Bruins sign goalie to contract extension
In a month that’s by all means become defined by goalie chatter both on and off the ice, Don Sweeney and the Boston Bruins did find some time to hammer out an extension with their one of their goalies this week.
It just wasn’t with the goalie you probably expected, as the team came to terms on a one-year, two-way contract extension for Providence netminder Michael DiPietro.
The new deal for DiPietro will come with a league-minimum $775,000 cap hit at the NHL level.
DiPietro’s extension also comes with the 24-year-old in the midst of an AHL campaign that’s featured a 17-8-0 record and .917 save percentage, as well as a 2.52 goals against average, in 26 games for the P-Bruins. In addition to the 17 wins, the Windsor, Ont. native has also posted four shutouts on the year, which is tied for the third-most in the AHL on the year.
DiPietro also made one appearance for Providence last year, and was electric in that outing, with 33 saves on 35 shots faced.
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The Bruins originally acquired DiPietro from Vancouver in last year’s early-season trade that sent Jack Studnicka to the Canucks. (Studnicka would go on to total five goals and nine points in 52 games for the Canucks before they traded him to San Jose earlier this season, where he went without a point in nine games before being sent down to the AHL.) And while some were a bit confused as to why the Bruins made DiPietro a priority in the return when you looked at their goalie group at the time, both in Boston and Providence, it’s a gamble and project that’s seemingly paid off to this point for Sweeney and the organization.
After spending the majority of last year with ECHL Maine, DiPietro has emerged as a solid option with Brandon Bussi, and has effectively replaced Kyle Keyser as the Black and Gold’s No. 4 goaltender on the organizational depth chart.
It’ll be interesting to see just what the future entails for DiPietro, too, as he does require waivers to be shuttled up and down between Providence and Boston, meaning 31 teams will have the chance to nab him for free should he fail to make the Big B’s roster out of training camp. That will also be the case for Bussi beginning next year, though, which puts the B’s in a very interesting spot when it comes to their backup goalie battle in 2024-25 should they ultimately decide to move on from Linus Ullmark (or Jeremy Swayman) following the 2023-24 season.
DiPietro, originally drafted by the Canucks with a third-round pick (No. 64 overall) in 2017, was one of four B’s goalies in need of a new contract this summer, with Bussi, Keyser, and Swayman also slated to enter the 2024 offseason as arbitration-eligible restricted free agents.
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Matt & Ty are back with a new episode getting caught up with the latest on the Boston Bruins and the NHL, as the Stanley Cup Playoffs fast approach.
(0:20) Opening banter on Twitter and seltzer drinks.
(11:40) Reactions to the Bruins’ recent win over the Ottawa Senators.
(17:50) Discussing the Bruins’ forward groups and the combinations that might work looking ahead.
(25:50) Initial thoughts on Andrew Peeke as a Bruin, and the state of the defense as a whole.
(48:40) Reactions to the latest recent performances of the Bruins’ goaltenders and what to expect in the playoffs.
(1:01:20) The guys draft their “Big 3” condiments.
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