Jake DeBrusk gets brutally honest about talks with Bruins
Bruins winger Jake DeBrusk, currently in the final year of his contract and staring down a summertime jump into the unknown of unrestricted free agency, has made his feelings on a future in Boston known.
DeBrusk, a career-long Bruin drafted by the club with the No. 14 overall pick in 2015, would like to remain with the Bruins. He feels that he’s a fit for the expectations that come with being a Bruin, that his identity meshes with the organization, and has repeatedly said that he knows what it means to wear that B’s sweater.
But just nine days away from the 2024 NHL trade deadline, DeBrusk remains without an extension, and without any sort of positive momentum on his agent’s talks with B’s general manager Don Sweeney.
Jake DeBrusk said there’s been no progress on a contract extension
— steve conroy (@conroyherald) February 28, 2024
And given the money-in, money-out nature that comes with the Bruins’ potential plans this trade deadline, that’s enough to make DeBrusk a bit nervous about his future between now and the Mar. 8 deadline.
“I mean, of course I do [worry],” DeBrusk admitted when asked if his current situation is making him a bit unnerved about this year’s trade deadline. “I mean, I understand [and] I feel like I’ve been around here long enough to to know how the league works and that sense of things. And obviously there’s, different things [like] guys getting injured around the league and different stuff that kind of happens that is out of normal control.
“It’ll be interesting to see what teams are aggressive, what teams aren’t. But of course, you always have that in the back of your mind. I mean, there’s obviously two years ago was a little more intense [on] that side of things. But I think ever since I’ve been here, I’ve been worried.”
That’s about as brutally honest as DeBrusk has gotten at any point this season when it comes to his talks with the club.
In the offseason, DeBrusk had more of a ‘when, not an if’ vibe when it came to questions about his future with the club. And when he spoke with the media in his first practice back from the bye week and All-Star break, DeBrusk threw in some jokes, but essentially made it known that he wanted to get a contract done to put his mind at ease ahead of the deadline.
But now, without a deal and time continuing to tick away, it appears that the mind is beginning to race.
In what’s been a step back from last year’s campaign, DeBrusk has posted 13 goals and 27 points through 58 games played. He’s also gone through a wild cool down since the B’s returned to action, with just one goal and one assist in 11 games since returning from the break, both of which came in last week’s win over DeBrusk’s hometown Oilers.
It’s enough to get you wondering just how the Bruins view DeBrusk moving forward.
Given some of their other needs long term — the Bruins would like to add another high-impact, left-shot defenseman and you have to imagine they’ll continue to monitor the center market for top-six help there — it’s entirely possible that the Bruins are taking more of a wait-and-see approach when it comes to retaining DeBrusk. The unknown with their goaltending situation with Jeremy Swayman looking for a massive raise after last year’s arbitration fiasco and Linus Ullmark entering the final year of a $20 million contract only adds another complicated layer to it all, too.
There’s only so much money to go around, and DeBrusk may not be the top priority given those other needs.
DeBrusk’s value to the Bruins (and around the league) may also cause an issue of sorts for the Bruins.
DeBrusk is definitely better than what his numbers have shown this season (his shooting percentage has taken a dip compared to the last two years, but he’s still creating looks, so there’s room for improvement there), and his growth as a two-way player has been noteworthy.
But at 27 years old, this is probably DeBrusk’s best chance to cash in a long-term deal that takes him into his mid-30s, and recent contracts extensions around league may indicate that DeBrusk’s next contract will come with an average annual value around $6 million plus. It’ll be awfully difficult for the Bruins to pay him that kind of contract while also addressing all those areas they’d like to between now and the start of next season, even with $28 million in projected cap space this summer.
In essence, expect the ‘worrying’ to continue until next Friday’s 3 p.m. deadline.