Bruins general manager Don Sweeney earns kudos from fellow GMs
For almost a decade now, the local view of the job done by Bruins general manager Don Sweeney has never quite matched up with what Sweeney is thought of around the league.
That trend has apparently rolled on for another year, too, as Sweeney finished in fifth in the voting for the Jim Gregory General Manager of the Year Award for the 2023-24 season.
Sweeney’s fifth-place finish came by way of three first-place votes, one second-place vote, and three third-place votes.
With 21 points to his name, only the Rangers’ Chris Drury (61 points), Florida’s Bill Zito (64 points), Vancouver’s Patrik Allvin (66 points), and the Stars’ Jim Nill (118 points) finished with more points than Sweeney. What was interesting about Sweeney’s point accumulation here is that he had the fifth-most first-place votes, but ultimately failed to get a ton of second- and third-place votes like the aforementioned names ahead of him on the voting leaderboard.
Unlike many of the NHL awards, voting for the GM of the Year Award is conducted by the 32 general managers of the NHL, as well as a panel of other NHL executives and select broadcasters and media members. Voting is also conducted following the conclusion of the second round of the playoffs, as opposed to the end of the regular season like every other notable NHL award.
Sweeney’s ‘kudos’ from his peers and broadcasters came after what was a ‘Moneyball’ type of season that saw Sweeney navigate through brutal cap overages and an undeniable talent drain through free agency and the retirement of franchise pillars Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci.
Still, despite those losses, the Bruins finished the regular season with the seventh-most points in hockey, while Boston’s 2.70 goals against per game were the fifth-best in hockey.
Sweeney’s club also saw notable contributions from some of their bargain-bin additions like Danton Heinen and James van Riemsdyk, while young players such as 2019 first-round pick Johnny Beecher, 2020 second-round pick Mason Lohrei, and 2022 second-rounder Matt Poitras had notable NHL runs.
Boston also advanced out of the first round for the first time since 2021 with a seven-game series win over the Maple Leafs.
The Bruins will hope that Sweeney can build on that this summer, with over $21 million in cap space, and some obviously major needs and notable roster decisions in front of the club.