It’s been an offseason of change for the Bruins.
An era-shifting change, to be honest.
After almost two decades of being the Black and Gold’s one-two punch down the middle, both Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci opted for retirement. Bergeron’s retirement also led to the appointment of Brad Marchand as the B’s new team captain, while their departures have also signaled a slight shift in Boston’s team identity, with the 2023-24 season looking like it’ll be the year of defense and goaltending for the cap-squeezed Bruins.
The Bruins are also embracing the idea of a ‘youth movement’ more than they ever half in the last half decade or so, with both Matt Poitras and Johnny Beecher making this year’s roster out of training camp, and with defenseman Mason Lohrei not too far behind despite his late-camp demotion down to the minors.
But even with these changes, the Bruins still expect their competitive fire to remain. Especially with the team celebrating its centennial season and with more than a few players from last year’s points-record-setting club still in town.
“I mean, we feel pressure from our fan base virtually every day to try to improve our club. That doesn’t change from season to season, the expectation is that we deliver a team that can at least makes the playoffs,” Bruins CEO Charlie Jacobs said. “And how’s the old saying go? It’s not necessarily the best team that wins the Stanley Cup, but it’s the team that’s playing the best hockey that wins the Stanley Cup, and that was certainly true last year.
“We’re the Boston Bruins, we’re an original six team, we’re celebrating our 100th anniversary. I think everyone here understands the gravity of the opportunity, and the gravity of what we have in front of us for this upcoming season.”