David Krejci explains what went into decision to retire from NHL
In an offseason full of departures, last week came with one of the more predictable ones of the 2023 Bruins offseason to date, as B’s center David Krejci announced his retirement from the NHL after 16 years with Boston.
Back in Boston on what always felt like a one-and-done, the 37-year-old Krejci’s retirement comes on the heels of what was a 16-goal, 56-point campaign back in the middle of Boston’s second line. And with Krejci’s retirement confirmation coming just weeks after Patrice Bergeron’s decision to walk away, it truly feels like the Bruins are officially entering a new era of hockey.
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But what was it that led Krejci to decide that he had his fill of NHL hockey?
“I retired from the NHL because I know my body can’t take the whole season,” Krejci admitted in a post-retirement Zoom with the media. “I have things that I would have to get done which would involve surgeries. And at my age, I’m not ready to do that. I don’t want to do that anymore.”
Krejci, of course, ended the year at less than 100 percent, and that ‘surgery’ note only confirms as much.
Dealing with a lower-body injury, Krejci missed the final six games of the regular season, and skated in the first two games of Boston’s first-round series with the Panthers before an injury put him back on the shelf. Krejci would return for Games 6 and 7, and factored in on all three of Boston’s Game 7 goals, but even that took a lot, with one source telling 98.5 The Sports Hub that Krejci required an injection to get back into action in that series.
Krejci, for what it’s worth, opted not to reveal the nature of his injuries at break-up day or during his retirement Zoom. But they were enough to make Krejci’s decision an easy one (relatively speaking), he admitted.
“Well the decision [to retire from the NHL] was made, I would say, when my injuries started to happen at the end of the season,” Krejci offered. “But I didn’t want to rush to my decision [either]. I really wanted to take my time and really think things over, because you don’t want to make decisions when the emotions are going through you. So I really wanted to take my time and wait for the right moment.
“I just realized there’s never a right time or right moment to retire from the NHL, but I felt like it was time. I knew my body couldn’t take 82 games anymore.”
One thing that’s important to note, of course, is that Krejci is retired from the NHL. He made it a point to note that the NHL is no longer something his body can handle. But he is leaving the door for a return to Czechia and the international stage on the table, especially with the 2024 World Championships slated to take place in Prague.
“If at some point around Christmas, I feel like, ‘Let’s get ready, play a couple of months somewhere in Europe, get ready for the World Championship,’ that’s something I’m thinking about,” Krejci said. “If I decide to keep going then it would definitely be after New Year’s Day.”
Krejci spent the 2021-22 season with his hometown Olomouc HC, and put up 20 goals and 46 points in 51 appearances. Krejci also played for Czechia in the 2022 Olympics in Beijing, and played for Czechia in the World Championships in 2022.
As for his NHL career, Krejci will retire from the Bruins as one of just seven skaters to play at least 1,000 games with the Bruins, with his 1,032 games in a Boston sweater ranking fifth on the club’s all-time list. His 231 goals, meanwhile, are 13th on the franchise leaderboard, while his 786 points are the ninth-most by any player in the century-long history of the club.