Bruins officially have clear picture of their salary cap situation
Don Sweeney and the Bruins finally know exactly how much money they’ll have to operate with this summer, as the NHL has officially set the 2024-25 salary cap ‘ceiling’ at $88 million.
The 5.39 percent increase from the 2023-24 ceiling ($83.5 million) was higher than many originally expected, and is the league’s highest percentage jump since what was a six percent jump in 2018.
And for a team like the Bruins, who went through a ‘cap hell’ year a season ago after a failed all-in year came with a significant, bonus-related reduction from their 2023-24 ceiling, it means that the summertime wishlist will come with over $21 million in cap space.
Sweeney has already noted that the Bruins are going to be ‘aggressive’ this summer, and there’s no shortage of needs. The obvious internal need comes with the team needing to strike a deal with restricted free agent Jeremy Swayman. After what was a breakout postseason as Boston’s No. 1 goalie, the 25-year-old Swayman’s long-term deal could potentially check in at $8 million per year.
Externally, the Bruins have a significant need for another high-end center, and will need to bring in another scoring wing to help complement talents like Brad Marchand and David Pastrnak.
The Bruins will also need to either re-sign one of their pending unrestricted free agent defensemen (lefties Matt Grzelcyk and Derek Forbort, along with the right-shooting Kevin Shattenkirk are the notables on the NHL roster) or bring in an external left-shot defender to shore up the depth at that spot.
But for the Bruins, the focus seems to be up front, with Sweeney realizing his group’s limitations.
“There are some things we need to address, and I need to address [them] from the standpoint of free agency and or internal growth,” Sweeney said at last month’s break-up day. “I think [Charlie] Coyle, [Pavel] Zacha, a bunch of guys were able to step forward. And they were cast as a little bit of misfits in that in that regard. We didn’t see it that way. And I think they stepped forward and several other guys did too. We have to conquer that I have to be able to find some players that can come in and provide secondary scoring for us and key opportune times.”
Free agency will begin on July 1.
11 teams that make sense as a potential landing spot for Linus Ullmark
You don’t have to be an agent or general manager to realize that the math in front of the Boston Bruins indicates that this is almost certainly the end of the Jeremy Swayman and Linus Ullmark tandem.
Boston’s backbone for the last three seasons, a breakout postseason from the 25-year-old Swayman has set him up for a gigantic payday as Boston’s most important restricted free agent. And given the needs the Bruins have elsewhere on the roster, namely in their top six and potentially on the backend, it’s almost impossible to imagine the Bruins putting themselves in a situation where they are guaranteed to have at least $5 million sitting on their bench in the regular season and, even worse, in the postseason.
It was fine for a one-year trek through cap hell, but it’s not a sustainable model.
And Bruins general manager Don Sweeney knows that to be the case, and knows that offers are going to come from around the league from other GMs who notice as much.