On their day off, the Bruins clinched a playoff berth
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - FEBRUARY 29: Morgan Geekie #39 of the Boston Bruins celebrates with David Pastrnak #88 and Danton Heinen #43 after scoring his second goal of the game against the Vegas Golden Knights during the first period at TD Garden on February 29, 2024 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
With the night off and a little help from the rival Hurricanes, who defeated the Red Wings by a 4-0 final, the Bruins officially punched their ticket to the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs on Thursday night.
The Bruins’ inevitability of qualifying for the postseason came on the third straight of clinching scenarios for the Bruins, and naturally actually came to be on a night where the Bruins were idle.
For the Bruins, it’s the eighth straight year of qualifying for the postseason, which is their longest streak in that respect since a 29-year streak that ran from 1967-68 through 1995-96. That 29-year streak is the longest in NHL history, while Boston’s current eight-year streak is the longest active streak in the NHL, which could be tied if and when the Maple Leafs punch their ticket to the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
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As for where the B’s will land from a seeding standpoint when the dust settles on the regular season, that remains completely up in the air. The Bruins begin Friday atop the Atlantic with 99 points, but the Panthers are right on their heels with 97 points, as well as a game in hand over Boston. The Bruins are also chasing the East-best Rangers and their 102 points for the top spot among all East clubs (the top seed in the East draws the second wild card, while the top team in the other bracket draws the first wild card).
In their latest projections, Moneypuck gives the Bruins a 45.5 percent chance of finishing first in the Atlantic (the Panthers have an over 49 percent), and a 43.7 percent chance of finishing second in the Atlantic. Unless the Bruins can catch the Rangers for the top spot in the East, that essentially puts the Bruins on a collision course with either the Maple Leafs or Lightning, with Tampa Bay and Toronto by all means locks to make up the No. 3 seed in the Atlantic and the first wild card.
The Stanley Cup Playoffs are currently expected to begin on Apr. 22.
Bruins make significant lineup tweak with playoffs looming
Even with a league-high 74 games in the books, there’s an awful lot of uncertainty when it comes to the Bruins.
One thing that felt like a certainty, however, was the Black and Gold’s second pairing of Brandon Carlo and Hampus Lindholm. That was until Wednesday in Tampa, anyway, as Bruins head coach Jim Montgomery decided to split the duo up in the midst of what’s been a sluggish stretch for each ahead of a 3-1 loss to the Bolts at Amalie Arena.
And, again, while the case could be made that this move was a long time coming given their recent results as well as the overall strain that’s come with their deployment, it was also a shock and shake-up to what’s been the norm for this Bruins squad.
Entering Wednesday night, just 29 NHL pairings had played more five-on-five time together than the Lindholm-Carlo pairing and their 645:40 of time together this season. The Lindholm-Carlo pairing was also the most-deployed Boston defensive pairing, too, with a 70-minute edge on the second-most deployed Boston pairing (Matt Grzelcyk and Charlie McAvoy).
Among a group of 53 pairings with at least 500 five-on-five minutes together this season, Lindholm-Carlo ranked last in offensive-zone start percentage (12.97%), and last in offensive-zone faceoff percentage (22.72 percent). And despite that defense-first deployment, the pairing thrived from a results standpoint, with an on-ice save percentage of .938 (eighth-best among that group of 53), while their 28-21 goal differential gave them a goals-for percentage of 57.14 percent, which ranked 19th among that group of 53.
This was a pairing that Montgomery leaned on more than any other to this point.
Ty Anderson is 98.5 The Sports Hub’s friendly neighborhood straight-edge kid. Ty has been covering the Bruins (and other Boston teams) since 2010, has been a member of the PHWA since 2013, and went left to right across your radio dial and joined The Sports Hub in 2018. Ty also writes about all New England sports from Patriots football to the Boston Celtics and Boston Red Sox.