoring phenom who either drop 4+ goals on their opponent and dare them to score, or goes back and forth against the superpowers. These days, Czechia’s done their back-and-forth routine and come out the victor more than once, and they’ll look to do much the same against a group that realistically only has the United States and maybe Switzerland as their biggest dangers. That said, with Switzerland once again making moves at the World Championship level, they’re going to need to keep their wheeling, dealing ways focused.
  • Switzerland may come away from this year with one of the best results they’ve ever had at this tournament as a result of Group B being unusually top heavy. The Swiss have been a real sickos team for many years; good fundamentals, strong defense, usually pretty good at goaltending, and for whatever reason decided that last year they were going to be untouchable. It ran out of gas over time unfortunately, but it was fun, and they may want to go ahead and re-do that. They are also a who’s who of “hey, I know that guy!”; Sven Andrighetto, Denis Malgin, Simon Knak, and maybe Andres Ambuhl if you’re a big enough hockey pervert, are all showing up again! I’m just glad they all get to do this gig. Maybe when they get tired of playing it, they’ll end up coaching it!
  • Germany didn’t get JJ Peterka or Leon Draisaitl (yet), but this is still a reasonably talented squad; featuring guys like Moritz Sieder, Former Sabre/Penguin Dominik Kahun, CURRENT Blackhawk Lukas Reichel, Marcel Noebels who’s been on the german national team for almost 20 years, Mammoth prospect (something I can say now) Maksymilian Szuber, and a host of Adler Mannheim and Eisbären Berlin players ready to scare the living daylights out of any of these middle tier clubs. As for medal aspirations? Well, they probably will make the KO round, but after that? eeeeh...maybe next time when any of the NHL players get scared by not going to Milan.
  • Norway is sort of the odd one out in Scandinavia in that they ended up the one who’s ice hockey programs don’t quite produce the same level of stars as Finland and Sweden. As such, while they’ve got some interesting talents, it’s considered rare if you’re NHL good. As for this year, I’m cautiously optimistic about their chances; this is a weak group outside of Czechia and the US, they’ve previously beaten Denmark before, they’re bringing noted violent maniac Stian Solberg, and they get to avoid Austria this year, so I’m imagining they walk away with at least two wins this tourney. Good for you guys!
  • Denmark, I promise you that this isn’t personal. I don’t like the idea of the home team just barely scraping into the bottom half of the knockout round if at all, but that’s probably what’s going to happen; they’ve got exactly one NHL prospect coming, Ollie Bjorkstrand appears to have opted to stay at home, and there’s no team UK or Austria in group that’ll save you here. You’re gonna have to wait until you play Hungary to come away with a W.
  • Kazakhstan is here! They’re probably gonna win one game. Oh well. It’ll be fun to watch them!
  • Hungary! Lovely of you to make the tournament! You’ll have fun in the relegation round with Slovenia. Good luck out there!

Bruins at the World Championships​

  • David Pastrnak and Jakub Lauko will be representing Czechia
  • For the USA: Mason Lohrei, Jeremy Swayman, and Andrew Peeke will represent the Red, White, and Blue
  • Latvia will be represented by prospect Dans Locmelis
  • Sweden will have Elias Lindholm representing them.

World Championships Rough Schedule​

  • Preliminary Schedule: May 9th to May 20th; each day has at least 4 games.
  • Knockout Round: May 22nd to May 24th
  • Medal Round: May 25th

A more comprehensive schedule of the World Championships can be found here


Congratulations to all Bruins picked to represent their countries, and good luck!​


Source: https://www.stanleycupofchowder.com...canada-sweden-finland-hockey-czechia-slovakia
 
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