Here are the latest notes and observations from Boston Bruins training camp at Warrior Ice Arena.
BRIGHTON — The captain’s back. Everybody get to work.
That was the message from Brad Marchand, both directly and indirectly, in his return to Bruins training camp on Wednesday at Warrior Ice Arena. Part of the message, anyway. Marchand has long been one of the NHL’s unique personalities, someone who takes hockey to heart but also knows how to have fun with it. It’s a delicate balance when you’re actually getting ready for the season, but Marchand strikes it. And the buzz clearly ticks up a notch or three.
“The first day, you really felt it, and it just continues,” head coach Jim Montgomery said Wednesday. “It’s amazing how much energy and competitiveness [Marchand] adds to practice all by himself.”
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Another standout player from the Group A practice, which included guys that didn’t play in Tuesday night’s preseason win over the Capitals, was defenseman Nikita Zadorov. Projected to play on the top pairing with Charlie McAvoy, Zadorov hasn’t had much opportunity to show off his physical edge just yet, in the absence of game action. But he’s also displayed a surprising ability to handle the puck and turn defense into offense, despite the bulk of his value coming at his own end of the ice.
Marchand has certainly taken a liking to his new teammate, all the way around.
“Hate him!” Marchand joked. “He’s amazing. He’s just an absolute animal. He can do it all. He has offensive abilities, he’s big, he’s mean, he doesn’t care, he’s a predator out there. I’ve played against him and I hated it. Love having him on our group. He’s great off the ice, on the bench and in the room. He’s always yapping, keeping things light, keeping guys on their toes. Incredible addition to the group. I think he’s fit in great. Really happy to have him here.”
You know who Zadorov sounds like, based on Marchand’s description? Marchand. This may be an underrated partnership brewing here, although Marchand indicated that Zadorov and McAvoy might play more with the top like of Pavel Zacha-Elias Lindholm-David Pastrnak.
Marchand and Zadorov looked like a borderline buddy comedy during one 2-on-2 drill, when they worked as a pair. Coaches brought the two nets in closer to the blue lines and sent a series of pairings out against each other for a micro-scrimmage. Marchand scored against Brandon Bussi in his first rep against a pair of David Pastrnak and Johnny Beecher, while Zadorov also showed his sneaky-good hands to create open ice and finish through Bussi himself. Marchand and Zadorov kept gliding back to the bench with prominent smirks on their faces, probably the most fun any two players have had so far in camp.
“That’s because we were dominating,” Marchand chirped. “Well I wasn’t, [Zadorov] was. He was a one-man show out there. That’s part of it. We compete hard in practice, but we have fun too. When you’re competing, there’s a lot of pride, and when you’re winning, you got to enjoy it, and he was making it look really easy out there today, and I was just riding his coattails. So, I’ve got to give him props when it’s due.”
Zadorov isn’t about to oversell his offensive abilities, although he did score 14 goals two seasons ago with Calgary. His bread will always be buttered by using his size in the defensive end. But it wouldn’t be surprising if he took advantage of the opportunities he’s sure to get on offense, too.
“My physical game is not going to go away,” Zadorov said Wednesday. “That’s why I’m in the league, that’s why people pay me money, that’s why they signed me. So, that’s my goal, defense-first, and if you can create, if you have enough guys to jump offensively – that’s why it’s so important to close those plays quick in the D zone, so you don’t spend time there so you can play some offense.
“I’m not a Cale Makar, super-super-high-IQ and high-skill offensive defenseman, but I know my strengths and I can also chip in offensively.”
Zadorov chipped in pretty well when he all of a sudden channeled his inner Tage Thompson and created some space with the puck against Pastrnak:
Not to turn this mini-dangle into the second coming of Mario Lemieux. But Zadorov and Marchand’s tag-teaming was the standout moment of the day, and it’s not the least bit surprising that the captain gave spectators something to enjoy as soon as he returned.
It’s a welcome sight for a Bruins team that’s been a tad banged up of late.