Bruins make first decision of 2024 offseason
Bruins general manager Don Sweeney considers himself a never-say-never kind of guy.
But with a jam-packed offseason to-do list in front of him, Sweeney has reportedly already let one player know that he’s free to look for work outside the organization, with bottom-six forward Oskar Steen informed that the club will be parting ways with him this summer.
Word of the Bruins’ intentions came courtesy of Steen’s agent, Joakim Persson, as confirmed to a Swedish outlet (and with some help from Google Translate).
“Boston has given us permission to already start talking to other teams to see what interest there is,” Persson told VF. “So those are the conversations we are in the middle of now, and I’m going over to Vegas for the NHL draft on July 28-29 and continue to have conversations and dialogues there.”
Among Boston’s pending Group 6 unrestricted free agents, the split between the B’s and Steen was certainly expected, especially after the Bruins waived him down to Providence in February following an NHL run that featured just one goal and zero assists in 34 regular-season games in 2023-24.
One of 580 NHL players to play at least 30 games in 2023-24 at the time of his move to the waiver wire (and subsequent reassignment to AHL Providence), Steen’s single point ranked dead last among that group of 580, while he was also one of just two forwards (and just four players in total) in the NHL to play at least 300 five-on-five minutes and not record multiple points at that point in the season.
While he made multiple trips to the waiver wire, Bruins head coach Jim Montgomery had grown to appreciate Steen’s ‘stout’ play as a 5-foot-9 wing who was able to get to the front of the net given his frame. But Steen failed to elevate that and become more than a fourth-line plug-and-play type, as he didn’t seem to have the ability to be a true agitator and draw his fair share of penalties (like a Jakub Lauko, for example) nor did he have the scoring chops to hang as a full-time contributor.
Drafted by the Bruins with a sixth-round pick (No. 165 overall), Steen recorded four goals and eight points in 60 NHL games over his Boston tenure, and his 60 appearances are the fifth-most among players drafted in the sixth round or later in that 2016 class.