A lack of discipline is their biggest problem, and their mental mistakes and poor positioning are overworking the PK troops.
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“It’s the penalties,” Andrew Raycroft said to his buddies, as they diagnosed the Bruins’ issues. “This has been the theme the last 10 days for this group.”
Patrice Bergeron saw it, too. Easy game to analyze from the couch, he reasoned, but the penalties are becoming poison.
“Because five on five,” he said, “it’s been …”
“It’s been close,” Raycroft said. “But another hook and another interference and you’re chasing the game.”
The thought hung in the air for a good 20 seconds.
No one — not Bergeron, Raycroft, Tuukka Rask, or Adam McQuaid, all ex-Bruins brought together on a NESN set to provide commentary during Thursday’s game against the Stars — wanted to belabor the point. In the second period, the Bruins had already given up two power-play goals. They were about to surrender a third.
One failed offensive sequence later, David Pastrnak skate-tripped Dallas’s Matt Dumba, his second minor in three shifts. Bergeron rubbed his temples. Then the Stars’ Tyler Seguin ripped a shot under the crossbar for a three-goal lead.
There was no need for an alumni alt-cast to figure out what has been hurting this year’s team the most.
The Bruins have been shorthanded a league-high 40 times in eight games. They have committed nine more minors (44) than second-worst San Jose, adding five to the total Thursday (and killing two of them). If their penalty kill were running hotter than 77.5 percent (19th in the league), it might not sting as much.
But their mental mistakes and poor positioning are overworking the PK troops. The Bruins’ lack of discipline — not new faces adjusting, or carryover effects from key players missing time in training camp — is their biggest problem.
It extends their time in the defensive zone, where their focus wanes, they tire, and they fail to break out. It stunts their chances on the attack, when they lose a puck battle and get caught hooking the other way. Thankfully for Pastrnak, who does not kill penalties, the Bruins have drawn enough calls to keep his minutes healthy (average time on ice: 19:18).
Two and a half weeks into the season, it feels like an exacerbation of last year’s playoffs, when the Bruins set an NHL record
for too-many-men-on-the-ice penalties in a single postseason (seven, in 13 games).
The Bruins have been one of the NHL’s most penalized teams in recent years, ranking no lower than sixth in PK time the last five seasons under coaches Jim Montgomery and Bruce Cassidy. They often leaned on elite goaltending to cover for mistakes, but this year they rank T-24th in goals-against average (3.58) and 19th in save percentage (.884).
While they haven’t had a bench minor this year, they are second in the league in major penalties (four, all for fighting). Half of those came in games against Florida. While they were shorthanded 11 times in those two games — and killed 10 — this hasn’t been an issue of settling a score against a rival.
“Our penalties have come when we’re not aggressive,” Montgomery said Thursday morning. “When you’re playing aggressive and you’re on your toes, you’re causing turnovers, and if you’re taking penalties, they’re from aggression.
“You don’t mind penalties from aggression. You don’t like penalties when they’re because you’re a second late and it’s a stick infraction. Those are the ones that really bother you.”
Sure, the Bruins have been playing hard, but there’s little flow to their game. How could there be when they’re constantly heading to the box?
Many have been deflating.
The Bruins were never in
the season opener at Florida, but in
the rematch six days later, they fell behind on a second-period PPG — a result of Charlie McAvoy’s cross-check on Carter Verhaeghe, a likely response to an uncalled hit on Pastrnak. The latter’s slash on Verhaeghe, late in the third period, ended their comeback hopes.
Brad Marchand’s retaliation penalty early in the third period against Dallas came when the Bruins were already chasing the score.
Many penalties have been committed by the Bruins’ best players.
The Bruins woke up Friday outside of the postseason picture. They held a playoff spot wire-to-wire in each of the last two seasons. On NESN’s “Unobstructed Views,” Bergeron, Rask, and Raycroft agreed that the Bruins shouldn’t be concerned unless they’re still out of position come Thanksgiving.
A group this proud doesn’t want to play catch-up all season.
“It’s of our own doing,” said Marchand. “Which is a good thing, I guess, because we can rectify it.”