No. 2: A top-six scoring wing
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – APRIL 30: Brad Marchand of the Bruins and David Pastrnak look on from the bench during the second period of Game 5 of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Maple Leafs at TD Garden. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
When we look at where it all went wrong for the Bruins in the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs, it wasn’t about an inability to handle a forecheck or their defensive play. It was just that their scoring dried up at the worst possible time. That was always a concern for the ‘Moneyball Bruins’ when you looked at how the Bruins assembled their 2023-24 squad with about 28 dollars in cap space, and it indeed played out that way at the worst possible time.
It was only accelerated when the Bruins were forced to play without team captain Brad Marchand for by all means three of their final four games of the postseason,. with teams able to key in on superstar David Pastrnak and ‘let’ the rest of the Black and Gold’s limited offensive threats beat them.
That’s something that’s gotta get fixed this summer.
“Yeah, we need to fix and address that,” Sweeney admitted at break-up day when pressed on the playoff scoring woes. “The margins are small. They just are. The final three games of the series were 3-2, 2-1, 1-2. So you know, at the end of the day, as teams move through the playoffs, things tighten up [and] you have to find a way. We didn’t get inside quite enough in rebound situations that we might be able to take advantage of.
“So there are some things we need to address. And I need to address from the standpoint of free agency and or internal growth, I think [Charlie] Coyle, [Pavel] Zacha, a bunch of guys were able to step forward. And they were cast as a little bit of misfits in that in that regard. We didn’t see it that way. And I think they stepped forward and several other guys did too. We have to conquer that I have to be able to find some players that can come in and provide secondary scoring for us and key opportune times.”
The good news for the Bruins is that this is a good market for teams looking scoring help on the wings. In terms of unrestricted free agents, there’s both Sam Reinhart (57 goals this season) and Jake Guentzel (22nd-most goals in the NHL over the last three seasons) at the top of the market. But with players expected to make about $9 million per season on their next contract, the Bruins are likely looking at the next tier of free-agent scorers available. That group is still solid, with veteran players like Tyler Toffoli, Jonathan Marchessault, Matt Duchene, Anthony Mantha, Vladimir Tarasenko, Tyler Bertuzzi, Jake DeBrusk, and Patrick Kane available.
No matter who the Bruins sign here, you have to look at them and be 100 percent, fully convinced that they can be a top-six scorer for your club. This league has quickly become about high-end talent, and while having a souped-up third line is great, the Bruins have a desperate need for guys who can thrive with their other high-end talents up top.